UK economy shrinks in January; stocks and euro jump on German debt deal – business live | Business

UK economy shrinks in January; stocks and euro jump on German debt deal – business live | Business

‘Germany is back,’ says Merz, as he wins key support for debt deal

Germany’s incoming chancellor Friedrich Merz said he had secured the crucial backing of the Green party for a massive increase in state borrowing and reform of debt rules, clearing the way for the outgoing parliament to approve it next week.

Merz’s conservatives and the Social Democrats, who are in negotiations to form a government after the national election last month, have proposed a €500bn fund for infrastructure and sweeping changes to borrowing rules to bolster defence and revive growth in Europe’s largest economy.

With the support of the Greens, they now have the two-thirds majority necessary to pass constitutional amendments, with a vote scheduled for Tuesday. Merz had justified the need to push the package through the outgoing parliament after recent shifts in US policy under president Donald Trump, warning that a hostile Russia and an unreliable US could leave Europe exposed.

Merz said at a press conference:

It is a clear message to our partners .. but also to the enemies of our freedom: We are capable of defending ourselves.

Germany is back. Germany is making a significant contribution to the defence of freedom and peace in Europe.

News of the deal lifted eurozone government bond yields, shares across Europe and the euro, with hopes that the borrowing plan will be a boost to all of Europe.

Germany’s benchmark Dax stock index rose by almost 2%, while the mid- and small-cap indexes rose more than 3% each. The euro rose by 0.5% against the dollar, taking its gains so far this month to 5%.

The compromise reached with the Greens includes an allocation of €100bn for the climate and economic transformation fund from the €500bn earmarked for infrastructure, Merz said.

It also includes a change to the constitution that would see spending on defence, civil and disaster protection, intelligence services, information security exempt from borrowing limits – the controversial Schuldenbremse or debt brake – if they exceed 1% of economic output.

The reforms will mark a rollback of those strict debt rules, imposed after the 2008 global financial crisis that have since criticised as being outdated and putting Germany into a fiscal straitjacket.

Carsten Brzeski, global head of macro at ING, said:

With today’s plan, the debt brake might not be entirely dead but rather buried alive.

The only limiting fiscal rule for the German government will be the (EU) Stability and Growth Pact. And we know from past experiences that these rules can be soft as butter if needed.

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Wall Street rallies but not enough to prevent fourth week of losses

On Wall Street, US stocks are also trading higher but pared some gains after the Michigan consumer sentiment survey was released.

The headline index plunged to 57.9, from 64.7, and now sits at its lowest level since November 2022. The survey also showed long-term inflation expectations rising to 3.9%, the highest level since 1993.

The Dow Jones has gained 261 points, or 0.6%, to 41,074 while the Nasdaq is 1.4% ahead and the S&P 500 has bounced back 1%, following yesterday’s 1.4% slide.

One bit of uncertainty hanging over Wall Street may be clearing after the Senate made moves to prevent a possible partial shutdown of the US government, with a deadline looming at midnight. But the escalating trade war is a persistent worry for investors.

The stock rally won’t be enough to keep Wall Street from a fourth straight losing week, which would be its longest such streak since August.

The University of Michigan sentiment survey is noisy, but to have long-term inflation expectations reaching the highest since 1993 is problematic. pic.twitter.com/4jrAS4kNif

— Lisa Abramowicz (@lisaabramowicz1) March 14, 2025

The University of Michigan has just released updated sentiment data segmented by political affiliation, showing a decline across all groups: pic.twitter.com/6e7I0JwksT

— Michael McDonough (@M_McDonough) March 14, 2025

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