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Investors expect strong bounceback in key US jobs report – business live | Business

US non-farm payrolls: economists forecast 200,000 jobs added

It has been a fairly quiet day on financial markets, but all financial traders’ eyes will turn to the week’s biggest data release: US non-farm payrolls.

Economists expect a major bounceback in the jobs figures – which show how many private sector jobs were added in the previous month – after a shock decline in October.

That reading, at 12,000, dropped far below consensus expectations. Hurricanes and a big Boeing strike hindered hiring, but even so the figure was a fraction of the 113,000 expectation.

It would be a second big shock if November’s figures were not much better. Economists polled by Reuters expect 200,000 new jobs were added for the month.

Economists at Goldman Sachs, an investment bank, estimate nonfarm payrolls rose by 235k in November, above the consensus. The three-month average of job creation is 104,000 – generally a reasonably healthy rate.

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The problem with analysing this month’s non-farm payrolls figures will be working out how much of the upward movement – presuming there is upward movement – is reversion to normal, or whether it is showing genuine economic strength.

Oscar Munoz, chief US macro strategist at TD Securities, an investment bank, said:

We do not think that a surge in November job gains implies a sudden resurgence in hiring, but only the normalization from temporary shocks in the data.

It would be more unbiased to analyse the recent payrolls performance by looking at the October-November data together.

Bob Savage, head of markets strategy and insights at BNY Mellon, an investment bank, said he expected 220,000 were added. The focus will be on revisions and unemployment holding at 4.1%, but also on hourly earnings growth.

That is expected at 0.3%, down from 0.4%. The mix of jobs added and the participation rate – the proportion of working-age adults in work – will be key for the Federal Reserve’s plans to lower interest rates further.

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US non-farm payrolls: economists forecast 200,000 jobs added

It has been a fairly quiet day on financial markets, but all financial traders’ eyes will turn to the week’s biggest data release: US non-farm payrolls.

Economists expect a major bounceback in the jobs figures – which show how many private sector jobs were added in the previous month – after a shock decline in October.

That reading, at 12,000, dropped far below consensus expectations. Hurricanes and a big Boeing strike hindered hiring, but even so the figure was a fraction of the 113,000 expectation.

It would be a second big shock if November’s figures were not much better. Economists polled by Reuters expect 200,000 new jobs were added for the month.

Economists at Goldman Sachs, an investment bank, estimate nonfarm payrolls rose by 235k in November, above the consensus. The three-month average of job creation is 104,000 – generally a reasonably healthy rate.

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Sarah Butler

Sarah Butler

A police car outside Boots on Exeter’s high street. Photograph: Paul Martin/Alamy

Retailers saw a surge in sales on Black Friday week – both in stores and online – raising hopes that festive spending will grow this year.

Sales at established stores rose 19% with strong growth at fashion and homewares stores, according to advisory firm BDO’s high street sales tracker which mainly involves small and medium-sized retailers.

Sales in stores rose more than 14% and online sales were up more than 23% as cash- strapped shoppers sought out bargain presents and treats for themselves during the US-inspired discount event.

Fashion performed strongly – up 18% as cold weather hit after a difficult mild October while homeware sales were up 28% as families prepared for guests.

However, the numbers are flattered by comparison to last year when spending tailed off
after Black Friday week – which fell a week earlier in the calendar. It may not be clear until mid-December whether households have felt secure enough to bump up festive spending after a lacklustre few years.

Recent figures from credit and debit card operator Barclaycard suggests consumers’ confidence in their ability to spend on non-essential items reached its highest level since February in the month to mid November.

However it found supermarket spend decreased 1.8%, as two thirds or cardholders said they were looking for ways to reduce the cost of their weekly shop helped by easing inflation. Spending on travel and holidays was up but spending on clothing down amid the mild October and then stormy start to November which held back trips to the high street.

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The British Steel plant in Scunthorpe. British Steel have announced that their coal-fired furnaces will be closed and replaced by electric arc furnaces. Photograph: Gary Calton/The Observer

Steelmaking unions have called for the UK’s two remaining blast furnaces in Scunthorpe to remain open in a meeting with Jingye, the Chinese owner of British Steel.

Community, GMB and Unite, the three main unions representing steel workers, said on Friday that a meeting was “constructive” as they presented a report prepared by consultants Syndex. The report contained a “strong recommendation to operate two blast furnaces at Scunthorpe to facilitate a smooth and low-risk transition” to electric arc furnaces.

They said:

If these talks are to lead to a successful outcome, the UK government must make good on its promises to steelworkers by supporting the huge investments required to successfully transition to greener steelmaking.

The Labour government’s talks with Jingye have proven to be difficult, with sources with knowledge of the situation suggesting that Jingye is driving a hard bargain.

The government is even considering nationalisation as one option – although it is not seen as the preferred route.

