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Gold Climbs Back Toward $4,200 as Weak Jobs Report Hammers Rate Hike Odds and Dollar Slides Friday

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Gold

Gold futures climbed sharply Friday morning, approaching $4,200 per ounce and extending a two-day recovery that has erased a significant portion of the month-long selloff driven by the escalation of the U.S.-Iran conflict and its knock-on effect on inflation expectations and Federal Reserve policy pricing.

The August gold contract was trading at $4,179.30 as of 9:45 a.m. EDT, up $53.60, or 1.30%, on the session, building on Thursday’s 1.47% advance and pushing the metal toward a level it has not closed above since early June. The gains came on an abbreviated pre-holiday session ahead of the Fourth of July weekend, with U.S. equity markets already closed for the day and trading volume in commodity markets running below normal as market participants wound down for the long weekend.

Gold climbed toward $4,200 an ounce on Friday, extending gains from the previous session as weaker-than-expected U.S. jobs data prompted traders to scale back bets on Federal Reserve rate hikes. The U.S. economy added just 57,000 jobs in June, the fewest in four months and well below forecasts of 110,000, while the unemployment rate stood at 4.2%.

That followed a report on Wednesday showing private-sector job growth also came in below expectations. Fed funds futures now imply roughly a 50% chance of a September rate hike, down from 67% before the latest employment data.

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That shift in rate expectations is directly consequential for gold, which competes with interest-bearing assets for investment capital. When the probability of higher rates falls, the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding gold declines, making the metal more attractive to institutional and retail investors simultaneously. Treasury yields have fallen meaningfully over the past two days in response to the jobs data, providing the mechanical backdrop for gold’s recovery even before considering the metal’s safe-haven and inflation-hedge dimensions.

Meanwhile, gold drew additional support from lower oil prices and easing inflation concerns as commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz continued to recover amid progress in U.S.-Iran talks.

The commodity price channel matters here beyond oil’s direct effect. When crude oil prices fall, headline inflation expectations ease, which in turn reduces the urgency for the Federal Reserve to tighten further. Lower inflation expectations narrow the real yield advantage that interest-bearing assets hold over gold, again supporting the metal’s price. The combined effect of a weak jobs report, falling oil prices and reduced rate hike probability has created a rare triple tailwind for gold heading into the holiday weekend.

Friday’s move is a recovery trade set against a backdrop of a dramatic 2026 so far for precious metals. Gold surged past $5,100 per ounce in January 2026, marking a record high that captivated investors worldwide. The metal had gained an extraordinary 64% throughout 2025, breaching both the $3,000 and $4,000 thresholds for the first time in history.

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Gold entered 2026 in spectacular fashion, surging to an all-time high of $5,595 per ounce on January 29, 2026. By the end of the first half, however, the picture had changed materially. The U.S.-Iran military conflict that escalated in late February 2026 proved paradoxically bearish: rising oil prices supercharged inflation expectations, prompting markets to price out Fed rate cuts and even assign a roughly 50% probability to at least one rate hike by year-end.

The roughly 24% peak-to-trough decline from the January all-time high to the recent floor near $4,170 per ounce represents one of the more significant corrections in gold’s multi-year bull run, even as the metal remains substantially higher than it traded just one year ago, when prices were closer to $3,303 per ounce. The correction is also the kind of volatility that both major investment banks and independent analysts have flagged as characteristic of a market processing genuinely conflicting macro signals rather than one experiencing a fundamental breakdown in its long-term demand thesis.

Wall Street’s longer-term outlook for gold remains constructive despite the correction. “Structurally, EM central bank diversification — following the 2022 freezing of Russia’s reserves — remains the anchor of our $4,900 per ounce end-2026 forecast,” said Lina Thomas, a Goldman Sachs researcher. The bank also noted that a recent World Gold Council survey said a record 45% of the 76 central banks surveyed between February and May expect to increase their own gold reserves over the next 12 months.

