The French economy grew less than first thought in the third quarter at a revised 0.3 percent, down from the initial estimate of 0.4 percent, the national statistics institute INSEE said Friday.
INSEE said the downward revision reflected lower industrial output and the inclusion of final sales figures.
Full StoryEuropean stocks were higher Wednesday and the euro was steady as markets digested a mixed set of U.S. economic data in subdued trade ahead of the Christmas holiday break.
Dealers said that after a volatile and dramatic year driven by fears the Eurozone debt crisis will tip the world into recession, the tone has turned slightly more positive, driven mainly by recent U.S. figures.
Full StoryRussia announced plans on Thursday to place up to $7.0 billion (5.4 billion euros') worth of Eurobonds next year depending on market conditions and the pace of Europe's recovery from its sovereign debt crisis.
"We will be placing them in parts depending on the situation on the market," news agencies quoted Finance Minister Anton Siluanov as saying.
Full StoryOil prices rose above $99 a barrel Thursday amid signs of growing U.S. crude demand and concerns about global supply.
Benchmark crude rose 93 cents to $99.60 per barrel in morning trading in New York. Brent crude rose 48 cents to $108.19 per barrel in London.
Full StoryWeekly claims for U.S. unemployment benefits fell to the lowest level since April 2008 last week, the Labor Department said Thursday, yet another sign that the jobs market is in recovery.
The data was better than most economists expected, with claims hitting 364,000 last week versus the consensus estimate of 380,000.
Full StoryHSBC said Wednesday it had sold its private banking business in Japan to Credit Suisse for $2.7 billion, as part of its broader restructuring to reduce costs and focus on growth.
The sale is the latest in a string of transactions since HSBC announced massive cost-cutting measures earlier this year, including plans to save up to $3.5 billion by 2013 and to axe 30,000 jobs globally.
Full StoryAsian markets enjoyed some Christmas cheer Wednesday as strong U.S. housing data and a successful bond issue by Spain added to upbeat business and consumer sentiment in Germany.
Dealers appeared to have overcome their nervousness seen earlier this week following news that North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il had died, leaving the nuclear-armed rogue nation in a state of uncertainty.
Full StoryEuropean stocks and the euro rose further on Wednesday after the ECB moved to boost lending and Spanish borrowing costs dropped, easing tensions over the Eurozone debt crisis, traders said.
The European Central Bank said it had injected a record 489.19 billion euros ($641 billion) into Eurozone banks via its first-ever three-year refinancing operation.
Full StoryIranian officials, lawmakers and media on Wednesday worriedly snapped their focus on to their country's sanctions-hit economy amid a sudden and accelerating plunge in the currency.
The currency, the rial, was trading at 15,800 to the dollar -- its lowest point ever, and an indication of the fragility of the economy as ramped-up Western sanctions bit.
Full StoryThe EU is short of a target for loans to the IMF destined for a Eurozone bailout, with Britain leaving its EU partners in the lurch for the second time this month.
Eurozone chief Jean-Claude Juncker said the 17 countries that share the single currency pledged 150 billion euros ($195 billion) in bilateral loans for the International Monetary Fund late on Monday. Europe hopes the money can help stabilize the debt-laden euro area
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