Blog

  • ECB keeps interest rates on hold despite eurozone inflation fears | European Central Bank

    ECB keeps interest rates on hold despite eurozone inflation fears | European Central Bank

    The European Central Bank kept interest rates on hold on Thursday for the third meeting in a row despite concerns that a modest economic recovery across the eurozone will fuel inflation.

    The ECB kept its key deposit rate at 2% despite annual price growth rising to 2.2% across the 20-member euro bloc in September, up from 2% in August and 1.7% a year earlier.

    In the 27-member EU, annual inflation was 2.6% in September, up from 2.4% in August, according to Eurostat.

    The eurozone economy expanded by 0.2% in the third quarter from the previous three months, according to preliminary data from the European Commission published on Thursday.

    The increase was higher than the 0.1% City analysts expected of 0.1%, with the rise driven mainly by strong performances in Spain, which expanded by 0.6%, and a 0.5% increase in France.

    The ECB rate decision follows a divergence across the eurozone in prices growth, which the central bank is expected to maintain at about 2%.

    Cyprus kept inflation at zero, while it increased modestly to 1.1% in France and 1.8% in Italy and Greece. However, Romania reported an inflation rate of 8.6%, to add to Estonia’s 5.3% and Slovakia’s 4.6%.

    The ECB has said it is concerned by the high level of inflation from services, food and energy. However, it has trimmed its main deposit rate to 2% over the past year and a half – about half the rate in the UK and US.

    skip past newsletter promotion

    The Bank of England is widely expected to keep its headline rate at 4% when its policymakers meet on 6 November. On Wednesday the US Federal Reserve trimmed its benchmark rate by a quarter point to a range of 3.75% to 4%, the second cut this year.

    Continue Reading

  • The Warehouse Triad: Connecting People, Process and Technology for Unlocked Potential with D365 Supply Chain Management

    The Warehouse Triad: Connecting People, Process and Technology for Unlocked Potential with D365 Supply Chain Management

    The U.S. warehousing industry faces growing challenges, including severe labor shortages and turnover rates. Many organizations also underuse powerful capabilities within Microsoft Dynamics 365 Supply Chain Management that can unlock…

    Continue Reading

  • Integrating physicochemical laws into future AI models for better drug design

    Integrating physicochemical laws into future AI models for better drug design

    Proteins play a key role not only in the body, but also in medicine: they either serve as active ingredients, such as enzymes or antibodies, or they are target structures for drugs. The first step in developing new therapies is…

    Continue Reading

  • Raman-based tool could advance continuous vaccine production

    Raman-based tool could advance continuous vaccine production

    Study demonstrates the non-invasive tool’s potential for real-time monitoring of cytomegalovirus (CMV) viral particles.

    Raman PAT vaccine - ampoules of liquid on a production line

    A new Raman spectroscopy-based process analytical tool can continuously monitor vaccine quality during production, according…

    Continue Reading

  • New on Java Realms: Interview with a mob

    New on Java Realms: Interview with a mob

    With the release of The Copper Age game drop, some of our maps have become obsolete – thankfully our mapmakers have worked hard to update their maps, ensuring our catalog still has plenty of our classics still playable, several with…

    Continue Reading

  • Stumped – New Zealand captain Sophie Devine on incredible ODI career

    Stumped – New Zealand captain Sophie Devine on incredible ODI career

    Available for over a year

    Alison Mitchell, Jim Maxwell and Charu Sharma are joined by New Zealand captain Sophie Devine who has just retired from ODI’s following the White Ferns exit from the Women’s World Cup. She looks back on her career,…

    Continue Reading

  • Just a moment…

    Just a moment…

    Continue Reading

  • Wallabies team confirmed to play England at Twickenham

    Wallabies team confirmed to play England at Twickenham

    Wallabies coaches have confirmed the team to play England in London on Saturday evening local time.

    Tighthead prop Taniela Tupou returns to the starting side for the first time since the first Bledisloe Cup Test in Auckland, combining with Angus…

    Continue Reading

  • Scientists turn common semiconductor into a superconductor

    Scientists turn common semiconductor into a superconductor

    For decades, researchers have tried to create semiconductor materials that can also act as superconductors — materials capable of carrying electric current without resistance. Semiconductors, which form the foundation of modern computer chips…

    Continue Reading

  • Shell finance chief flags uncertainty in timing of new global LNG supply

    Shell finance chief flags uncertainty in timing of new global LNG supply

    LONDON, Oct 30 (Reuters) – The finance chief of Shell (SHEL.L), opens new tab, the world’s biggest LNG trader, said on Thursday that the exact timing of new LNG projects starting up around the world is in flux, which could create uncertainty about long-term supply.

    The comments by Shell CFO Sinead Gorman suggest a note of caution as forecasts point to ample LNG supply in future, although she was not concerned about the European Union’s move this month to ban Russian liquefied natural gas (LNG) imports from January 2027, a year earlier than planned.

    Sign up here.

    Some estimates see LNG supplies jumping many times over by then, led by U.S. and Qatari volumes. The International Energy Agency expects around 184 million metric tons per year of added global net supply of LNG by 2030.
    “We understand why the (EU) proposals have been put in place, and frankly, we think the LNG market is resilient, regardless of what rules are in place as well. We believe the market will find a balance at the end of the day,” Gorman told reporters on a media call after Shell beat third-quarter earnings expectations.
    New LNG projects are, however, seeing delays as they face rising construction costs, with U.S. LNG exporters seeking to renegotiate deals to cover higher costs, while some big LNG projects are being delayed due to security concerns, for example in Mozambique.

    “Supply growth on the horizon and those timings are uncertain. You’ve seen those move quite a few times between years,” Gorman said.

    Shell expects global demand for LNG to grow up 60% by 2040 and wants to boost its LNG sales by 4% to 5% a year throughout this decade. It sold more than 65 million metric tons last year.

    Gorman said prices of $11-$12 per million British thermal units (MMBTU) during the third quarter had allowed Europe to restock gas inventories.

    TotalEnergies (TTEF.PA), opens new tab, which has sold around 28 million metric tons of LNG this year so far, said on Thursday it expected European gas prices to stay at around $11 per MMTBU throughout the winter.
    Talking about the short-term, the finance chief of Norway’s Equinor (EQNR.OL), opens new tab, which overtook Russia as Europe’s biggest gas supplier in 2022, said on Wednesday that Europe’s gas market was tighter than many might think this winter.

    Equinor nevertheless lowered its long-term gas price outlook, to $8 per MMBTU in 2030 from around $9 per MMBTU, given its expectations for new volumes coming to market.

    Reporting by Shadia Nasralla; Editing by Susan Fenton

    Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles., opens new tab

    Continue Reading