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Business Today
Business live
UK wage growth slows; global chip stocks fall amid growing tensions between US, China and Taiwan
Live  
UK wage growth slows; global chip stocks fall amid growing tensions between US, China and Taiwan
UK labour market continues to cool; vacancies down
Headlines
Donald Trump  
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Co-founders of Silicon Valley venture capital firm back presidential bid
Technology  
Global stock markets rocked by potential US crackdown on chipmakers
King's speech  
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Housing  
Developers welcome aim to liberalise planning
Medical  
Cosmetic surgery group Skin collapses putting hundreds of jobs at risk
Industrial relations  
Labour to hold talks with Aslef over strikes next week
Retirement  
Shake-up may add £11,000 to pension pots
Rail  
Unions hail renationalisation bills as return to ‘public service’
Telegraph Media Group  
Private equity firm behind Six Nations rugby considers bid
Food & drink  
Pernod Ricard sells Jacob’s Creek and other big wine brands
Amazon  
Workers in Coventry lose union recognition ballot by handful of votes
Banking  
HSBC names new Mandarin-speaking CEO
Today's agenda
The UK job market has continued to cool, with wage growth slowing while the unemployment rate remained at 4.4%, according to the latest official labour market figures.

Average earnings growth slowed to 5.7% between March and May from 5.9% in the three months to April, said the Office for National Statistics. Both regular wages, and earnings including bonuses grew at an annual rate of 5.7%.

Regular wage growth was last lower than this in the three months to August 2022, when it was 5.4%, while total wage growth was last lower in the three months to January, when it was 5.6%.

In the public sector, wage growth remained strong at 6.4% for the third consecutive period while in the private sector, it was 5.6%.

The finance and business services sector saw the largest annual regular growth rate at 6.7%; while the construction sector saw the smallest rate at 3%, the same as the previous three-month period.

Liz McKeown, the ONS director of economic statistics, said: "We continue to see overall some signs of a cooling in the labour market, with the growth in the number of employees on the payroll weakening over the medium term and unemployment gradually increasing.

"Earnings growth in cash terms, while remaining relatively strong, is showing signs of slowing again. However, with inflation falling, in real terms it is at its highest rate in over two and a half years."

Annual growth in real terms – adjusted for inflation – for regular pay was 2.5% in March to May, and for total pay was 2.2%.The UK’s unemployment rate stayed at 4.4% in the three months to May. The number of job vacancies fell by 30,000, led by dwindling demand in retail and hospitality amid a continued slowdown in hiring across the economy.

Global chip stocks tumbled, with the Dutch company ASML, US firm Nvidia and Taiwan’s TSMC hit by reports of tighter export restrictions from the US and remarks from Donald Trump.

Bloomberg reported yesterday that the Biden administration is considering using the most severe trade restrictions available to clamp down on companies exporting their critical chipmaking equipment to China.

Washington’s foreign direct product rule (FDPR) allows the US to put controls on foreign-made products if they use a small amount of American technology. This can affect non-US companies.

Trump, the former US president who is running for the presidency again, said Taiwan should pay the US for defence, in an interview with Bloomberg Businessweek. He also claimed Taiwan took “about 100%” of America’s semiconductor business.

ASML tumbled by 11% while Tokyo Electron shares in Japan closed nearly 7.5% lower and TSMC dropped by 2.4%. The Cambridge-based chipmaker Arm closed down by 10%, along with US firms AMD and Marvell, while Qualcomm and Broadcom fell by around 8% and Nvidia lost 6.6% on Wall Street. The tech-heavy Nasdaq dropped by 2.77% while the S&P 500 lost 1.4%.

The agenda
• 1.15pm BST: European Central Bank interest rate decision
• 1.30pm BST: US Initial jobless claims for week of 13 July
• 1.45pm BST: ECB press conference
• 3.15pm BST: ECB president Christine Lagarde speech

We’ll be tracking all the main events throughout the day ...
Opinion
IMF reform is tricky: the US and China will need to work together
IMF reform is tricky: the US and China will need to work together
Analysis  
King's speech sounded a bit like the Labour of old. But only a bit
Analysis  
Fear of persistent inflation? Bank of England should shake it off
Media
Strictly Come Dancing  
Professionals will no longer be left alone with contestants
Professionals will no longer be left alone with contestants
Disney  
Hackers claim data theft in protest against AI-generated artwork
Spotlight
‘More politicised than any other bank’: HSBC’s new boss prepares to ride the Chinese tiger
Banking  
‘More politicised than any other bank’: HSBC’s new boss prepares to ride the Chinese tiger
Georges Elhedery learned Mandarin in preparation for the top job, a sign that he grasps exactly where his lender’s strength and weakness lie
 
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