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  • US weekly jobless claims increase, more people collecting unemployment checks, economists estimate – Reuters

    1. US weekly jobless claims increase, more people collecting unemployment checks, economists estimate  Reuters
    2. Wall Street Analysis: Uptick in U.S. Initial Jobless Claims Signals ‘Internal Strain’ in Labor Market!  富途牛牛
    3. Unemployment Insurance (UI) Claims  Economic Policy Institute
    4. US Initial Jobless Claims Rose Last Week, State Data Suggest  Bloomberg.com
    5. Unemployment Claims Are Rising — What It Means and How to Protect Yourself  moneywise.com

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  • Reese Witherspoon pens sweet tribute for son Deacon on special day

    Reese Witherspoon pens sweet tribute for son Deacon on special day

    Reese Witherspoon marks son Deacon’s special day

    Reese Witherspoon is celebrating her son Deacon’s another trip around the sun!

    The Good Morning actress took to her Instagram account on Thursday to mark her son…

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  • Can the plastic recycling industry be saved?

    Can the plastic recycling industry be saved?

    MaryLou CostaTechnology Reporter

    Getty Images A man adds an empty plastic bottle to a large pile of plastic bottles.Getty Images

    There’s no shortage of plastic to recycle

    In the plastic recycling industry, the casualties keep coming.

    Waste management company Biffa’s Sunderland plant closed in February after opening in 2022 at a cost of £7m, while rival Viridor closed its Avonmouth plant in 2022, Skelmersdale in 2023 and confirmed this summer that its Rochester plant would close, too.

    Like falling dominoes, plastic recycling plant closures have been endemic across Europe too: another big name, Veolia, will close its two German operations this year, while seven plastic recyclers closed in the Netherlands last year.

    Meanwhile, companies Borealis, Dow and Nester have all dropped plans to construct new plastic recycling plants in Europe.

    Industry body Plastic Recyclers Europe equates this to the loss of nearly one million tonnes of plastic recycling capacity since 2023.

    “Without decisive political action, Europe will replace its recycling industry with dependency on unsustainable imports and growing volumes of waste, undermining both its economic resilience and its climate leadership,” the organisation told the BBC in a statement.

    And more closures are likely, warns James McLeary, managing director for Biffa’s polymers division, as the industry here and in Europe faces its most challenging year yet. High energy and labour costs here are two factors, in parallel with the fact that sourcing virgin and recycled plastic from Asia is currently cheaper than buying European recycled plastic.

    Plastic recycling plant closures are affecting the US as well, also prompted by the low price of virgin plastic, causing the country to miss its recycled content targets, as S&P Global reports.

    “There’s a big global dependence building on Asian plants, and we then have the situation where (plant operators in the UK and Europe) are going to make very tough decisions. Either they run their plants at a point where they’re literally not making anything, or they decide to close,” explains Mr McLeary, who is based in County Durham.

    Getty Images A man walks down a massive pile of plastic bottles in BangladeshGetty Images

    The UK alone exports hundreds of thousands of tonnes of plastic waste

    A dependence on exporting plastic waste also hasn’t helped. The UK exported around 600,000 tonnes of plastic waste last year, according to environmental analysts at ENDS Report – 5% more than in 2023.

    Loopholes in current UK legislation mean plastic waste collectors are inadvertently incentivised to export rather than process domestically. Meanwhile, manufacturers using plastic packaging are still inclined to use cheaper virgin plastic from abroad, and stomach being taxed for it.

    Ahmed Detta, CEO and founder of plastic waste recycler Enviroo, is frustrated by the flaws and contradictions that he feels are plaguing the industry and disrupting the goal of creating a circular economy that keeps materials in use for as long as possible.

    “For me, a circular economy is a win-win. Every single person in that journey has to have some benefit, and that’s not working,” says Mr Detta, who is based in London.

    “Brands aren’t aligning with the circular economy. They’re saying, ‘why should I buy recycled material when it’s cheaper for me to pay the fine for the plastics packaging tax, than actually pay for recycled materials? No one is saying, ‘let’s unite’.”

    Biffa A man in an orange hi-viz jacket stands at a conveyor belt carrying squashed plastic bottles.Biffa

    It’s tough for UK based recyclers to make money

    So concerned is RECOUP, a UK-based plastic recycling independent authority, that its head of policy and infrastructure, Steve Morgan, warns: “We are almost witnessing the demise of plastic recycling as we know it, unless we have some interventions. There’s no way a lot of recyclers in the UK can compete.”

