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SYMBOL
LAST
BID
ASK
HIGH
LOW
NET CHG.
%CHG.
SPREAD
SPX
S&P 500 Index
6857.13
6857.13
6857.13
6865.94
6827.13
+7.41
+ 0.11%
--
DJI
Dow Jones Industrial Average
47850.93
47850.93
47850.93
48049.72
47692.96
-31.96
-0.07%
--
IXIC
NASDAQ Composite Index
23505.13
23505.13
23505.13
23528.53
23372.33
+51.04
+ 0.22%
--
USDX
US Dollar Index
98.820
98.900
98.820
98.980
98.810
-0.160
-0.16%
--
EURUSD
Euro / US Dollar
1.16603
1.16610
1.16603
1.16613
1.16408
+0.00158
+ 0.14%
--
GBPUSD
Pound Sterling / US Dollar
1.33516
1.33523
1.33516
1.33519
1.33165
+0.00245
+ 0.18%
--
XAUUSD
Gold / US Dollar
4226.90
4227.33
4226.90
4229.22
4194.54
+19.73
+ 0.47%
--
WTI
Light Sweet Crude Oil
59.303
59.340
59.303
59.469
59.187
-0.080
-0.13%
--

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Share

Ukmto Says It Received Reports Of An Incident 15 Nm West Of Yemen

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Dollar/Yen Falls To 154.46, Lowest Since November 17

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Citigroup Sets 2026 STOXX 600 Target At 640 On Fiscal Tailwinds

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Reserve Bank Of India Chief Malhotra On Rupee: Fluctuations Can Happen, Effort Is To Reduce Undue Volatility

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Reserve Bank Of India Chief Malhotra On Rupee: Allow Markets To Determine Levels On Currency

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Sri Lanka's CSE All Share Index Down 1.2%

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Iw Institute: German Economy Faces Tepid Growth In 2026 Due To Global Trade Slowdown

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Stats Office - Seychelles November Inflation At 0.02% Year-On-Year

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[Market Update] Spot Silver Prices Rose 2.00% Intraday, Currently Trading At $58.27 Per Ounce

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S.Africa's Gross Reserves At $72.068 Billion At End November - Central Bank

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[Market Update] Spot Silver Broke Through $58/ounce, Up 1.56% On The Day

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Dollar/Yen Down 0.33% To 154.61

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Kremlin Says No Plans For Putin-Trump Call For Now

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Kremlin Says Moscow Is Waiting For USA Reaction After Putin-Witkoff Meeting

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Cctv - China, France: Say Both Sides Support All Efforts For A Ceasefire, Restore Peace According To Intl Law

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[Chinese Ambassador To The US Xie Feng Hopes Chinese And American Business Communities Will Focus On Three Lists] On December 4, Chinese Ambassador To The US Xie Feng Delivered A Speech At The China-US Economic And Trade Cooperation Forum Jointly Hosted By The China Council For The Promotion Of International Trade And The Meridian International Center. Xie Feng Said That In November 2026, China Will Host The APEC Leaders' Informal Meeting For The Third Time In Shenzhen, Guangdong Province. In December 2026, The United States Will Also Host The G20 Meeting. Regarding How Chinese And American Business Communities Can Seize These Opportunities, He Suggested Focusing On Three Lists: First, Continue To Expand The Dialogue List; Second, Continuously Lengthen The Cooperation List; And Third, Constantly Reduce The Problem List

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India's Nifty Financial Services Index Extends Gains, Last Up 0.75%

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Eni : Jp Morgan Cuts To Underweight From Overweight

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Cctv - China, France: Signed Protocol On Sanitary, Phytosanitary Requirements For Export Of French Alfalfa Grass

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India's NIFTY IT Index Last Up 1.3%

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          XBR/USD Chart Analysis: Geopolitics Are Once Again Driving Brent Crude Prices

          Dark Current

          Commodity

          Technical Analysis

          Summary:

          On 21 November, we outlined a descending channel on the XBR/USD chart and noted that the bearish trend had been fuelled by easing geopolitical risks and hopes for an end to the war in Ukraine.

          On 21 November, we outlined a descending channel on the XBR/USD chart and noted that the bearish trend had been fuelled by easing geopolitical risks and hopes for an end to the war in Ukraine.

          Ten days later, Brent crude is now trading above its late-November highs — once again driven by geopolitical developments.

          Why is Oil Rising?

