H
recent
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Here’s how Europe can file for divorce from Donald Trump | Phillip Inman

about 10 hours ago
A picture


There is a way to file for divorce from Donald Trump and Europe needs to grab the opportunity.To the public it will look as if nothing has changed.But behind the scenes the EU and the UK could close the joint bank account and cut up the credit cards, or at least set in motion a form of financial separation that limits the power of a controlling former partner.It won’t be easy to walk away and it won’t be quick.But a degree of separation is necessary and, crucially, achievable.

As a tumultuous week in the Swiss Alps ends with a reprieve for Greenland and there is talk of a post-Davos peace deal for Ukraine, maybe some believe a mix of distraction and appeasement can placate the US president.Or that midterm elections in the US will lasso Trump and tame him permanently.If only that were likely.What we know is that the breakdown of a post-second world war order is set in train – let’s face it, the signs have been flashing red since the 2008 financial crisis – and Washington’s next incumbent is likely to be just as belligerent when international rules constrain them.There is some recognition in the shifting tectonic plates of international finance, which show a separation from the White House wrecking ball is on almost everyone’s mind.

The S&P 500 might say the opposite, sucking in, as it does, so much international money that its rise seems unstoppable,In other financial markets, the reverse is true,For instance, China has spent the past year reducing its US government bond holdings,In other words, it has cut the amount it lends to the US government via the bond markets,Japanese pension funds have done the same.

In part their policy is driven by the fear of a stock market crash now that US share prices are at highs not seen since the dotcom bubble at the turn of the century.What is fantastic today could bring tears tomorrow, so those who lend must take a more cautious view and hedge against disaster.China and Japan are also selling up because they have trouble at home, encouraging them to repatriate or redirect their foreign investments, but that is a different, if connected, story.The ongoing leaching away of bond investors means the cost of US government borrowing has begun to rise, little by little.If Europe were to begin instituting a financial divorce, it too would start selling the US bonds it holds.

This week a fearless and spirited pension scheme – the main retirement fund for Danish academics – provided a glimpse of what could be the norm,The AkademikerPension said it would sell all remaining US government bonds in its multibillion-pound fund by the end of the month,The investment director Anders Schelde made the announcement as Trump was still threatening to invade Greenland,“The decision is rooted in the poor US government finances,” he said,“Thus, it is not ⁠directly related ⁠to ​the ongoing rift between the US and Europe, but of course that didn’t make it more ‍difficult to take the decision.

”The holding is small, at $100m (£73m).Nevertheless, its impact as a beacon to others could be huge.European regulators could help by making it easier for other pension funds to sell their US bond holdings.Some experts believe pension funds slavishly followed credit rating agency verdicts.And while most agencies downgraded the US last year, they still say it is a safe bet.

It should be remembered that credit ratings agencies were at the heart of the 2008 crash.They said the financial products containing US sub-prime mortgages were safe.They weren’t.If pension funds can consider US debt to be more at risk, they can reduce their holdings.There is a cost, there always is, to a reduction rather than a Danish-style clear-out, which is that the bonds remaining in any portfolio are worth less.

And the more pension funds sell, the lower the value goes.But there is a gain, just as there is to the Danish, of a less risky portfolio once the number and value of US bonds is reduced.Europeans could also lend to themselves, if Brussels created a market for bonds denominated in euros.This would create a rival market to US Treasury bonds, offering an alternative safe haven that would drain the US market even further.As a proposal it dates back to a 2010 document from the Bruegel thinktank, which it recently updated.

Since then the EU has corralled its disparate members to agree one-off eurobonds, most recently the borrowing that underpinned its post-Covid €385bn (£334bn) NextGenerationEU recovery scheme.Like previous schemes it was a one-off.As Bruegel and more recently the Peterson Institute have argued, there needs to be a permanent market that could begin to rival the US and others.The opportunity is ripe.Funds across the world are looking for safe havens and Europe could be one of those places.

Brussels could start with a coalition of the willing rather than all 28 countries.It could reluctantly admit that much of the money would be generated by banks in London, which hosts bond markets that run deeper and wider than anything on the continent.And why would that be a problem? Politicians in Berlin, Amsterdam, Dublin and maybe even Paris want the UK to be pulled closer to the EU.If there is more money to be made, then resistance on both sides of the Channel could ebb away.And if there is a degree of insulation from Trump’s threats of financial punishment from Europeans creating their own debt market, in their own currency, then all the better.

