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Friday newspaper round-up: US shutdown, Autumn Budget, Ryanair...

(Sharecast News) - Senior officials inside Donald Trump's administration have acknowledged the federal government shutdown, without an end in sight, could hurt the US economy. The damage could be worth billions of dollars each week, according to analysts. [...] "We estimate that each week of shutdown would reduce US GDP growth by 0.1 percentage points (ppt) in Q4 (in annualized terms), translating into a $7 billion weekly hit to the economy," a report by EY Parthenon said, citing the effect of lack of pay for furloughed federal workers, delayed government procurement of goods and services and decline in demand. - The Guardian Britain's fiscal watchdog is poised to deliver a £20bn blow to Rachel Reeves by downgrading its forecasts ahead of the Budget. The embattled Chancellor will on Friday receive initial predictions from the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) about the state of the economy, which will underpin her autumn tax and spending plan set to be unveiled on Nov 26. Ms Reeves is set to be plunged even deeper in the red because the OBR is widely expected to admit its assumptions about UK productivity gains have been too optimistic. - The Telegraph

Ryanair could cancel up to 600 flights a day next week due to French air traffic control (ATC) strikes, the airline has claimed. The company's chief executive, Michael O'Leary, has reiterated demands to the EU to protect overflights in a long-running campaign to minimise the disruption from ATC strikes. The strikes mean flights from the UK to France and holiday destinations such as Spain, Italy and Greece will be affected, as those routes overfly France. - The Guardian

The government can raise as much as £45 billion in non-inflationary taxes in line with its manifesto pledges at next month's budget, according to an American investment bank. Economists at Morgan Stanley said that Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, could raise £25-45 billion to cover a fiscal deficit through a blitz of taxes targeting pension savings, a reform of council tax, gambling taxes, and a series of smaller changes removing tax loopholes for capital gains and national insurance contributions. - The Times

The owner of Selfridges has warned of a slowdown in wealthy foreigners visiting London to shop after suffering a £130m sales hit. Cambridge Retail Group (CRG), which controls the British luxury department store, said "reduced numbers of international visitors coming to the UK and shopping" led to revenues tumbling last year to £1.44bn versus £1.57bn a year earlier. The warning will fuel concerns over Britain's luxury sector after it was dealt a blow from a government decision to axe tax-free shopping for tourists. - The Telegraph

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Thursday newspaper round-up: Post Office, Ben & Jerry's, Anthropic
(Sharecast News) - The Post Office has avoided a fine over a data breach that resulted in the mistaken online publication of the names and addresses of more than 500 post office operators it had been pursuing during the Horizon IT scandal. The Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) has reprimanded the Post Office over the breach, in which the company's press office accidentally published an unredacted version of a legal settlement document with the operators on its website. - Guardian
Tuesday newspaper round-up: Zipcar, BP, Volvo/Polestar
(Sharecast News) - As the battle lines harden amid Germany's intensifying pressure on the European Commission to scrap the 2035 ban on production of new petrol and diesel cars, two Swedish car companies, Volvo and Polestar, are leading the campaign to persuade Brussels to stick to the date. They argue such a move is a desperate attempt to paper over the cracks in the German car industry, adding that it will not just prolong take up of electric vehicles but inadvertently hand the advantage to China. - Guardian
Monday newspaper round-up: Black Friday, Gail's, Evri, Amazon
(Sharecast News) - Shoppers held back from visiting high streets over Black Friday, data shows, amid fears weak consumer spending will put the brakes on economic growth in 2026. Visitors to all UK shopping destinations were down 2% on Friday and 7.2% compared with the equivalent days last year, according to the monitoring company MRI Software, with locations near central London offices among the few to experience a lift in visits. - Guardian
Monday newspaper round-up: Black Friday, Gail's, Evri, Amazon
(Sharecast News) - Shoppers held back from visiting high streets over Black Friday, data shows, amid fears weak consumer spending will put the brakes on economic growth in 2026. Visitors to all UK shopping destinations were down 2% on Friday and 7.2% compared with the equivalent days last year, according to the monitoring company MRI Software, with locations near central London offices among the few to experience a lift in visits. - Guardian

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