JPMorgan has gone further, forecasting prices per ounce to average $6,000 by the final quarter of 2026. Greg Shearer, head of Base and Precious Metals at JPMorgan, has described the metal as stuck in technical no-man’s land, trading above the 200-day moving average while capped below the 50-day moving average, but noted that the structural demand case, led by central bank diversification away from dollar assets, remains intact.

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Precious metals have plummeted since the war in Iran began in late February, with gold prices falling by roughly 24%. Year to date, bullion is down more than 6% after reaching a record high in late January.

That year-to-date decline sits alongside a 25% gain over the trailing 12 months, a combination that reflects just how sharp the January peak was and how significant the subsequent correction has been in absolute dollar terms even as the longer-term uptrend remains intact.

The holiday weekend’s compressed trading environment means the next major price catalyst for gold will likely arrive when markets reopen Monday, July 6, when investors will be assessing the full weight of this week’s employment data, any new developments from the Doha negotiations between U.S. and Iranian officials, and whether the momentum built during Thursday and Friday’s sessions translates into sustained buying or represents merely a short-covering bounce ahead of the Fourth of July break.

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Russell 2000 Slips Thursday After Its Best First Half Since 1991 as Chip Selloff Weighs on Small-Cap AI Names

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FTSE 100 Surges 0.8% Today as Oil Eases and Markets

NEW YORK — The Russell 2000 Index, which just completed the strongest first half of any year since 1991, closed Thursday with a modest decline of 0.55%, settling at 2,996.11 and finishing just below the psychologically significant 3,000-point level as the broad chip sector selloff that rattled the Nasdaq for a second consecutive session weighed on small-cap technology and semiconductor-adjacent names even as the Dow Jones Industrial Average hit a fresh all-time record.

The day’s pullback for small-cap stocks came on the final trading session before the Fourth of July holiday weekend, with U.S. markets closing Friday in observance of Independence Day. The small decline capped a week that itself followed one of the most remarkable six-month stretches for American small-cap equities in a generation.

The Russell 2000 gained 22% in the first half of 2026, its best performance since 1991 and well above the S&P 500’s 9.6% first-half advance. The rally also outpaced the Dow Jones Industrial Average’s 8.9% gain and the Nasdaq’s 12.8% climb, a reversal of the large-cap-heavy pattern that had defined much of the prior three years when megacap technology stocks captured nearly all of the headline performance.

“It’s both a valuation catch-up story and a fundamental story,” said Amy Zhang, portfolio manager at Alger. “The valuation gap was so wide that a truck can drive through it. At the same time, fundamentals are improving in small-caps and I think that’s why it’s causing the broadening trade.”

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Consensus forecasts for Russell 2000 companies’ 2026 earnings growth have climbed to 38% from about 23% at the start of the year, according to LPL Financial, reflecting growing optimism that profit growth is broadening beyond the largest technology companies. Bottom-up analyst estimates suggest the Russell 2000 could deliver around 43% year-over-year earnings growth over the next 12 months, a figure that outpaces projections for the S&P 500 and has underpinned much of the institutional interest in the asset class through the first half of the year.

Semiconductor and semiconductor equipment companies were the biggest winners within the Russell 2000 during that period, underscoring how the artificial intelligence investment boom has rippled through the broader market well beyond the large-cap names that dominate most AI coverage. Chip-related companies accounted for 16 of the Russell 2000’s 50 best-performing stocks in the first half of the year, including Aehr Test Systems, Ichor Holdings and MaxLinear, which all rallied more than 400%. Rather than competing directly with industry leaders like Nvidia, many of these smaller companies have benefited from rising demand across the AI supply chain, supplying testing equipment, materials, components and specialized subsystems.

Those same names, however, have shared in this week’s semiconductor sector correction, which has wiped out meaningful short-term gains across the chip space broadly as investors who accumulated large positions during the sector’s extraordinary first-half run have taken profits ahead of the holiday. The VanEck Semiconductor ETF fell 4.5% Thursday alone, and the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index has posted its worst two-day decline since early June, with many of the smaller, more speculative names in the sector experiencing even steeper percentage drops than the large-cap bellwethers.

