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UK unemployment rises while regular wage growth slows; bitcoin breaks $89,000
Live  
UK unemployment rises while regular wage growth slows; bitcoin breaks $89,000
Jobless rate rises to 4.3% while wage growth excluding bonuses is at a two-year low
Headlines
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FTX sues Binance and its former CEO for $1.8bn
Bitcoin  
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Bluesky adds 700,000 new members as users flee X after the US election
Rail industry  
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Care workers  
Licences granted to nearly 200 UK care providers despite labour law violations
Cop29  
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Insurance  
Direct Line to axe about 550 jobs as part of £50m cost-cutting drive
Working from home  
Hybrid working much more likely if staff have a degree, says ONS
Retail  
Police called after Le Creuset warehouse sale brings four-hour queues
Today's agenda
Unemployment in the UK has gone up, while regular wage growth slowed to the lowest rate in more than two years, according to official figures.

The unemployment rate rose to 4.3% between July and September, up from 4% in the June to August quarter, according to the Office for National Statistics, which warned that the job market figures should be treated with caution due to data collection issues.

Pay excluding bonuses climbed by 4.8% year on year, the lowest since June 2022. Including bonuses, wage growth picked up to 4.3% from 3.8%, although this was affected by one-off payments made to the civil service last summer.

Liz McKeown, the ONS’s director of economic statistics, said: "Growth in pay excluding bonuses eased again this month to its lowest rate in over two years. Pay growth including bonuses increased, but for recent periods these figures have been affected by last year’s one-off payments made to public sector workers.

"Job vacancies have fallen again, as they have been doing for more than two years now. However, the total still remains a little above where it was before the pandemic."

The number of job vacancies fell to its lowest level since May 2021, down by by 35,000 on the quarter to 831,000 between August and October.

The pound fell by 0.5% to $1.2806, the lowest since mid-August, after the figures were released.

Paul Daley, the chief UK economist at Capital Economics, said: "Overall, there is little here to suggest the Bank of England needs to worry that the loosening in the labour market and the easing in underlying wage growth are coming to an end."

Asian shares tumbled amid disappointment over Beijing’s latest economic stimulus package, and as investors worried about president-elect Donald Trump’s policies.

Meanwhile, bitcoin jumped to a new high of more than $89,000.

The Shanghai market lost 1.3% while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng slid by 3%.

The price of bitcoin, the world’s best-known cryptocurrency, has more than doubled from $37,000 a year ago, as markets are expecting lighter regulation of crypto currencies under a Trump administration. Bitcoin touched $89,982 and is now trading around $89,300.

The agenda
• 11am GMT: Eurozone/Germany ZEW economic sentiment index

We’ll be tracking all the main events throughout the day ...
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