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David Sacks, chief executive of Zenefits, speaks during 2016 TechCrunch Disrupt in San Francisco, US. Photograph: Beck Diefenbach/Reuters

At least 11 picks for strategic positions after Trump returns to the White House in January have either achieved billionaire status themselves, have billionaire spouses or are within touching distance of that threshold.

The net result will be the wealthiest administration in US history – worth a total of $340bn at the start of this week, before Trump further boosted its monetary value by trying to appoint at least three more billionaires.

One of Trump’s latest appointments was podcaster and former PayPal chief operating officer David Sacks. Sacks will be “artificial intelligence and crypto tsar”.

Sacks, a venture capitalist and Silicon Valley insider, hosted big spenders at his San Francisco mansion in June to support the Trump campaign, with tickets ranging up to $300,000 a head. The event reportedly raked in more than $12m.

You can read the full story on the wealth of Trump’s cabinet here:

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A tanker from Thames Water in southeast England. Photograph: Andrew Matthews/PA

A clutch of bidders have expressed interest in buying Thames Water, after its initial owners essentially said they will walk away with nothing.

However, any buyer – including the newly public Covalis bid – will have to negotiate a complex regulatory and political process in order to take ownership. And workers at the sprawling utility will have their say.

Gary Carter, national officer at GMB, which represents water workers, said:

Any plan to takeover Thames and break it up would be a disaster for consumers and workers. These bids won’t stop the leaks nor pollution – they will only line the pockets of those who want to break it up.

Thames Water needs considered, long-term investment to repair its infrastructure, stop the leaks and provide stability; not the plundering of its assets to make a quick buck.

The government has to stop this vulture auction and take control of Thames in the interest of the public.

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Bank of England official calls for lower interest rates

Swati Dhingra, a member of the Bank of England monetary policy committee, in her office inside the Bank of England, central London in 2022. Photograph: Alicia Canter/The Guardian

The Bank of England should be cutting interest rates by more, a member of the rate-setting monetary policy committee member has said.

Swati Dhingra, an external member of the committee, said high interest rates had hurt consumption and business investment, and damaged the supply capacity of Britain’s economy, according to Reuters. In an interview on Friday with Bloomberg TV, she said:

That’s why I think we should be easing policy more.

Dhingra said that the UK has limited direct exposure to US tariffs, but added that the indirect exposure may be greater. Tariffs could lead to a return of supply chain disruption that we’ve seen in recent years, she said.

She estimated that the neutral rate – the rate at which monetary policy is neither restrictive nor expansionary, was between 2.5% and 3.5%.

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Quiz shares slump by 40% as it warns it could run out of cash

Sarah Butler

Sarah Butler

A Quiz store in Glasgow, Scotland, in 2016. Photograph: Robert Perry/REX/Shutterstock

Glasgow-based clothing retailer Quiz has said it could run out of cash early next year after a “marked decline” in trade both online and in stores in October and November.

The company’s share price has fallen by 44% to 2.35p. It was only valued at £6.6m on Thursday evening.

The business, which has more than 70 stores in the UK and Ireland as well as concessions in New Look and outlets in the Middle East, said it had appointed
advisers to “consider appropriate options” from both a financing and strategic point of view.

In a statement issued to the stock market, Quiz said that changes in the budget had combined with poor autumn trading to put pressure on its balance sheet.

The company continues to proactively manage its cost base and identify opportunities to improve performance and profits. However, ongoing improvements being made in these areas will be offset by the recent proposed changes to the National Living Wage and Employer’s National Insurance arrangements, resulting in circa £1.7m per annum of
additional costs from April 2025.

Quiz said it was managing its working capital carefully but currently had just £1.2m
of headroom within its £4m borrowing facilities.

Tarak Ramzan, the company’s founder and largest shareholder, has offered to provide a
£1m loan to assist the company but this is subject to approval from Quiz’s other lenders.

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Guardian Media Group agrees sale of Observer to Tortoise Media

The sale of the Observer, the world’s oldest Sunday newspaper, to Tortoise Media has been agreed in principle.

The announcement by the Scott Trust, the ultimate owner of the Guardian and Observer, came as it also revealed that it would invest in Tortoise to become a key shareholder and take a seat on both the editorial and commercial boards of the media company.

The Trust said the new ownership model would “protect the Observer’s future, championing the voice of liberal values and investing in exceptional journalism while building its digital offering”.

“We knew we needed the right combination of resources and commitment to build a new platform for the Observer,” said the Scott Trust chair, Ole Jacob Sunde.

“It required an ally to be sufficiently funded, long-term in nature and respect editorial independence and liberal values. I believe we have found this in Tortoise Media. We are looking forward to being part of the next phase in the Observer’s journey.”

Observer staff are due to meet managers today.