          US President Donald Trump stated that the airspace over and around Venezuela "should be considered completely closed". This immediately led to flight cancellations, created a de facto blockade, and raised the threat of military action in an oil-rich region. This risk premium is being priced into the current rally.

          In addition, OPEC+ members have confirmed they will postpone the production increases planned for early 2026 — setting the stage for a potential supply deficit, especially if Venezuelan exports are disrupted.

          XBR/USD Technical Analysis

          Although there was no further downside extension, the descending channel remains valid. The downward move was met with strong buying interest (evident from the long lower wicks on candles in late November around $61.50), triggering an upward reversal from the channel's lower boundary.

          This week opened with a bullish gap, followed by a large bullish candle on the 4-hour chart — a sign of limited selling pressure and market expectations of higher prices.

          However, Brent's advance may soon stall due to nearby resistance zones:

          → around $63.90 (the 20 November high);

          → at the upper boundary of the channel.

          Should sellers regain control, support may be found in the area between:

          → the channel's median line;

          → the lower edge of the gap at $62.78.

          Source: ACTIONFOREX

          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          Why Startups Fail Early: Founder Misalignment Tops the List, Says Europe’s Leading Pre-Seed VC

          Gerik

          Economic

          The Real Startup Killer: Co-Founder Conflict

          Reece Chowdhry, founder of Concept Ventures the largest pre-seed venture capital firm in Europe has pinpointed the primary reason most startups collapse within their first 18 to 24 months: a breakdown in co-founder relationships. While product-market fit and financial runway are often cited as leading causes of startup failure, Chowdhry argues that internal dynamics are far more decisive. In his view, if co-founders clash or lack alignment on vision, purpose, and values, the startup is likely to unravel long before product issues even emerge.
          This insight is rooted in Chowdhry’s investment philosophy. His firm, which just closed an $88 million fund, typically backs startups at the ideation stage before any product exists. For that reason, Chowdhry allocates 80% of his investment decision-making process to evaluating the founding team. Rather than focusing on technical capabilities or business plans, he examines the chemistry between co-founders.

          Team Dynamics Over Product Features

          Chowdhry’s investment approach centers around behavioral and relational assessments. He often interviews co-founders separately to determine whether their responses align and whether they know each other deeply beyond surface-level collaboration. Drawing a metaphor from the New York Times’ dating questionnaire, he measures whether co-founders have the emotional and cognitive understanding necessary to endure the intense startup journey.
          For Chowdhry, ideal teams are not just technically compatible they must complement each other in temperament, decision-making pace, and social magnetism. One founder might be the visionary, while the other ensures execution. One may be fast-thinking and instinctive, while the other is deliberate and analytical. The goal is not just to find harmony but to detect whether the team can evolve together under pressure.
          This was evident in Concept Ventures’ early bet on voice AI unicorn Eleven Labs, co-founded by Mati Staniszewski and Piotr Dąbkowski. Chowdhry noted that two key factors influenced his decision to invest: the co-founders’ deep, long-standing relationship and their domain obsession. Their complementary skill sets and history as childhood friends offered a strong foundation for trust, resilience, and long-term alignment.

          Beyond the CEO: VCs Must Evaluate the Whole Founding Team

          In contrast to traditional venture capital models that often focus heavily on the CEO, Chowdhry stresses that early-stage investment must evaluate the entire founding team. He challenges the bias many investors have in weighing their confidence solely on the CEO when 50% or more of the business may depend on the contributions of other co-founders. In Europe especially, where many startups have technically focused founders, Chowdhry seeks teams with strategic diversity not just in coding skills, but in personality, persuasion, and leadership balance.
          He emphasizes qualities such as grit, a growth mindset, and evidence of exceptionalism in non-professional fields (such as competitive sports or chess) as predictors of founder resilience. These traits suggest the psychological fortitude required to endure the volatility of startup life.

          Y Combinator’s Paul Graham Echoes the Warning

          Chowdhry’s warning echoes the perspective of Paul Graham, co-founder of Y Combinator, who has long cautioned against the risks of solo founders. Graham argues that the absence of co-founders reflects a lack of validation and support essential elements in navigating startup challenges. Even with co-founders, however, Graham underscores that relational strength is non-negotiable. The startup process, he famously noted, “does to the relationship between the founders what a dog does to a sock: if it can be pulled apart, it will be.”
          This analogy reinforces the idea that co-founder cohesion is not merely advantageous it is essential to survival.

