
-
Canada relish pressure ahead of Rugby World Cup quarter-final against Australia
-
French doctor accused of serial poisonings was at first 'above suspicion'
-
Madrid to host 2027 Champions League final
-
Ganna takes Vuelta stage 19 time trial victory, two protestors arrested
-
Postecoglou admits Spurs sacking 'not a surprise' despite European glory
-
Hamas says US 'accomplice' in Israel Qatar attack as funerals held
-
ECB seeks to ease jitters over France crisis
-
Ed Sheeran to release eighth studio album
-
Pakistan must 'focus on job' in highly charged India clash: coach
-
UN Security Council to meet over drone raid in Poland blamed on Russia
-
Scientists behind breakthrough cystic fibrosis treatment awarded top US prize
-
New Forest boss Postecoglou shoulders great expectations
-
Belgian festival axes German orchestra over Israeli conductor
-
Global stocks rise as no surprise on US inflation data
-
US consumer inflation heats up but unlikely to deter rate cut
-
ECB holds rates as France crisis looms over meeting
-
DR Congo survivors of IS-linked massacre say army, govt let them down
-
Robot dogs, flying cars: five takeaways from the Munich auto show
-
President seeks end to crisis engulfing Nepal
-
World Cup quarter-final against New Zealand is 'biggest game' for Springbok women
-
Chelsea face 74 charges over alleged breaches of agent rules
-
Poland calls emergency UN meeting over drone raid blamed on Russia
-
Stocks up before US inflation, ECB rate call
-
Police hunt shooter who killed Trump ally Charlie Kirk
-
China penalises popular app Xiaohongshu over content
-
'Double standards' over Israel sports participation: Spanish minister
-
Starmer sacks Mandelson as UK ambassador to US over Epstein links
-
'Why not?' Europeans warming up to Chinese electric cars
-
Philippines protests China nature reserve plan for Scarborough Shoal
-
Mexico, under US pressure, mulls 50% tariff on Chinese cars
-
Most markets rise as US producer price data stokes rate cut bets
-
Process 'underway' to release S. Koreans detained in US raid
-
Manhunt underway for shooter who killed Trump ally Charlie Kirk
-
French lawmakers urge social media ban for under-15s
-
China-US talks mark a 'small step' towards Xi meeting Trump
-
Schmidt demands 'start-to finish' Wallabies performance against Pumas
-
'Threat to democracy': World reacts to killing of Trump ally Kirk
-
Australia Davis Cup captain Hewitt to appeal ban, hits out at timing
-
North Korea's Kim Ju Ae 'likely successor': Seoul
-
Finnish phone ban brings focus, and chatter, back to school
-
Nepal ex-chief justice tipped to lead political transition
-
China says imposed punishment on Xiaohongshu over content
-
Britain's Baxter Dury swaps 'ponderous' indie for dance music
-
Wallabies throw rookie Edmed into Argentina cauldron
-
Israel intercepts missile fired from Yemen after deadly Sanaa strikes
-
France political crisis looms over ECB meeting
-
Against the tide: Filipinos battle rising sea on sinking island
-
Silent for 800 years, medieval organ sings again in Jerusalem
-
Canoe-kayak champion Fox out of worlds after kidney surgery
-
DuPlantis excited to be back in Tokyo after 'apocalyptic' Olympics

ECB holds rates as France crisis looms over meeting
The European Central Bank held interest rates steady again Thursday with inflation under control and trade tensions having eased, even as France's political crisis presents policymakers with a fresh challenge.
The central bank for the 20 countries that use the euro left its key deposit rate at two percent, as widely expected, with inflation hovering close to its two-percent target.
The turmoil unleashed by US President Donald Trump's tariffs blitz has also subsided since the European Union and the United States struck a deal in July, setting levies on most EU goods at 15 percent.
Announcing its decision, the ECB noted that inflation was currently around target, and "the governing council's assessment of the inflation outlook is broadly unchanged".
As expected, the bank offered no indication of its next move, saying that it was "not pre-committing to a particular rate path" and would "follow a data-dependent and meeting-by-meeting approach".
In updated projections, the ECB increased its forecast for eurozone growth in 2025 to 1.2 percent but lowered it slightly for 2026 to 1.0 percent.
It also hiked its inflation forecasts slightly for both this year and next.
At the press conference following the rate call, ECB President Christine Lagarde is likely to face questions on the escalating crisis in France, the eurozone's second-biggest economy.
Francois Bayrou quit as prime minister on Monday following his defeat in a confidence vote over an austerity budget, and was replaced just 24 hours later by Sebastien Lecornu -- France's third prime minister within a year.
The turmoil sent France's borrowing costs, a measure of investor confidence, surging above those of traditional eurozone debt laggard Italy.
Lagarde, who was French finance minister from 2007 to 2011, is likely to reiterate that she does not comment on individual eurozone member states although she might make a general call for fiscal discipline.
- French, German woes -
One key question she could be pressed on is whether the ECB is weighing the use of a special mechanism aimed at calming disorderly movements in bond markets.
This tool, known as the Transmission Protection Instrument (TPI), involves the ECB buying bonds of a eurozone country that is struggling to raise finances due to unjustified market attacks -- although not if a country is struggling due to weak fiscal discipline.
Established in 2022 during a period of instability in Italy, it has never been used.
In a nod to this, the ECB noted in its statement that the mechanism "is available to counter unwarranted, disorderly market dynamics that pose a serious threat to the transmission of monetary policy across all euro area countries".
Analysts, however, see little chance of the tool being deployed for now.
They believe it would only be used if the French crisis spread to other countries, pushing up their borrowing costs -- as happened during the eurozone debt crisis in the 2010s.
But there is little sign of this happening yet, with markets largely remaining calm so far.
Adding to the ECB's worries is an increasingly bleak outlook in Germany, the eurozone's top economy, where recent data have dashed hopes for a strong rebound.
While the ECB has not indicated its next move on rates, some analysts believe policymakers will likely keep rates on hold for some months, as they wait for the effects of previous reductions to feed through to the eurozone economy.
S.F.Warren--AMWN