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The eurozone economy grew by 0.4% in the third quarter of 2024, according to a third estimate of GDP.

That was an acceleration compared with the 0.2% growth in the second quarter, according to EU statistics office Eurostat.

However, despite the acceleration, the eurozone economy only grew by 0.9% compared with the same quarter of the previous year – a relatively meagre growth rate. Growth has been held back in particular by Germany, where economic growth lagged at 0.1% in the quarter.

The eurozone economy has picked up pace during 2024, although still at a relatively meagre growth rate. Photograph: Eurostat

Ireland (+3.5%) recorded the highest increase of GDP compared to the previous quarter – although Ireland’s economic figures are heavily caveated because of the infuence of tech companies’ offshore holding companies. It was followed by Denmark and Lithuania (both +1.2%). The highest decreases were observed in Hungary (-0.7%) and Latvia (-0.2%).

Household spending was a big contributor, increasing by 0.7% in the euro area.

However, exports decreased by 1.5% in the euro area in the quarter.

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Secretary of state for business and trade Jonathan Reynolds leaves 10 Downing Street after attending the weekly Cabinet meeting in London on 26 November. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

The UK may not retaliate if Donald Trump imposes tariffs on British goods imports, the business secretary has said.

Jonathan Reynolds said that the UK could be relatively sheltered from Trump’s ire because the US runs a goods trade surplus, exporting more goods to Britain than it imports the other way.

But if Trump does impose tariffs on all countries, the UK would not automatically respond, Reynolds said in an interview with the Financial Times. He said:

In this country there’s no political constituency for protectionism.

Increasing costs of goods or food for your constituents is not attractive.

Reynolds also cautioned that the prospects for a trade deal between the US and UK could be tricky, given the “very different regulatory regimes for agriculture and food”.

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British trains able to run normally once underway says National Rail

National Rail has given an update on the rail disruption: it appears to be limited mainly to trains setting off for their first journey, although there could be knock-on delays through the day.

Its update said:

This issue is mainly affecting trains on some routes leaving the depot to start their service. However, trains can run normally once they are underway.

Short-notice cancellations and alterations are expected due to the knock-on effect on the timetables. Please check before you travel, allow extra time for your journey and monitor live departure boards.

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Mike Ashley, the largest shareholder of Frasers Group, which owns the Sports Direct, Flannels and Frasers brands. Photograph: Yui Mok/PA

Mike Ashley’s Frasers Group is in the market for another retailer: this time it’s Norwegian sporting goods retailer XXL ASA.

Frasers said that it is launching a hostile takeover of the brand because it disagreed with the company’s plan to issue new shares, which would dilute Frasers’ existing shareholding.

Frasers, the bulk of whose earnings come via Sports Direct, is XXL’s second largest shareholder, with about 32.5% of the voting rights and about 25.8% of the issued share capital.

It said that it opposed a share issue by XXL which would have sought to raise 600m Norwegian krone (£42m). It said in a statement to Oslo’s stock market:

We believe that the proposed alternative rights Issue is wrong, its legality is questionable and its implementation will be extremely detrimental to both Frasers and the other minority holders of XXL shares, who will be unfairly and significantly diluted by the commission shares to be issued under the terms of the Alternative Rights Issue.

In addition, we do not believe that shareholders, especially minority shareholders, should be asked to provide further funding to XXL when it has not articulated any clear plan to address and resolve the root causes of its persistent problems.

Michael Murray, Frasers chief executive (and Ashley’s son-in-law), said:

Our strategic vision and industry experience position us uniquely to help XXL navigate its current challenges. We are committed to ensuring that XXL reaches its full potential.

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UK house prices hit new record high of £298,083 says Halifax

Canalside properties in Ancoats and New Islington areas of Manchester, one of the fastest growing places in the UK. Photograph: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian

The average price of a house in the UK has hit a record high as homeowners experience a fifth successive month of increases in the value of their properties, Britain’s biggest mortgage lender has said.

Halifax’s monthly house price index found that the cost of an average home stood at £298,083 in November, up almost £5,000 on the previous record set in October.

Prior to the latest rise, the record average house price was set in June 2022, at 293,507.

House prices increased by 1.3% in November, the biggest increase this year and the fifth consecutive monthly rise.

On an annual basis property prices are up 4.8%, the highest rate of increase since November 2022.

House price growth has accelerated in the UK, according to Halifax. Photograph: Halifax

Amanda Bryden, the head of mortgages at Halifax, said:

Latest figures continue to show improving levels of demand for mortgages, as an easing in mortgage rates boost buyer confidence. However, despite these positive trends, many potential buyers and movers still face significant affordability challenges and buyer confidence may be tested against a changeable economic backdrop.

As we move towards the end of the year and into 2025, positive employment figures and anticipated decreases in interest rates are expected to continue supporting demand. This should underpin further house price growth, albeit at a modest pace as borrowing costs remain above the average of a few years ago.

