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Britain now faces a 50-50 chance of a recession next year amid the "toxic combination" of a housing market slump and the fallout from the credit crunch, experts have warned.
UK recession forecast put at 50-50
Sterling faces the risk of a "perfect storm" next year as the housing bubble pops, interest rates tumble, and dwindling City revenues following the credit crunch expose the grim state of Britain's overstretched trade accounts.
Sterling's outlook hit by credit crisis
Shoppers have finally hit the high street and are forecast to spend nearly 30pc more in the week to Christmas then they did last year, but retailers fear the rush could prove to be too little too late.
Early sales lead to Christmas shopping rush
Growth in the UK will slow markedly next year and is unlikely to see a recovery until after 2009, the CBI warned today, as the credit crunch and soaring energy prices continue to cloud the outlook for the world economy.
CBI predicts a grim few years ahead for the UK economy
China loosened its controls on overseas investments yesterday by opening the door to its banks to invest in British stocks and mutual funds. Britain becomes only the second destination after Hong Kong in which the banks can invest their clients’ money.
China gives the green light for banks to invest in British funds
Chinese citizens will soon be able to buy shares and mutual funds in London and New York through their local banks after a regulatory reform that marks a further step in the export of Chinese capital into global markets.
Chinese to be allowed to buy UK shares
Europe’s central bank crossed the Rubicon of monetary policy last night as it announced that it would undercut the credit squeeze by lending funds below market interest rates.
ECB to lend below market rates in credit squeeze fight
Wall Street is bracing itself for years of legal wrangles over who should shoulder losses on the complex derivatives at the heart of the credit crisis. A court case pending in New York, involving Deut-sche Bank and UBS, among others, is the first to try to unpick who is owed what, now that American homeowners are defaulting on their mortgages in record numbers.
Millions at stake as credit crisis gets legal
Turbo-charged American exports have at last begun to sweep global markets, leading to a dramatic fall in the US current account deficit over the past year.
Weak dollar restores health to wide range of exporters