          The Intangible Foundation of Success

          While many investors focus on market timing, scalability, or proprietary technology, Chowdhry believes that the real early-stage differentiator is the human equation at the core of a startup. Team dynamics, emotional compatibility, and shared vision are not just soft skills they are structural foundations that determine whether a startup can weather the brutal early years.
          Concept Ventures’ track record, including early investments in unicorns like Eleven Labs, underscores the importance of prioritizing people over products in pre-seed investing. For founders and investors alike, the message is clear: the biggest risk isn’t the market it’s the team.

          Source: CNBC

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          Last Chance For The Hawks

          ING

          Forex

          Political

          Economic

          USD: Still expensive and vulnerable

          This week will offer the last real chance to put a December cut from the Federal Reserve into question. While our call is for a cut next week, we admit the 25bp priced into the OIS curve looks a bit too dovish relative to the mix of data and Fedspeak we have seen so far.

          At the same time, this week's economic data releases often struggle to materially move pricing by themselves. The two major inputs for the Fed, payrolls and CPI, are only due after the 10 December meeting. So, despite the dovish asymmetry in pricing, strong hawkish signals are needed to lift the dollar and short-term rates.

          In our view, those hawkish signals won't materialise this week. The ISM surveys should remain mixed at best, with manufacturing (released today) still in contraction. On Wednesday, we expect zero ADP payrolls growth (consensus 10k), with clear risks of a negative read, while Thursday's Challenger job cuts may send some dovish signals. Finally, Friday's core PCE deflator (for September) should stay close to 0.2% month-on-month, given muted CPI and PPI figures, a comfortable level to keep cutting rates.

          Considering that the dollar still hasn't fully absorbed the negatives of the recent dovish repricing, we continue to see risks on the downside for the US dollar this week as markets may well cement their cut expectations. There is also some chance that President Donald Trump will announce the next Fed Chair in the next few days. Expectations are that it will be dove Kevin Hassett – confirmation of which could weigh on the greenback.

          EUR: Eyes on Ukraine negotiations

          Negotiations on a Ukraine peace deal have somewhat stalled in the past few days, but US special envoy Steve Witkoff's trip to Russia this week has some potential of leading to a breakthrough. Given how cautiously markets have been treading on the prospect of a truce, any meaningful progress should lift high-beta European currencies and weigh on oil and gas prices. Remember that, given the high sensitivity of the euro's medium-term fair value to energy prices, the implications for EUR/USD extend beyond the initial impact.

          Eurozone data should continue to play a secondary role for FX. We are slightly below consensus with our CPI call for tomorrow: 2.0% vs consensus 2.1% for headline and 2.3% vs 2.4% for core. However, that will hardly be enough to drive markets towards more dovish European Central Bank pricing.

          EUR/USD remains around 1.5% undervalued relative to our short-term fair value model, as rate differentials keep pointing up. Our baseline is a return to 1.170 this week.

          JPY: Big hawkish surprise

          In a rather surprising move, Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda sent clear hawkish signals in a speech this morning, causing a jump in market pricing for a December hike from 14bp to 21bp.

          Aside from explicitly saying the BoJ is considering the pros and cons of a hike, he hinted that there is no clear opposition by new Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi to raising rates. This second factor had been crucial for markets, whose basic understanding was that Takaichi was a dovish-leaning influence.

          USD/JPY is trading around 0.5% lower on the news. That is a rather small move relative to a very large overvaluation (both short and medium term) in the pair. A consolidation of rate hike expectations in Japan and rate cut expectations in the US does suggest that the tide may well be turning (at least this week) in USD/JPY, with a decisive break below 155.0 a clear risk.

          CEE: Waiting for a peace deal

          The CEE region is growing busier once again as the new month begins. GDP data in Turkey and Poland will be released today, and PMIs across the region should show a mixed picture of industry.

          On Wednesday, inflation in Turkey is expected to show some decline from 32.9% to 31.6% year-on-year (1.3% MoM), and the National Bank of Poland is likely to cut rates again by 25bp to 4.00%. A press conference a day later should indicate how far the central bank wants to go in the cutting cycle, given last week's favourable inflation figures.

          The Czech Republic will release November inflation and third-quarter wage data on Thursday. Inflation is expected to remain unchanged at 2.5%, slightly above the Czech National Bank's forecast.

