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Russia’s Federal Tax Service has filed a bankruptcy petition against the Tobol Timber Company, the largest timber firm in Siberia’s Tyumen region, over unpaid taxes exceeding 14.6 million rubles ($174,000), Russian media reported Tuesday, the Moscow Times reported. The Federal Tax Service asked a regional arbitration court to initiate bankruptcy proceedings after Tobol’s bank accounts were frozen on Sept. 12, according to Ura.ru.
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Switzerland’s central bank left its key interest rate at zero Thursday, ending a sequence of six straight cuts, despite the threat of slower growth as the economy adjusts to one of the highest tariffs set by President Trump, the Wall Street Journal reported. Investors had mostly expected the decision after comments from officials at the central bank that signaled a reluctance to push the key rate back below zero, where it settled for almost eight years until September 2022.
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China's Premier Li Qiang and European Union chief Ursula von der Leyen stressed cooperation during their meeting in New York, as the world's No.2 and No.3 economies looked to defuse trade tensions while squeezed by U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs, Reuters reported.
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After signing a trade deal with Indonesia, the European Union is preparing to conclude agreements with the Philippines, Thailand and Malaysia by 2027, a top trade official said, the Wall Street Journal reported. Asean’s importance as a partner for Europe is growing, European Commissioner for Trade & Economic Security Maroš Šefčovič said at the Asean-EU Business Summit in Kuala Lumpur. “We are living in turbulent times where you very much treasure true partnership, friendship, predictability and stability,” he said.
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Brazil's central bank projected on Thursday that inflation will hover near the official goal in the first quarter of 2028, but still fail to meet it, according to the bank's latest quarterly monetary policy report, Reuters reported. After projecting earlier this month annual inflation at 3.4% for the first quarter of 2027, the relevant horizon for policy decisions, policymakers unveiled a 3.1% forecast for the first quarter of 2028, the final period covered by the report. The bank targets inflation at 3%, with a tolerance band of 1.5 percentage points in either direction.
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Factory activity in Canada looks to have stalled, with an early estimate of sales showing a pullback in August following a recovery the previous two months, the Wall Street Journal reported. Manufacturing sales fell an estimated 1.5% from a month prior, Statistics Canada said on Wednesday. The largest declines were seen in transportation equipment and food, the data agency said. There have been signs of stability for Canadian manufacturers that have been hit hard by the sharp shift in the U.S.’s approach to trade and frequently changing import tariffs.
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Argentina's economic activity grew 2.9% in July compared with the same month last year, official data showed on Wednesday. The figure for Latin America's third-largest economy came in below the 3.3% figure projected by analysts polled by Reuters.
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The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) warned investors it has not approved any stablecoin issuers, labeling the marketing of such products as illegal, the SCMP reports, CoinDesk.com reported. The statement came after Hong Kong-based AnchorX announced the introduction of AxCNH, a stablecoin pegged to the offshore Chinese yuan. The company said it held a license from Kazakhstan’s Astana Financial Services Authority and that the coin would support cross-border payments and tokenized real-world assets, according to the SCMP.
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Global debt hit a record high of $337.7 trillion at the end of the second quarter, driven by easing global financial conditions, a softer U.S. dollar and a more accommodative stance from major central banks, a quarterly report showed on Thursday, Reuters reported. The Institute of International Finance, a financial services trade group, said that global debt rose over $21 trillion in the first half of the year to $337.7 trillion. China, France, the United States, Germany, Britain, and Japan recorded the largest increases in debt levels in U.S.
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German automotive supplier Kiekert has applied for insolvency, according to a court document seen by Reuters on Tuesday. Two core businesses - Kiekert AG and Kiekert Holding GmbH - have initiated insolvency proceedings and Joachim Exner has been appointed as administrator on an interim basis, the document showed. Kiekert, which specialises in locking systems, has 4,500 employees in 11 locations, according to its website.
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