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Markets around the world tumbled on Monday as Dominique Strauss-Kahn, managing director of the International Monetary Fund, said the worst of the global recession was yet to come.
Markets tumble as IMF warns worst of crisis could be ahead
The European Central Bank has given its starkest warning to date on growing strains in the eurozone credit markets.
ECB warning on banks rattles global markets
The worst of the recession is yet to come, European finance chiefs warned today. And there is still "something rotten" in the banking system in Europe, despite the spate of recent state bailouts. Erik Berglof, chief economist at the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, and EU Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes were speaking at the Forbes CEO Forum in Gleneagles today.
European recession will worsen, says economist
Cheaper prices for food is expected to have driven down inflation in May, returning prices to the Bank of England's target.
UK inflation expected to have eased in May
Investors' appetite for British government debt will be tested today with the first gilt sale of its kind in four years. The Debt Management Office (DMO), the executive agency of the Treasury that manages sales of government bonds, is expected to raise up to 5 billion through the sale of 25-year gilts.
Government tries out taste for debt with 5bn gilt sale