    UK regulations have benefited foreign markets more than they have the UK, and serious reform is needed, Mr Morgan argues.

    “There are an awful lot of fantastic technologies developing. But it’s a scale up of those and how they can actually make money, to continue to exist and then also thrive, is the secondary thing,” says Mr Morgan, who is based in Peterborough.

    “The commercial viability long term is just not there at the moment. There are some really good people producing technologies that we couldn’t even dream of 10 years ago. But I just feel we’re not going to see any real change in the next two to three years without some intervention.”

    RECOUP is urging the UK government to introduce a single plastic recycling certification scheme aimed at reducing the export of plastic waste and making more companies more inclined to use recycled packaging.

    Mr Morgan is optimistic that a UK government consultation this year will seriously consider what changes should be implemented to save the plastic recycling industry.

    Plastics Europe Wearing a white top, Virginia Janssens leans her arm on the back of her chair as she turns to face the camera.Plastics Europe

    Europe is in danger of falling behind in plastic recycling says Virginia Janssens

    Packaging reforms are indeed being implemented, alongside £10bn of investment in new plastic sorting and processing facilities, according to a spokesperson from the UK Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA).

    They also say the Deposit Return Scheme, launching in October 2027, will create higher quality material for recycling, as consumers will be encouraged to return drinks bottles and cans to collection points to collect the small deposit they will have paid on purchase. The government has also convened a Circular Economy Taskforce.

    “Our collection and packaging reforms will support UK-based recycling, meaning we can reduce our dependency on exports of plastic waste,” says the spokesperson. “The export of waste is subject to strict controls set out in UK legislation.”

    Over in Brussels, Virginia Janssens is the managing director at Plastics Europe, which represents plastic producers, including those with recycling operations and that use recycled materials. She’s concerned that the plastic recycling industry is set to flourish outside Europe.

    “Business will go where it makes sense and where it’s cheapest to build. If those big production plans are built somewhere else, with huge investments of billions, they’re not all of a sudden then going to decide to go back and build one in Europe,” says Ms Janssens.

    “It will have a huge effect on our value chain. It would set us back to 20 years ago, when we would have to incinerate or use landfill more, and that would be a real shame. Nobody wants this.”

    But there are some bright spots in an otherwise struggling industry.

    Biffa, for example, has recently acquired bottle manufacturer Esterform, which uses recycled PET.

    Meanwhile, Enviroo recently secured £58m to build a new recycling facility in the north-west of England, specialising in converting PET drink bottles into a recycled granulate that can be used in food packaging.

    Due to be operational by 2026, the plant is expected to process up to 35,000 tonnes of plastic annually.

    Mr Detta believes being a specialist in an industry of generalists, and going back to the fundamentals of plastic recycling, will be his key to success.

    “I’m not here to tell you I’ve got the most innovative technology. No – I’ve looked at the real, hardcore problems and said, ‘What is it that I need to resolve?”

    Plastic Energy, meanwhile, is successfully converting plastic waste into pyrolysis oil that can be used to make food and medical grade plastic. Headquartered in London, the company has plants in Spain, France and the Netherlands.

    CEO Ian Temperton is preparing to benefit from an anticipated under supply of recycled plastic as recycled content targets kick in across Europe: by 2040, plastic drinks bottles must contain at least 65% recycled content.

    “We’re about developing and continuing to enhance the technology that deals with waste plastics. Having partners commit to new investments over the next couple of years is going to be a bit harder, but it’s very clear the market will be very significantly under-supplied against any version of the targets,” says Mr Temperton.

    “So I will keep my team focused on the best technology for when that comes.”

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  • Meta Layoffs Included Employees Who Monitored Risks to User Privacy – The New York Times

    1. Meta Layoffs Included Employees Who Monitored Risks to User Privacy  The New York Times
    2. Exclusive: Meta slashes jobs in its AI operations  Axios
    3. Meta lays off 600 from ‘bloated’ AI unit as Wang cements leadership  CNBC
    4. Meta tells some employees their jobs are being replaced by tech — read the memo  businessinsider.com
    5. Reddit Sues Perplexity for Alleged Illegal Data Scraping  Analytics India Magazine

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  • Booker prize launches £50,000 children’s award | Books

    Booker prize launches £50,000 children’s award | Books

    The Booker prize foundation has launched a major new literary award, the Children’s Booker prize, offering £50,000 for the best fiction written for readers aged eight to 12.