          On Friday, we will see some hard economic data from the Czech Republic, Hungary and Romania. Hungary is scheduled for another rating review on Friday, this time from Fitch. Moody's, as expected, kept its outlook negative on Friday but didn't downgrade Hungary. This time, we could see more action and a deterioration in the outlook to negative, given that Fitch was the most optimistic rating agency yet.

          We will also be monitoring further developments in the peace agreement talks between Ukraine and Russia. Preliminary signs that the talks are moving forward supported CEE currencies last week. Betting websites show a rather pessimistic view, with a 28% chance of a ceasefire by the end of the first quarter. This, in our view, still presents a rather asymmetric risk for CEE FX in favour of further strengthening if we see some progress on this side. This should also deflect some pressure from a dovish NBP or negative rating reviews in Hungary.

          EUR/CZK could see a minor move up to the 24.200-250 range after Friday's rate move lower. Otherwise, the Polish zloty and Hungarian forint will await more news on the Ukraine story, with fair pricing in our view at this point.

          Source: ING

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          Administration Closer to Naming New Fed Chair

          Michelle

          Forex

          Economic

          Jerome Powell's term as Federal Reserve Chairman doesn't expire until May 15, 2026, but his successor may be named before Christmas.

          What that will mean is awkwardness and uncertainty for Powell and his successor. But speculation is already soaring on the next Fed chair , however, and that may affect how the economy and markets react.

          Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, charged with nominating Powell's successor, has said he will recommend his choice to the president before Christmas. The job is still subject to Senate confirmation.

          Trump has repeatedly criticized Powell, angry that the Fed has not cut interest rates in a softening economy. But the Fed has basically been an independent agency since after World War II with its decisions not subject to Presidential or Congressional approval.

          The president threatened to fire Powell this past winter, but such a move was stalled because the Chairman and Fed governors probably can't be fired except for cause. It's a dispute now in the courts.

          Powell has said he won't leave before his term ends. Though he could serve as a Fed governor until 2028, he is likely to resign after his successor is confirmed.

          Whoever takes the job will do so knowing Trump wants to be able to dictate Fed policy as the White House works to centralize government policy.

          The nominees for the job are:

          • Kevin Hassett, chairman of the National Economic Council and a long-time advisor to President Donald Trump.

          • Christopher Waller, now a Fed governor.

          • Michelle Bowman, the Fed's vice chair and a firm advocate for reducing banking regulation.

          • Kevin Warsh, a former Fed governor and Wall Street banker.

          • Rick Rieder, global chief of fixed-income at money-management giant BlackRock.

          Bloomberg and others have said Hassett is the front runner. He is an ebullient economic advisor who has long called for interest-rate and tax cuts. Hassett has been an advisor to Republican political candidates. He was worked on Sen. John McCain's 2008 campaign against Barack Obama.

          Hassett may be best known as the co-author of Dow 36,000. The book, published in 1999, argued that stock prices were too low and could move much higher. The book came out just as the stock market peaked and broke during the Dot.com bubble.

          The Dow Jones Industrial Average didn't top 36,000 until November 2021, during Joe Biden's term. The Dow closed at 47,716.42 on Friday.

          Naming Hassett would probably boost stock and bond prices. It's also possible the financial markets are already pricing in a Hassett Fed nomination.

          But stock index futures were lower Sunday evening after the big week enjoyed by stocks last week. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index was up 3.7% for the week, with the Dow up 3.2% and the Nasdaq Composite Index rising 4.9%.

          The reports to watch for

          Ordinarily, the Labor Department would release its November jobs report on Friday. The report would command the most attention during the week. But the release has been pushed back to Dec. 16 because of the government shutdown and problems getting the data collected.

          But there are other reports to watch this week before the Fed's interest-rate decision on Dec. 10.

          Purchasing managers reports — manufacturing

          The state of U.S. manufacturing will be examined in Purchasing Manager Index reports from Standard & Poor's and the Institute for Supply Management. These measure manufacturing based on contracts signed. A weak report can set off a market sell-off.

          S&P's last report put the index at 51.9. Above 50 means manufacturing was growing. The ISM's report showed manufacturing weakening slightly. That's what economists expect from the reports.

          Purchasing managers reports — services

          S&P and ISM will report on the services economy on Wednesday. Expect decent numbers because the service economy is in better shape — and bigger — than the manufacturing sector.

          ADP employment report

          This report, issued by payroll processing giant ADP, is the closest we will get to a November jobs report. Due Wednesday morning, the report will look only at private-sector employment, however.

