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Business live
Markets calm after fall of Assad; Chinese inflation falls to five-month low
Live  
Markets calm after fall of Assad; Chinese inflation falls to five-month low
Oil and gold prices rise modestly as new era begins in Syria
Headlines
Brexit  
Reeves to pledge closer EU ties in pivot from post-withdrawal ‘division and chaos’
Reeves to pledge closer EU ties in pivot from post-withdrawal ‘division and chaos’
Economics  
UK job vacancies fall at fastest rate since pandemic as business confidence slumps
Energy industry  
UK ‘needs to play catch-up’ in global race to rewire electricity grids
Eurostar  
The worst-performing rail service in Europe, campaigners find
ITV  
Broadcaster faces hard sell to tempt suitors despite McCall’s efforts
Royal Mail  
Revealed: the business dealings of bidder Daniel Křetínský
Christmas  
Dips and party nibbles run short as Bakkavor factory strike continues
Property  
Average UK house price hits record £300,000 as demand remains undented
Diageo  
Guinness supply rationed to British pubs as popularity soars with gen Z
How Musk could affect UK politics  
Money, lawyers or boosting Farage on X
Winter fuel crisis  
1m elderly already skipping meals and applications system ‘overwhelmed’
Carmakers  
Trump’s promise to tax imported goods could spell trouble for US auto industry
Environment  
‘Brexit problem’: UK tap water safety at risk after testing labs shut down
Football  
Fans stand up to ‘ridiculous’ ticket-price hikes
US  
Trump’s policies ‘should be turning off farmers’ – why did so many vote for him?
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Today's agenda
Financial markets are calm after the fall of Bashar al-Assad in Syria, where people are celebrating a new era after five decades of dynastic rule. It comes amid political turmoil in France and South Korea.

The South Korean stock market tumbled by 2.8% and the country’s currency fell towards a 15-month low against the dollar amid uncertainty over the fate of president Yoon Suk Yeol, even though the authorities pledged to stabilise markets. Yoon has been banned from leaving the country, as opposition politicians accused his party of staging a 'second coup' by refusing to impeach him over his botched declaration of martial law last week.

The opposition leader Lee Jae-myung warned that the political fallout is causing financial market volatility and threatens the economy.

Japan’s Nikkei index rose by 0.3%, helped by an upward revision to economic growth and MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan edged 0.15% higher.

The price of gold and crude oil has risen slightly. Brent crude futures climbed by 0.66% to $71.59 a barrel. Spot gold rose by 0.3% to $2,639 an ounce, as China’s central bank resumed gold purchases after a six-month hiatus.

Rachel Reeves is heading to Brussels for her first meeting with eurozone finance ministers today to reset ties with the EU. The chancellor will tell them that reducing the UK’s trade barriers with the European Union will improve the growth prospects for both. She plans to end the UK’s “fractious” post-Brexit accord with the EU, a relationship she said had been defined by “division and chaos”, by promising closer ties in the first speech by a UK chancellor to eurozone finance ministers since 2020.

Reeves will say she wants to adopt a “business-like” approach through an “economic reset” with the EU, offering the goal of driving up trade and growth.

China’s consumer inflation hit a five-month low in November as prices for fresh food pulled back and factory deflation persisted, suggesting Beijing’s efforts to shore up demand with fresh stimulus measures have had little impact. China is also bracing for new tariffs from the second Donald Trump presidency next year.

The consumer price index rose at an annual rate of 0.2% last month, according to data from China's National Bureau of Statistics, down from October’s 0.3% and less than the 0.5% forecast by analysts. Consumer prices fell by 0.6% in October from September, faster than October’s 0.3% monthly drop.

Core inflation, excluding volatile food and fuel prices, edged higher to 0.3% from 0.2%, though.

This week is packed with central bank meetings. Ipek Ozkardeskaya, senior analyst at Swissquote Bank, said: 'The European Central Bank (ECB), the Bank of Canada (BoC), the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) and the Swiss National Bank (SNB) will announce their latest policy verdict throughout this week and all – except the RBA – are expected to lower their rates.

'The BoC is expected to cut by 50bp while the SNB and the ECB are expected to announce a 25bp cut. Some investors are convinced that the ECB could announce more than a 25bp cut. Either it could go bigger with a 50bp cut, or cut by 25bp but shift their focus from inflation to economic growth. I believe that the second option is more plausible. If that’s the case, we should not see a significant selloff in the euro post-decision.'


The Agenda
• 
1pm GMT: Bank of England deputy governor Dave Ramsden speech on financial stability

We'll be tracking all the main events throughout the day …
Opinion
Elon Musk’s rumoured $100m donation may just fuel a fresh look at UK political funding
Elon Musk’s rumoured $100m donation may just fuel a fresh look at UK political funding
What determines whether a PM will sink or swim? Look to their chancellor
Employees are being marched back to the office. But why?
Analysis  
‘Don’t bite the hand that feeds’: United fans angry over ticket price rises
The science behind winning a Nobel prize? Being a man from a wealthy family
Labour’s big Farage problem has a simple solution: build, build, build
Media
Syria  
Biden voices hope for US journalist Austin Tice, missing since 2012
Biden voices hope for US journalist Austin Tice, missing since 2012
What the papers say  
The end of the Assad regime
Spotlight
Tech titans who poured $394.1m into US election - and how they compared to Musk
Revealed  
Tech titans who poured $394.1m into US election - and how they compared to Musk
FEC filings offer only a glimpse of the money tech is pouring into Washington as it seeks to influence government
Popular on business
‘Brexit problem’: UK tap water safety at risk after testing labs shut down
‘Brexit problem’: UK tap water safety at risk after testing labs shut down
Woolworths workers vote to return to work ending two-week strike action
Auto Trader forecasts ‘seismic shift’ to electric vehicles in Britain
UK workers: tell us if you are expected to spend more time in the office next year
The happiest place to live in the UK? It’s not London …
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