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Inflation figures from some of the biggest eurozone economies, including France, Spain, and Italy, show no immediate threat of price hikes. However, German inflation figures came in unexpectedly high.
Inflation figures from the eurozone's major economies paint a mixed picture of the bloc's price prospects. In Germany, the region's biggest economy, the inflation rate unexpectedly rose to the highest level in nine months.
Mainly driven by food prices, as energy prices fell modestly, EU-harmonised inflation in Germany was 2.6% higher in November compared with the previous year, after inflation hit 2.3% in October of 2025. This is according to preliminary results from the Federal Statistical Office (Destatis).
Month-on-month, the harmonised inflation rate showed that German prices fell by 0.5% in November, from a 0.3% rise in October.
Elsewhere, it appears that Europe's price pressure is cooling following the region's post-pandemic cost-of-living crisis. Preliminary data released on Friday suggests French inflation remains subdued. According to flash estimates from INSEE, the country's EU-harmonised price index is projected to rise by 0.8% year-on-year in November, unchanged from the previous month and down from 1.7% a year earlier.
Economists had expected a stronger increase of 1%.
The stable reading reflects contrasting movements across spending categories: a slowdown in service prices, driven down by communication services, and a more pronounced decrease in manufactured goods prices, offset by a smaller decline in energy prices and a slight acceleration in food prices.
Month-over-month, French prices fell by 0.2% in November, after a 0.1% increase in October. The consensus forecast had pointed to no change.
The decline was driven by lower service prices, particularly in transport and communications, and to a lesser extent by cheaper manufactured goods. Energy prices are expected to rebound, led by petrol products, while tobacco prices are projected to edge higher. Food prices are expected to remain broadly stable.
The EU's third-largest economy showed a similar pattern. Italy's harmonised index of consumer prices fell by 0.2% in November, matching October's decline, according to preliminary figures from the national statistics agency ISTAT.
Annual inflation eased to 1.1% from 1.3% in the previous month, which is its lowest level since October 2024.
Italian inflation remained low as falling energy prices and softer services inflation offset modest rises elsewhere. The largest downward pressures came from steep declines in regulated energy and communication services, alongside slower increases in transport and recreational services.
Only a few categories — mainly processed food and some unregulated energy products — added mild upward pressure.
Spain, the eurozone's fourth-largest economy, recorded somewhat stronger price pressures. The EU-harmonised index of consumer prices was flat in November following a 0.5% rise in October, defying expectations of a 0.2% monthly fall, according to preliminary data from the National Statistics Institute.
However, annual inflation came in higher than expected. The harmonised rate eased to 3.1% from 3.2% in October, compared with a forecast of 2.9%. Price rises for food, transport and other non-energy goods continued to drive inflation.
Friday's figures from the eurozone's major economies will inform the European Central Bank ahead of its meeting in December. The ECB is not expected to cut its key interest rate from the current 2%, with policymakers judging that medium-term inflation targets are broadly being met.
Eurozone inflation stood at 2.1% in October, slightly above the ECB's 2% target, reinforcing the bank's view that price pressures are largely under control after the surge to double-digit highs caused by post-pandemic supply shocks and the energy crisis triggered by Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
Meanwhile, inflation expectations have edged higher. According to a new ECB survey published on Friday, median consumer inflation expectations for the next year rose to 2.8% in October from 2.7% in September. Expectations for three years ahead were unchanged at 2.5%, while five-year-ahead expectations remained steady at 2.2%.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) released an explanatory video on its X account, highlighting the potential of tokenized markets to speed up asset trading while introducing severe risks, such as intensified flash crashes.
Tokenization removes the need for intermediaries by automating clearing and settlement directly in code, which early pilots have shown can cut costs and enable near-instant execution. While this paves the way for cheaper, programmable financial services, it can also amplify volatility, since automated trades fire off immediately with no buffers in between.
Researchers note that tokenized systems allow near-instant settlement and more efficient use of collateral, reshaping how assets can trade around the clock. But the IMF warns that these benefits come with familiar risks: past episodes of automated trading have shown how quickly flash crashes can unfold, and layered smart contracts could make those shocks even sharper by triggering chain reactions under stress. On top of that, if platforms remain fragmented and don't interoperate, liquidity could get stuck in silos, undercutting the broader vision of unified, always-on markets.
The video points to historical precedents, such as the 1944 Bretton Woods system, in which governments fixed currencies to the U.S. dollar and gold, only for it to collapse into fiat and floating rates by the 1970s.
Such interventions shaped global finance for decades, signalling that regulators may soon embed tokenized assets under tighter regulatory oversight. BlackRock's BUIDL fund has surged to become the largest tokenized Treasury product, outpacing rivals like Franklin Templeton's fund through 2025.