          For October, ADP reported a job gain of about 42,000, the first gain in three months. Pay growth was flat, suggesting "shifts in supply and demand are balanced."

          Aside from the pandemic, U.S. private sector job growth has grown fairly steadily since September 2010. The growth rate has flattened in 2025.

          Jobless claims

          States report jobless claims data to the U.S. Labor Department, which puts out a weekly aggregate report every Thursday. Last week, the estimate was 216,000 new claims for unemployment insurance, down 6,000 in a week.

          The report seems to confirm economist estimates that jobless rates may be rising. But they are still relatively low.

          Layoff report

          Outplacement firm Challenger Gray Christmas tracks layoff announcements monthly. Last month, the company said it saw layoffs affecting 153,074 workers in October, up 183% from September.

          Directionally, the report is right. The numbers may not be perfect. The industries announcing the biggest layoffs were technology, retail, services and warehousing.

          The November report is due at 7:30 a.m. Thursday.

          Fed's favorite inflation report

          Friday morning, the Commerce Department reports its Personal Income Spending Index in a gaggle of releases about incomes. The Index is the Federal's preferred inflation report because it tracks prices on stuff people actually buy.

          The report will be for September because of the government shutdown.

          Like the PMI reports, this report can move markets. It may influence the thinking of Fed officials because it comes out before the Dec. 9-10 Fed meeting.

          How consumers are reacting to the economy and jobs

          The University of Michigan's Consumer Sentiment Index offers a first look at how consumers are thinking in a report set to be released at 10 a.m. ET Friday morning. This is an attitudinal survey, and attitudes often don't match with spending decisions and other activities.

          Nonetheless, people and investors pay attention to this report and the Conference Board's Consumer Confidence Index.

          This story was originally published by TheStreet on Dec 1, 2025, where it first appeared in the Fed section. Add TheStreet as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

          Source: Yahoo Finance

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
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          Gold Hits Six-week High on Rate Cut Optimism; Silver Hits Record High

          Glendon

          Commodity

          Economic

          Gold prices climbed on Monday to their highest level in six weeks, driven by investor expectations of a possible U.S. interest rate cut later this month and shifts in Federal Reserve leadership, while silver surged to a record high.

          Spot goldwas up 0.3% at $4,241.21 per ounce as of 0855 GMT, after hitting its highest since October 21. U.S. gold futuresfor December delivery gained 0.5% to $4,275.40.

          Silverwas up 1.3% to $57.12 per ounce after hitting an all-time high of $57.86 earlier.

          "Market participants are now starting to price in again a rate cut for the Fed in December, as well the expectation is the new FOMC chairman will be a dove... that is supporting investment demand for gold," said UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo.

          "Silver benefits from the same factor as gold, plus the expectation of further improving industrial demand next year."

          Traders have increased bets over the last few weeks for interest rate cuts in December following softer U.S. data, and dovish comments by several policymakers, including Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller and New York Fed President John Williams.

          Markets are now pricing an 88% chance of a rate cut, according to the CME's FedWatch tool.

          Lower borrowing costs tend to support non-yielding bullion.

          White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett said on Sunday he would be happy to serve as the next chairman of the Fed if chosen. Like Trump, Hassett believes rates should be lower.

          Trump is likely to announce a new chair before Christmas, said Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent.

          Markets now await the November ADP employment report on Wednesday and core U.S. Personal Consumption Expenditures September figures on Friday for further cues on the Fed's policy path.

          Meanwhile, the U.S. dollar fell to a two-week low, making greenback-priced bullion cheaper for holders of other currencies.

          "We expect gold to rise to $4,500/oz next year (and) silver to rise to $60/oz next year," said Staunovo.

          Among other precious metals, platinumrose 0.5% to $1,680.75, while palladiumgained 0.2% to $1,452.97.

          Source: TradingView

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
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          Eurozone Manufacturing Sector Weakens in November As Demand Falls

          Glendon

          Forex

          Economic

          The eurozone manufacturing sector weakened in November as new orders fell, according to the latest HCOB Eurozone Manufacturing PMI data released Monday.

          The headline PMI dropped to 49.6 in November from 50.0 in October, falling below the crucial 50.0 threshold that separates growth from contraction. This marked a five-month low and signaled a renewed deterioration in factory conditions across the eurozone, though the decline was only marginal.