    The new award will launch in 2026, with the first winner announced in…

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  • Lily Allen describes the breakdown of a marriage in West End Girl

    Lily Allen describes the breakdown of a marriage in West End Girl

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

    Lily Allen is, perhaps above all, open. In her 2018 memoir My Thoughts Exactly, she writes about, in no particular order:…

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  • Max Verstappen boosted by F1 title charge but knows he and Red Bull ‘need to be perfect’ to overhaul McLaren drivers

    Max Verstappen boosted by F1 title charge but knows he and Red Bull ‘need to be perfect’ to overhaul McLaren drivers

    Max Verstappen knows full well that he and Red Bull will “need to be perfect” from this weekend’s Mexico City Grand Prix to the season finale in Abu Dhabi if he is to beat McLaren rivals Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris to the title.

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  • Car production slumps to a 73-year low after JLR cyber-attack | Automotive industry

    Car production slumps to a 73-year low after JLR cyber-attack | Automotive industry

    Car production in British factories slumped in September to the lowest level for the month since 1952 after Jaguar Land Rover was hit by an unprecedented cyber-attack.

    JLR, Britain’s largest automotive employer, was forced to shut down all its computer systems at the start of September and was unable to make another car until early October.

    That contributed to a 27% slump in total UK car production in September compared with the same month a year earlier, according to the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT), a lobby group.

    Car output dropped to 51,100, from 70,000 in September 2024, while output for the first nine months of the year was down by 8%. Van production has also slumped by nearly 40% so far this year, after the closure by the Vauxhall owner Stellantis of its factory in Luton.

    “September’s performance comes as no surprise given the total loss of production at Britain’s biggest automotive employer after a cyber incident,” said Mike Hawes, the SMMT’s chief executive. “While the situation has improved, the sector remains under immense pressure.”

    Automotive industry bosses and workers had been talking for more than a year of a “low-volume crisis” afflicting the sector, even before the JLR hack. The global automotive industry is under pressure in part because of a huge increase in competition from China and the need to invest in upgrading factories to produce electric cars. At the same time, higher interest rates and inflation have dented consumer appetite for new cars.

    The JLR hack added to the industry’s woes. The Cyber Monitoring Centre, a non-profit group, this week estimated that it has been the most costly hack in British history because of its widespread effects on the UK supply chain. The group estimated costs to the UK economy of about £1.9bn.

    Suppliers have been able to restart work as JLR goes through the careful job of ramping up demand and avoiding further costly disruption. One manufacturing executive said the ramp-up has gone better than expected, thanks in part to planning done earlier by JLR in partnership with larger suppliers.

    The car industry is also bracing for further disruption if a Dutch government takeover of the Chinese-owned chipmaker Nexperia affects supply. Germany’s car industry this week warned that “the situation could lead to considerable production restrictions in the near future”, after China retaliated by banning exports of finished products.

    The sales slump has driven the UK industry into repeated – and unwanted – comparisons with the 1950s, when British citizens still faced rationing after the second world war and the UK market was dominated by the British Motor Corporation, formed from the merger of Austin and Morris.

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  • Prostate cancer drug that can halve death risk to be offered to thousands in England | Prostate cancer

    Prostate cancer drug that can halve death risk to be offered to thousands in England | Prostate cancer

    Thousands of men with advanced prostate cancer in England are to be offered a drug that can halve the risk of death.

    In guidance published on Friday, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) gave the green light to…

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  • The impact of interest: How loan rates shape firm investment

    Central banks have moved interest rates sharply in recent years, but the link from policy rates to corporate investment remains a black box. Do cheaper loans actually cause firms to invest more? If so, by how much and for which type of firms? Aggregate evidence indicates large effects on investment (e.g. Christiano et al. 2005) and highlights the role of lower credit costs (e.g. Gertler and Karadi 2015). However, these responses encompass many factors, including indirect effects such as demand, making it difficult to isolate the direct impact of financing costs. For policy purposes, it is crucial to pin down the size of this direct channel and the heterogeneity that makes transmission state-dependent over time (Gnewuch and Zhang 2025). Additionally, recent models emphasise the importance of the direct borrowing cost channel for heterogeneous households (Auclert et al. 2020) and firms (Koby and Wolf 2020).