You can read the full story here:

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Here is the full statement from Suez on the bid by Covalis for Thames Water:

In exclusive partnership with Covalis, Suez is submitting a non-binding offer to advise and assist Thames Water by leveraging Suez’s expertise in technical advisory and organizational optimization.

At this stage, Suez scope of work is limited to advisory mission to ensure the project’s success and address the specific challenges faced by Thames Water.

Suez attaches great importance to support Thames Water in its operational recovery and long-term sustainability in alignment with regulatory expectations.

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The FTSE 100 in London has edged down in the opening trades by five points – less than 0.1% – to 8,344.

Direct Line Group has jumped by 7.6% to £2.53 – although it remains well off the £2.75 offer price, suggesting investors may have questions over whether the deal will be completed.

Here are the opening snaps from across Europe’s major stock indices:

  • EUROPE’S STOXX 600 FLAT

  • FRANCE’S CAC 40 UP 0.1%; SPAIN’S IBEX DOWN 0.2%

  • EURO STOXX INDEX DOWN FLAT; EURO ZONE BLUE CHIPS DOWN 0.1%

  • GERMANY’S DAX UP 0.1%

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Trains across Great Britain could be disrupted by nationwide communications fault

A train puling in to London’s Waterloo station. Photograph: Andy Rain/EPA

Trains across Great Britain may be disrupted this morning because of a nationwide fault with the radio systems used by drivers to communicate with signaller, National Rail has reported.

National Rail, which is run by train operating companies, said that all National Rail routes may be affected, in a statement on its website. It said it was investigating the problem.

It said:

There is a nationwide fault with the communication system used between train drivers and signallers. As a result, services across the National Rail network may be subject to disruption this morning.

Trains across the network are having to start their journeys later because of this fault and some may also be subject to cancellations or alterations. Please check before you travel, allow extra time for your journey and monitor live departure boards.

The lines affected included London’s Elizabeth line – Britain’s most popular line – ScotRail, and services across England.

National Rail said the problem was with the GSMR system, or the Global System for Mobile Communications-Railway. The technology is designed to deliver “digital, secure and dependable communications between drivers and signallers” including within tunnels and deep cuttings, according to Network Rail, which runs the UK’s rail tracks.

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Aviva agrees £3.6bn Direct Line takeover; Suez lined up to manage Thames Water in bid

Good morning, and welcome back to our love coverage of business, economics and financial markets (after a two-day break).

FTSE 100 insurer Aviva has agreed to buy rival Direct Line in a £3.6bn cash and shares deal after a sweetened offer.

Direct Line’s board said that it would be minded to accept the offer of £2.75 per share, up from Aviva’s first bid of £2.50 per share that valued its FTSE 250 rival at £3.3bn.

Direct Line had argued that it could turn its performance around, after slumping in recent years. It rejected the first offer, saying it substantially undervalued the company.

The latest offer is a 73% premium to the closing price before the first bid was announced, the companies said in a joint stock market statement on Friday morning. The companies said:

The Direct Line board believes that, in addition to the attractive headline value per share, the combination would provide the opportunity to deliver significant synergies, creating substantial additional value for both sets of shareholders.

Aviva has until 5pm on – ah – Christmas day to make a firm offer or walk away.

Another Thames Water bidder emerges

French utility Suez could reportedly be brought in to manage the struggling Thames Water as part of a new £5bn bid by an infrastructure investor.

Covalis Capital has submitted a bid to Thames Water, the Financial Times reported, as it looks for new owners and tries to agree an emergency debt package to avoid temporary nationalisation.

Thames Water provides water and sewage services to 16 million customers across London and the Thames Valley in south-east England. It has been on the verge of collapse for several months, labouring under its £19bn debt pile.

The investor plans to break up Thames Water and list the remainder on the stock market, while giving the UK government a seat on the board, according to people cited by the FT. It reported:

Covalis would provide about £1bn up front on agreement of the deal, the people added. The London-based investor would then raise another £4bn from asset sales, refinancing and the listing, which is expected in two to three years’ time.

Under the deal Suez would only function as a service provider. Suez said in a statement:

At this stage, Suez’s scope of work is limited to [an] advisory mission to ensure the project’s success and address the specific challenges faced by Thames Water.

The FT reported that other potential bidders for Thames Water could be Hong Kong-based firm CK Infrastructure Holdings, the owner of Northumbrian Water, and Castle Water, which is owned by Conservative party treasurer Graham Edwards.

The agenda

  • 10am GMT: Eurozone GDP growth third estimate (third quarter; previous: 0.2% quarter-on-quarter; consensus: 0.4%)

  • 1:30pm GMT: US non-farm payrolls (November; prev.: 12,000 jobs; cons.: 200,000)

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