Small cap stocks are having a moment, according to Schwab’s market open report. The Russell 2000 gained 22% during the first half of the year, its best since 1991 and well above the S&P 500’s 9.6% gain. The index also topped the S&P 500 for two consecutive quarters, the first time that had happened since 2021, a milestone that has attracted fresh institutional attention to the small-cap universe and driven significant inflows into small-cap focused exchange-traded funds throughout the year.

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Despite Tuesday’s chip-driven dip, broader small-cap market dynamics remain constructive for investors with a longer time horizon. The Russell 2000’s composition spans financials, industrials, healthcare, energy, biotech and technology, a diversification that gives the index exposure to domestic economic strength across multiple sectors simultaneously. Small-cap stocks generate roughly 70 to 80 percent of their revenue domestically, making the index particularly sensitive to U.S. economic conditions and comparatively insulated from global trade tensions that have periodically complicated the earnings outlooks of larger multinationals.

Bank of America analyst Jill Carey Hall said in a recent note that the bank still sees upside opportunities within small caps for less rate-sensitive stocks, especially because Russell 2000 performance has been concentrated this year and the broader universe has room to participate more fully in the rally.

The Federal Reserve interest rate outlook remains the most consequential variable for the small-cap outlook heading into the second half of 2026. Higher borrowing costs pose a particular challenge for smaller companies, which generally carry more floating-rate debt and face greater refinancing needs than large-cap peers. Bank of America has estimated that every additional 25 basis point rate hike would reduce Russell 2000 operating earnings by approximately 2%, a meaningful sensitivity given that the Fed’s next meeting is scheduled for July 28-29 and that some market participants had been pricing in the possibility of further tightening before this week’s soft employment report shifted that calculus.

“This should allow the Fed to take a patient approach to any shift in its policy over the next few months, seeing how the incoming economic data comes in rather than rushing to a decision to hike,” said Collin Martin, head of fixed income research and strategy at the Schwab Center for Financial Research.

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The June nonfarm payrolls report, which showed just 57,000 jobs added against expectations of 115,000, has provided the most direct macro support for small-cap stocks this week by reducing near-term rate hike fears, even as the soft headline reading raised fresh questions about whether economic momentum is slowing more quickly than the consensus had anticipated.

For now, Thursday’s modest decline represents a pause in a larger story rather than a reversal, with the index barely off a recent all-time high reached on Wednesday of this week at 3,033.75 and well positioned, by most analysts’ assessments, to resume its outperformance once the semiconductor profit-taking cycle runs its course and attention shifts back to the improving earnings trajectory across the small-cap universe heading into the second half of 2026.

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England’s 1am World Cup match: unions urge employers to allow flexible working

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England's 1am World Cup match: unions urge employers to allow flexible working

Union leaders are calling on employers to let staff work from home on Monday, after England’s World Cup last-16 tie against Mexico kicks off at 1am BST.

The Trades Union Congress (TUC) has appealed to businesses to show “common sense” and allow football fans to work flexibly following the match, whether by working from home, starting later or swapping shifts.

Paul Nowak, the TUC general secretary and a self-confessed England and Everton fan, admitted the scheduling was far from ideal for supporters. “That’s why we are appealing to employers to show some common sense and understanding by allowing their staff to work flexibly where possible,” he said.

The plea comes as separate research suggests more than half of bosses have no plans to make any special arrangements for the fixture. Just one in five employers intend to offer flexible working during the tournament, according to a poll of more than 1,100 managers by the Chartered Management Institute (CMI), a striking gap given the £3.8bn windfall the World Cup is expected to deliver for British business.

Petra Wilton of the CMI said: “We’re not saying every England win deserves a bank holiday, but if millions of people have stayed up until 3am supporting their team, asking employers to let them start a little later the next morning is simply common sense. We’re saying to employers across the country, ‘Let them start late.’”

