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JLR to restart some manufacturing operations on Wednesday; Ineos claims UK ‘sleepwalking into deindustrialisation’ – business live | Business

JLR announces some manufacturing will restart tomorrow after cyber-attack

Newsflash: Jaguar Land Rover has announced that the phased restart of car manufacturing will begin tomomorrow after the cyber-attack which disrupted its operations for the last month.

JLR says operations will restart tomorrow at its Electric Propulsion Manufacturing Centre (EPMC), where the company builds engines, and its Battery Assembly Centre (BAC), both in the West Midlands.

The company adds that staff will begin to return on Wednesday to the company’s stamping operations in Castle Bromwich, Halewood and Solihull, UK, and other key areas of its Solihull vehicle production plant, such as its body shop, paint shop and its Logistics Operations Centre (LOC).

The Guardian reported last night that some JLR factory workers had returned to work, as the company attempts to restart production five weeks after the cyber-attack forced the company to shut down key systems, from vehicle design software, the flow of millions of parts, manufacturing and sales.

JLR says tomorrow’s restart will be “closely followed” by vehicle manufacturing in Nitra, Slovakia.

It also plans to restart Range Rover and Range Rover Sport (MLA) production lines in the Solihull facility later this week.

But we don’t, yet, have a restart date for JLR’s Halewood plant on Merseyside.

Further updates on the next steps of the controlled, phased restart will follow, including for Halewood, the company says.

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Goldman lifts gold price forecast

Goldman Sachs has hiked its forecast for the gold price at the end of next year, following the surge in bullion prices in recent weeks.

Goldman now expects gold will hit $4,900 per ounce in December 2026, up from a previous forecast of $4,300 per ounce.

They argue that the flows of money into gold from central banks, and investors buying gold-focused exchange-traded funds (ETFs), are “sticky”, meaning prices will rise higher than expected.

Gold is currently trading at $3,947 per ounce, having hit a record high of $3,977/oz overnight.

In a new analyst note, Goldman analysts Lina Thomas and Daan Struyven say they expect:

  • Central bank buying to average 80/70 tonnes in 2025/2026 as EM central banks are likely to continue the structural diversification of their reserves into gold (contributing 19pp to the 23% price increase we expect by Dec26)

  • Western ETF holdings to rise as the Fed cuts the funds rate by 100bp mid-2026 (contributing 5pp by Dec26)

  • Speculative positioning to gradually normalize

Goldman Sachs has raised its December 2026 #Gold price forecast to $4,900/oz (from $4,300 prev), citing strong & persistent inflows that have fueled a 17% rally since Aug26. The bank says continued buying from Western ETFs and CenBanks appears to be durable, prompting it to lift… pic.twitter.com/dsKR096RAD

— Holger Zschaepitz (@Schuldensuehner) October 7, 2025

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