          The Manufacturing PMI Output Index also decreased to 50.4 from 51.0 in October, hitting a nine-month low while still indicating slight growth.

          A stark contrast emerged between the eurozone's two largest economies and the rest of the bloc. Germany and France both saw their PMI readings fall to nine-month lows at 48.2 and 47.8 respectively, while Ireland led growth with a reading of 52.8, followed by Greece at 52.7.

          New orders, the most heavily weighted component of the PMI, decreased after stabilizing in October. Export orders fell for the fifth consecutive month, highlighting continued challenges in overseas markets.

          Despite these headwinds, manufacturing output growth continued for the ninth straight month, though at the weakest pace during the current upturn. Companies pursued more aggressive retrenchment strategies, with employment, purchasing, and inventories all falling at steeper rates than in October. Job losses were the sharpest since April.

          Supply chain pressures intensified, with suppliers' delivery times lengthening to the greatest extent since October 2022. This contributed to a marked increase in input costs, the sharpest since March, following relatively stable prices throughout 2025.

          "The current picture of the eurozone is sobering, as the manufacturing sector is unable to break out of stagnation and is even tending towards contraction," said Dr. Cyrus de la Rubia, Chief Economist at Hamburg Commercial Bank.

          However, business confidence improved, with sentiment rising above its historical average to the highest level since June. Dr. de la Rubia noted that "most companies in the eurozone are confident that they will be able to expand their production in the next twelve months," with improved mood in Germany and a shift from pessimism to optimism in France.

          Source: Investing

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
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          Crypto Sell-Off Deepens as Bitcoin and Ethereum Lead Sharp Declines Amid Risk-Off Mood

          Gerik

          Economic

          Cryptocurrency

          Major Cryptocurrencies Slide as December Begins

          The cryptocurrency market resumed its downward trajectory on December 1, 2025, with Bitcoin falling to $86,273.68 down 5.5% and Ethereum plunging over 6.5% to $2,831.95 in early London trading. The losses marked a sharp reversal from recent attempts at recovery and underscored renewed investor anxiety across digital assets. Other major tokens also slumped, including Solana (down 7.7%) and Dogecoin (off 8.4%), signaling widespread risk aversion among crypto holders.
          These declines highlight an intensifying correlation between cryptocurrency performance and broader market sentiment. As macroeconomic uncertainty grows, digital assets often positioned as speculative risk-on instruments are among the first to feel the impact when sentiment sours.

          Broader Market Risk-Off Sentiment Spills into Crypto

          The latest downturn coincides with a resurgence in global risk-off behavior. Concerns about overheated valuations in artificial intelligence stocks, ambiguous signals from the U.S. Federal Reserve ahead of its December 9–10 meeting, and deteriorating factory activity in China have dampened investor appetite across asset classes.
          Cryptocurrencies, due to their volatility and speculative nature, have become increasingly sensitive to such shifts. The current climate mirrors periods earlier in the year when macroeconomic uncertainty triggered synchronized pullbacks across tech and crypto. The recent drop suggests that expectations of a potential Fed rate cut may not be strong enough to offset deeper structural fears especially if economic data remains mixed or geopolitical risks escalate.

          Chinese Regulatory Crackdown Adds Additional Pressure

          Sentiment in Asia was further dented by regulatory developments. The People’s Bank of China (PBoC) issued a public warning over the weekend, reaffirming its stance against illegal activities involving digital currencies. While details were limited, the statement contributed to a decline in Hong Kong-listed digital asset-related equities during Monday’s session.
          This warning reflects a continued tightening of China’s approach to crypto markets, particularly after brief periods of speculative optimism earlier this year. By reinforcing regulatory restrictions, Chinese authorities have effectively removed one of the largest potential sources of institutional demand in the Asia-Pacific region. As a result, investor confidence weakened, and crypto-linked equities followed crypto tokens into negative territory.

          Volatility Returns as Crypto Enters Uncertain December

          The renewed sell-off in Bitcoin, Ethereum, and other digital assets marks a turbulent start to December, a month that has historically brought strength to risk markets. However, the convergence of regulatory pressure, macroeconomic uncertainty, and shifting market psychology has once again destabilized the crypto landscape.
          Unless clarity emerges from upcoming Fed policy announcements or risk appetite revives across equity and tech sectors, cryptocurrencies may continue to face downward pressure in the short term. Traders and investors should be prepared for heightened volatility as 2025 closes out on a note of caution.

          Source: CNBC

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
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