businessSee all
A picture

Coca-Cola sues Vue after cinema chain switches to Pepsi

Coca-Cola is taking legal action against Vue after the cinema chain switched to its arch-rival PepsiCo to supply soft drinks in Europe.Vue, which operates more than 90 cinemas across the UK and Ireland, put the contract up for tender last year.The largest privately owned cinema operator in Europe, with 222 sites in eight countries, selected PepsiCo as its exclusive supplier in March last year until at least 2030.The deal brought an end to a relationship between Vue and Coca-Cola that had lasted for almost 25 years.Coca-Cola Europacific Partners Great Britain (CCEP) took legal action against Vue Entertainment on Thursday to reclaim alleged unpaid debts outstanding when the contract was terminated

about 16 hours ago
A picture

Asbestos found in children’s play sand sold in UK

Bottles of children’s play sand have been withdrawn from shelves by the craft retailer Hobbycraft after a parent discovered they were contaminated with asbestos.The parent, who did not wish to be named, raised the alarm after her children played with the sand at a party.She sent samples off to a testing lab, which found traces of asbestos fibres in the bottles of yellow, green and pink sand sold in Hobbycraft’s Giant Box of Craft arts kit.Asbestos can cause cancer in later life if inhaled, although the risk to children who played with the sand is thought to be low.The discovery came two months after asbestos traces found in similar play sand products in Australia prompted a government recall and the closure of schools and nurseries across the country and in New Zealand

about 19 hours ago
A picture

‘At the table or on the menu’: a turbulent Davos week with Trump’s circus in town

“If we’re not at the table, we’re on the menu.” The Canadian prime minister, Mark Carney, was the darling of Davos this week as he rallied resistance to Donald Trump’s smash and grab politics and his voracious appetite for other countries’ wealth and land.“Call it what it is,” he told delegates. “A system of intensifying great power rivalry, where the most powerful pursue their interests using economic integration as coercion”. He urged “middle powers” to band together or be crushed, and was rewarded with a standing ovation

1 day ago
A picture

Strong UK pay growth could limit interest rate cuts, Bank policymaker warns

The Bank of England may not be able to lower interest rates as much as expected this year, due to strong UK pay growth and expected rate cuts in the US, one of its top policymakers has said.Megan Greene, a member of the Bank’s monetary policy committee (MPC), which sets interest rates in the UK, said she was concerned that wages appeared to be growing strongly again this year and this could stop inflation from easing.In a speech in London at the Resolution Foundation, a leading thinktank, Greene said a decline in wage growth “may have run its course”, pointing to recent Bank of England surveys that suggest employers are planning to hand out pay rises of 3.5% or more this year.The latest official figures showed wage growth, excluding bonuses, weakened slightly to 4

1 day ago
A picture

Davos: ECB’s Lagarde plays down fears of ‘rupture’ in world order, as IMF’s Georgieva warns of AI ‘tsunami’ hitting jobs market – as it happened

Good morning from Davos, where the final day of the World Economic Forum is underway.After a week dominated by issues such as the world order, geopolitical tensions, tariffs and artificial intelligence, the health of the global economy will be in focus today.ECB president Christine Lagarde, IMF head Kristalina Georgieva and WTO director-general Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala will give their views on the Global Economic Outlook.It’s an outlook that has darkened this week, with warnings from the leaders of Germany and Canada about the rise of great powers, and anxiety over whether AI will create an unemployment crisis.Speaking here earlier this week, Lagarde warned that President Trump’s escalating threats have undermined trust

1 day ago
A picture

Poundland shuts 149 stores, cuts 2,200 jobs and focuses on £1 items

Poundland has shut 149 stores with the loss of 2,200 jobs under a rescue shake-up launched after challenging trading conditions and unpopular clothing ranges sent it into the red.The company, which was itself bought for £1 from Pepco Group by the US restructuring specialist Gordon Brothers in June last year, said it had refocused on £1 items, with 60% of its stock now at that price.It is also relaunching its Pep & Co clothing brand after a switch to ranges supplied by its former parent group hit sales. Adult clothing will be in stores by the end of this month, with children’s and baby wear arriving in February.Poundland said underlying profits had more than doubled to £17

1 day ago
politicsSee all
A picture

Nigel Farage’s trip to Davos hosted and paid for by family trust of billionaire

1 day ago
A picture

UK politics: Trump’s Nato claims ‘insulting and frankly appalling’, says Starmer –as it happened

1 day ago
A picture

French authorities ban British far-right activists from gathering at weekend

1 day ago
A picture

Starmer stands up to Trump at last and has chance to make case for Europe

1 day ago
A picture

Can Andy Burnham calm the anger in a Manchester seat Labour fears losing?

1 day ago
A picture

‘We have a clear agenda’: the teenager who broke news of Tory MP’s defection to Reform

1 day ago