    A survey approach: Confronting firms with hypothetical loan rate changes

    In a new paper (Best et al. 2025), we present novel evidence on the micro and macro effects of interest rates on investment. Using hypothetical vignettes, we elicit firms’ investment adjustments to loan rate changes, thereby isolating the direct borrowing cost channel. Open-ended responses reveal why some firms do not adjust and the extent to which the borrowing cost channel features in managers’ views of monetary policy. Additional vignettes, survey questions, and linked financial statements enrich the analysis. By embedding this in a large German firm panel, we can compare vignette responses with firms’ behaviour around actual monetary policy shocks. We use the ifo Business Survey, a monthly survey of a representative sample of German firms typically answered by C-level executives (Hennrich et al. 2023). Our main sample includes more than 3,200 firms.

    Firms’ investment adjustment to loan rate changes

    In December 2023, we asked firms to imagine a reduction in loan rates of 0.5, 1, 3, or 4 percentage points lasting two years, while holding everything else constant. This setup isolates the causal effect of loan rates – the key marginal cost of external finance for most German firms – on investment. The rate change applies to loans of all maturities and is defined relative to firms’ current expected rates. At the time, the ECB’s main refinancing rate was 4.5%, which was expected to remain elevated over the next two years. Panel A of Figure 1 shows the average adjustment to firms’ investment plans over the subsequent two years, expressed in percent.

    Figure 1 Semi-elasticity of investment with respect to loan rate changes

    Notes: Panel A: average investment adjustment in percent following hypothetical change in loan rate; Investment adjustment winsorized at 100%; sample restricted to firms that initially planned to invest in 2024 and 2025. Green dot shows the response of aggregate corporate investment in the first year after a monetary policy shock (with shaded 90% confidence interval), estimated using local projections and high-frequency identified monetary policy shocks (Jarociński and Karadi 2020); response scaled to a 1 percentage point reduction in firms’ cost of external financing. Panel B: share of firms adjusting their investment plans following hypothetical change in loan rate for firms with and without existing investment plans for the respective year.

    A one percentage point decrease in the loan rate raises planned investment by approximately 6% in the following year and by about 7% the year after that. A similar response is observed for a half-percentage point cut, rising to 12-15% for reductions in loan rates of 3-4 percentage points. This implies a lower elasticity for larger rate changes. In comparison, the overall monetary policy effect on corporate investment – capturing additional channels – amounts to about 15% in the first year following a shock that lowers borrowing costs by 1 percentage point. Thus, the total monetary policy effect is roughly twice the size of the impact of borrowing costs alone.

    There is substantial heterogeneity underlying the average investment adjustment. While most firms do not adjust investment at all, adjusting firms significantly revise plans by about 18-30%. Among firms initially planning to invest, the share of adjusters ranges from 30% for a 0.5 percentage point cut to 49% for a 4 percentage point cut. This percentage is much lower among firms without investment plans, which is consistent with fixed adjustment costs (see Panel B of Figure 1).

    We ask firms with existing investment plans that do not adjust their investment to explain their reasoning in an open-ended text format. Two narratives stand out. First, about 37% of firms argue that they have sufficient internal funds and prefer to use them for investment, in line with the pecking order theory (Myers 1984). Second, about 39% of firms report that they are not at the margin to adjust their investment plans. This could reflect either a low marginal return on capital, which is consistent with a lack of additional profitable investment opportunities, or a high marginal return on capital, in which case investment is driven by capacity or technological requirements rather than financing costs.

    Further heterogeneity analyses confirm the key role of the firms’ financial conditions for their interest rate sensitivity. Firms relying more on external funds, that have recently negotiated loans with banks, or that report financial constraints are more likely to increase investment following a reduction in the loan rate. Additionally, firms facing shortages of skilled labour and those operating in industries with more durable capital goods adjust their investment more strongly.

    In a follow-up vignette, we elicit how firms adjust their required returns on new investments, or ‘hurdle rates’, in response to changes in the loan rate. Consistent with prior evidence, hurdle rates are sticky (Graham 2022, Gormsen and Huber 2023): most firms do not adjust their hurdle rates after a loan rate cut. Although hurdle rate adjustment is strongly correlated with investment adjustment, firms are more likely to adjust investment than hurdle rates. This suggests that the insensitivity of hurdle rates to transitory loan rate changes does not necessarily impede investment.