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Sir Keir Starmer has confirmed that British pubs can stay open through the night for the tie, which takes place at the Azteca Stadium in Mexico City. Should the match go to extra time, it could run as late as 4am.

The Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD), which represents HR professionals, has encouraged employers to allow workers to take annual leave, swap shifts or make up time later in the week, echoing its broader guidance on handling major sporting events in the workplace.

“Employers are under no obligation to make special arrangements around World Cup matches; however, some may choose to offer flexibility where this works for the business and does not impact performance,” said David D’Souza of the CIPD.

For smaller firms, the calculation may be more nuanced. With research showing that rigid office mandates are already driving workers to seek more flexible roles elsewhere, a well-handled World Cup could prove a cheap win for morale and retention. Acas has urged employers to get their team line-up sorted before kick-off, advising that agreements covering time off, sickness absence and flexible hours are put in place ahead of matches rather than argued over the morning after.

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Employment lawyers, meanwhile, have warned fans against pulling a sickie. Samir Moftah, head of employment law at Manak Solicitors, said: “Intentionally deceiving your employer about your health can constitute misconduct and, in certain situations, gross misconduct.” Employees found to have falsely claimed sickness absence could face disciplinary action, and dismissal in the most serious cases.

The debate over Monday morning extends beyond the workplace. After England’s last-32 victory over the Democratic Republic of the Congo, head coach Thomas Tuchel asked parents to let their children skip school to cheer the side on. Bridget Phillipson, the Education Secretary, responded that while the decision rested with parents, “children can be in school the next day.”

For SMEs weighing up how to respond, the tournament is as much an opportunity as a headache, and those thinking strategically about the World Cup event economy may find that a little flexibility on Monday pays dividends long after the final whistle.


Amy Ingham

Amy is a newly qualified journalist specialising in business journalism at Business Matters with responsibility for news content for what is now the UK’s largest print and online source of current business news.

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Rewards for Walking 30 Minutes a Day

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Rewards for Walking 30 Minutes a Day

The NHS is to offer rewards to people who walk for half an hour a day, in the first scheme of its kind to pay Britons back for getting active.

NHS England will launch its “marathon a month” challenge early next year, asking participants to walk for around 30 minutes daily. Those who manage it every day will cover roughly 26 miles over the month, the distance of a marathon, logging their progress online or via a phone or smartwatch.

Complete the challenge and rewards follow, potentially including incentives and discounts, although the organising team has yet to confirm precisely what is on offer. Vouchers are one option under consideration, and the presence on the team of Sir Keith Mills, the founder of Air Miles and Nectar, suggests the architecture of Britain’s best-known loyalty schemes will be brought to bear on the nation’s step count.

Crucially for taxpayers, the NHS will not be footing the bill for the rewards. NHS England is covering the initial set-up, but the wider plan is to draw in philanthropic backing from major corporates as the scheme rolls out, with public and private sector partners running the programme. GPs and other health staff will be encouraged to promote it to patients.

The scheme is being developed with Sir Brendan Foster, the Olympic medallist and founder of the Great North Run, who was asked by NHS England to build a campaign to get people walking as part of the government’s 10-year health plan for England.

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“I’m known for running, but the ambition here is far simpler. We just want people to walk. Simple,” he says.

The aim is to sign up more than 100,000 people, with daily stats recorded digitally. If the target is hit, Sir Brendan says it would count as the biggest marathon in history. He is banking on “streak” culture, the habit-forming mechanic behind Snapchat and Duolingo, to keep participants going.

The under-25s Business Matters spoke to were broadly upbeat. One said the gamified challenge would push her to be more active, admitting that not wanting to break a streak is a powerful motivator for her and her friends. Another, who already clocks up roughly a marathon’s worth of walking each month, said he would happily take a free reward for something he is already doing.

