Headlines

The Ångermanland District Court has approved Cinis Fertilizer AB’s previously submitted bankruptcy application, placing both the parent company and its subsidiary Cinis Sweden AB into bankruptcy proceedings and appointing lawyer Johan Klåvus of Trägårdh Advokatbyrå in Malmö as bankruptcy administrator, TipRanks reported.

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Global markets shifted abruptly into a defensive posture this week, with U.S. equities dropping over 2% amid a dual shock of fiscal instability in Japan and renewed trade war tensions between the U.S. and Europe, according to a market commentary published by QCP on Wednesday, Blockspace reported. Bitcoin has fallen below $90,000, failing to hold its recent reclamation of the $97,000 level as the cryptocurrency struggles to find footing.

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Japan’s government bond market jolted global finance this week after yields jumped fast, forcing officials to step in, 99Bitcoins reported. U.S. Treasuries wobbled in response, while Bitcoin hovered near recent ranges as traders paused. This fits a bigger macro story where bond stress, central banks and risk assets keep colliding. For crypto beginners, this sounds distant. It isn’t. Bond markets sit under everything, including Bitcoin. Japanese government bonds are IOUs backed by the world’s third-largest economy. When investors sell them hard, yields rise.

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Japan's manufacturing activity expanded in January for the first time in seven months, buoyed by the biggest rise in new export ​orders in more than four years, a private-sector survey showed, Reuters reported. The S&P Global flash ‌Japan Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) increased to 51.5 in January from December's final reading of 50.0, marking a ‌return to expansionary territory for the first time since June 2025. Readings above 50.0 indicate growth in activity, while those below point to a contraction.

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Japan's exports rose for a fourth straight month in December, government data showed on ​Thursday, as slower shipments to the U.S. were offset ‌by strong demand elsewhere as well as by a boost to sales from the ‌yen's decline, Reuters reported. Total exports by value rose 5.1% year-on-year in, data showed, less than a median market forecast for a 6.1% increase and after a 6.1% rise in November. Exports to the U.S. fell 11.1% in December ⁠from a year earlier, ‌while those to China were up 5.6%, the data showed.

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The Bank of Japan (BoJ) is expected to leave its benchmark interest rate unchanged at 0.75% after concluding its two-day monetary policy meeting on Friday, FXStreet reported. The central bank raised rates to a three-decade high in December. A pause now would allow policymakers to assess the economic impact of that move before tightening further. BoJ Governor Kazuo Ueda is expected to reaffirm the bank’s commitment to gradual policy normalization. Investors will closely scrutinize his press conference for clues on the timing and pace of future rate hikes.

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Brazil's central bank ordered on Wednesday the liquidation of Will Financeira SA, a unit of ​troubled lender Banco Master, in the latest drastic step involving ‌illiquid institutions tied to the conglomerate, Reuters reported. The move comes a day after Mastercard said that it ‌had suspended Will Bank cards from its network due to non-compliance with settlement schedules under its payments arrangement.
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The operators of a suspected £200 million Ponzi scheme that put people’s “life savings” at risk have been bankrupted as part of U.K. efforts to track down investors’ money, The Times reported. Individuals behind 79th Group were adjudged bankrupt by Liverpool county court last week over debts linked to an alleged investment scam that owes money to thousands of people in the UK and overseas. The scheme’s operators, who The Times has chosen not to name for legal reasons, were pursued by certain investors.
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Lawmakers in the European Parliament agreed to put off work on the European Union’s trade agreement with the U.S. as President Trump continues his push take over Greenland, the Wall Street Journal reported. “By threatening the territorial integrity and sovereignty of an EU member state and by using tariffs as a coercive instrument, the U.S. is undermining the stability and predictability of EU-U.S. trade relations,” Bernd Lange, chair of the parliament’s international trade committee, said in a statement Wednesday.
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EU lawmakers voted on Wednesday to challenge the European Union's contentious free trade agreement with South America in the bloc's top court, a move ​that could delay the deal by two years and potentially derail it, Reuters reported. The European Union signed ‌its largest-ever trade pact with Mercosur members Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay on Saturday after 25 years of negotiations. It still requires ‌approval before it can take effect.
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