This public video signals tokenization moving from a niche topic to a mainstream policy focus for the IMF, which has been following digital money developments for a while. Historically, governments don't stay on the sidelines when money evolves; they step in to regulate. As tokenized markets reach multibillion-dollar sizes, platforms will need to tackle these risks head-on to avoid heavy-handed interventions that could change the entire landscape.
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Kenya and two Chinese state firms are launching construction of a $1.5 billion highway expansion on Friday, marking Beijing's return to major infrastructure development in the East African economy after a years-long hiatus.
The project, split into two phases, will be financed by the partners through a mix of debt and equity using a model that is gaining traction after China's traditional lending model raised concerns over borrowers' debt burdens.
"We don't have any room to borrow any more money," Kefa Seda, director general of the Public-Private Partnerships directorate at Kenya's finance ministry told Reuters ahead of the official launch ceremony.
The project will improve a key transport corridor that links Kenya's port of Mombasa with its western region and neighbouring landlocked states like Uganda, via Nairobi.
After pumping billions of dollars into infrastructure projects, China cut its lending in Africa around 2019 as worries grew over debt sustainability in countries like Kenya.
Beijing pledged $50 billion in credit and investments over three years, however, at a summit with African leaders last year as it moves to reposition itself on the continent.
Kenya terminated a deal with a consortium led by France's Vinci SAfor the highway expansion project earlier this year.
The new agreement was announced during a state visit by Kenya's President William Ruto to Beijing in April.
Kenya is among Washington's closest African allies. And the rapprochement between Nairobi and Beijing angered U.S. PresidentDonald Trump, prompting Ruto to issue a public defence of the strategy, saying Kenya needed to boost exports into markets like China.
One phase of the highway project will cost $863 million and see China Road and Bridge Corporation partner with Kenya's state pension fund NSSF to expand two existing stretches of a single-lane, 139-kilometre (86-mile) highway into four- and six-lane dual-carriage roads, the Kenya National Highways Authority said.
In the second phase, Shandong Hi-Speed Road and Bridge International, a subsidiary of China's Shandong Hi-Speed Group, will develop an existing single-lane, 94-kilometre stretch of highway into a six-lane carriageway at a cost of $678.56 million.
Both total cost estimates include financing costs, KENHA said.
Deals for the two portions of the project will be split into 75% debt and 25% equity. NSSF will contribute 45% of the equity funding in the phase it is involved in.
The borrowing could come from Chinese commercial lenders and state entities like Export-Import Bank of China, Seda said.
The firms have until the end of 2027 to complete construction followed by a 28-year concession to collect tolls to recoup their investment and make a return.
Canada's economy grew at a much faster pace than expected in the third quarter as crude oil exports and government spending boosted over all economic activity even as business investments and household consumption disappointed, data showed on Friday.
The third quarter annualized gross domestic product grew by 2.6%, Statistics Canada said, escaping what could have been a technical recession after a contraction in the previous quarter of a downwardly revised 1.8%.
The quarterly GDP is calculated based on income and expenditure, unlike the monthly GDP which is derived from industrial output.
The statistics agency said the third quarter number could be subjected to a larger than normal revision in February as some parts of GDP by expenditure relies on foreign merchandise trade data that was not available due to U.S. government shutdown.
Analysts polled by Reuters had forecast annualized growth of 0.5% in the third quarter and had expected monthly GDP growth of 0.2% in September.
On a month on month basis, the economy matched analysts predictions following a deceleration of an upwardly revised 0.1% in the prior month, StatsCan said, primarily driven by 1.6% expansion in manufacturing output.
However, an advanced estimate showed that the GDP might decline by 0.3% in October, signaling a negative start to the fourth quarter.
U.S. tariffs on critical sectors has hit Canadian exports hard. It has led to job losses, dampened hiring and subdued business and consumer sentiment, leading to forecasts of a near recessionary environment.
But a 6.7% increase in crude oil and bitumen exports, along with a 2.9% increase in government capital investments helped cushion some of the impact in third quarter.
Higher crude oil exports also helped boost corporate income in the third quarter, the statistics agency's data showed.
Jump in government investments were mainly led by a significant increase in spending on weapon systems and non-residential structures such as hospitals, StatsCan said.
Other factors lifting the third quarter GDP were a rise in residential resale activity and renovations.
But the underlying impacts of tariffs on the economy continue to reflect on business and consumer sentiment. Business capital investment was unchanged in the third quarter and household final consumption expenditure dropped 0.1% in Q3.
New residential construction also declined by 0.8% in the third quarter, StatsCan added.
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