    The macroeconomic relevance of the direct borrowing cost channel

    We assess the role of the direct borrowing cost channel for monetary policy using two approaches. First, in a later survey wave, we ask firms an open-text question about the discussions and considerations that typically arise in their investment planning when the ECB changes its key rate. Notably, more than half of the firms do not discuss the implications of monetary policy changes for their investment plans. A quarter refer to concrete transmission channels, with one dominating: 83% cite the direct interest rate channel via external financing, suggesting a crucial role of the mechanism we consider in our vignette for aggregate dynamics. Twelve percent mention changes in demand due to interest rate changes, and 11% refer to general-equilibrium effects.  Both are especially common among firms with high business cycle attachment, consistent with models of rational inattention.

    Figure 2 Perceived channels of monetary policy

    Note: Hand-coded perceived channels of monetary policy elicited in an open-ended question. Subsample of firms that clearly indicate which channel(s) they have in mind.

    Second, we leverage the survey’s panel dimension and examine whether responses to the one-time vignette regarding changes in borrowing costs predict dynamics following monetary policy shocks. Specifically, we analyse the monthly output dynamics of manufacturing firms in our sample in response to high-frequency identified monetary policy shocks over the past 23 years (Jarociński and Karadi 2020). Figure 3 shows that firms that do not adjust investment in the vignette also exhibit lower output responses after monetary policy shocks. This relationship is robust to many potential confounders. This underscores the importance of firms’ investment sensitivity to interest rates for the monetary transmission mechanism.

    Figure 3 Production response to monetary policy shock by interest sensitivity

    Notes: Impulse response functions at monthly frequency of cumulative production to a 1 pp monetary policy shock (Jarociński and Karadi 2020) estimated using local projections over 01/1999-12/2021. The sample is balanced over the horizons. Orange: firms adjusting investment in the vignettes. Blue: firms not adjusting investment in the vignettes. The sample is restricted to manufacturing firms that planned to invest in 2024 and 2025. Shaded areas represent the 90% confidence level. Standard errors are two-way clustered at the firm and the 2-digit-industry-by-month level.

    Policy implications

    There are at least three important policy implications. First, many firms do not adjust investment after borrowing costs decreases because they report having sufficient internal funds. In periods of heightened uncertainty (e.g. geopolitical risk), firms build precautionary cash buffers, which further reduces their sensitivity to loan rate changes. Second, firms’ sensitivity to borrowing costs decreases with the size of the change (e.g. due to managerial constraints). Thus, monetary policy becomes less effective when it has to counter weak demand. Lastly, many firms do not have the general-equilibrium effects of monetary policy in mind, consistent with ‘GE neglect’. As a result, firms’ demand may be lifted by monetary policy without managers linking it to policy, making transmission slower.

    References

    Auclert, A, M Rognlie and L Straub (2020), “Micro jumps, macro humps: Monetary policy and business cycles in an estimated HANK model”, NBER Working Paper 26647.

    Best, L, B Born M Menkhoff (2025), “The impact of interest: Firms’ investment sensitivity to interest rates”, CEPR Discussion Paper 20695.

    Christiano, L J, M Eichenbaum and C L Evans (2005), “Nominal rigidities and the dynamic effects of a shock to monetary policy”, Journal of Political Economy 113(1): 1–45.

    Gertler, M and P Karadi (2015), “Monetary policy surprises, credit costs, and economic activity”, American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics 7(1): 44–76.

    Gnewuch, M and D Zhang (2025), “Lumpy investment matters for the (heterogeneous) transmission of monetary policy”, VoxEU.org, 27 January.

    Gormsen, N J and K Huber (2023), “Firms’ required returns to capital and the missing investment puzzle”, VoxEU.org, 10 August.

    Graham, J R (2022), “Presidential address: corporate finance and reality”, Journal of Finance 77(4): 1975-2049.

    Hennrich, J, S Sauer and K Wohlrabe (2023), “Who reports the mood in German boardrooms? Evidence from the ifo business survey”, CESifo Working Paper 10571.

    Jarociński, M and P Karadi (2020), “Deconstructing Monetary Policy Surprises—The Role of Information Shocks”, American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics 12(2): 1-43.

    Koby, Y and C K Wolf (2020), “Aggregation in heterogeneous-firm models: Theory and measurement”, mimeo, Princeton University.

    Myers, S C (1984), “Capital structure puzzle”, Journal of Finance 39: 575-592.

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