The numbers behind the initiative are stark. Physical inactivity is associated with one in six deaths, according to official public health guidance, and a person is classified as inactive if they do less than 30 minutes of moderate-intensity activity per week. Sport England’s Active Lives survey showed that in the year to November 2025 nearly a quarter of adults, around 12 million people, fell into that category.

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“If someone walks 30 minutes five times a week, they could gain up to four extra years of healthy life,” Sir Brendan says.

For employers, the scheme lands at a moment when workforce health has become a boardroom issue. Business groups have already backed the Keep Britain Working review amid mounting fiscal pressure from economic inactivity, and there has been a marked rise in UK employers using wellbeing strategies to lift engagement and cut absenteeism. A state-backed incentive scheme that nudges staff out of the door at lunchtime may prove a useful, and free, addition to the corporate wellbeing toolkit.

The potential savings for the health service are significant too, at a time when technology is already being deployed to claw back hundreds of millions in NHS costs.

Not everyone believes incentives alone will shift the dial. Sonia Pombo, head of research and impact at Action on Salt & Sugar, says: “Encouraging people to build regular movement into their daily lives can support better health, and making it simple, achievable and rewarding may help more people get started. But we cannot rely on individual behaviour change alone. If the government is serious about improving the nation’s health, particularly for children, it must pair initiatives like this with stronger prevention measures.”

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Full details of the scheme, including how to sign up, will be released in the coming months.


Amy Ingham

Amy is a newly qualified journalist specialising in business journalism at Business Matters with responsibility for news content for what is now the UK’s largest print and online source of current business news.

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Republic Services: It's A Garbage Company, Literally, And I Love It

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Republic Services: It's A Garbage Company, Literally, And I Love It

Republic Services: It's A Garbage Company, Literally, And I Love It

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Dabur Q1 updates: Co expects double-digit revenue growth as rural demand stays ahead of urban

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Dabur Q1 updates: Co expects double-digit revenue growth as rural demand stays ahead of urban
Dabur India expects consolidated revenue to grow in double digits in the June quarter, helped by steady demand in India, strong growth in emerging sales channels and resilience in its international business despite pressure in the Middle East.

The company, in its quarterly update for the period ended June 30, 2026, said consumer sentiment remained resilient despite geopolitical concerns and hyperinflationary pressure in some of its key markets. Dabur said its business trajectory improved sequentially over the previous quarter, and it expects consumption in international markets to improve in the coming quarters as the Middle East situation eases.

In India, both rural and urban markets sustained their growth trend, with rural demand continuing to outpace urban. This is important for Dabur as a large part of its portfolio, including health, oral care, hair care and beverages, has strong rural and semi-urban reach.

The India FMCG business is expected to post near double-digit growth during the quarter. The home and personal care business is likely to grow at a near-teens level, led by strong demand for hair oils and shampoos. Dabur said hair oils and shampoos are expected to deliver high-teens growth, supported by perfumed and coconut hair oils.

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Oral care is also expected to report near double-digit growth. Dabur said growth was broad-based across the segment, with the new herbal franchise and Meswak recording strong double-digit growth. Its flagship Red Toothpaste and Lal Dant Manjan brands also continued their upward trend.


Also Read: Vedanta Power Q1 update: Sales rise 38% on Meenakshi boost, Sakti shutdown weighs
The healthcare business is expected to show sequential improvement, with mid-single-digit growth. Key brands such as Hajmola, Pudin Hara, Dabur Honitus, Isabgol and the health juices range are expected to deliver robust double-digit growth. Dabur Glucose, which was affected in the early part of the quarter, recovered sequentially later.The food business continued to grow at a high double-digit pace. Badshah is expected to deliver high-teen growth, while the beverages portfolio recovered during the quarter. Dabur said Real Activ juices and coconut water recorded strong double-digit growth.

The company’s emerging channels, including e-commerce, quick commerce and modern trade, are expected to report strong double-digit growth. General trade also improved sequentially, with growth seen across urban and rural markets. Dabur said Project Saksham, its distribution and route-to-market optimisation initiative, is showing early positive signs.

The international business is expected to grow in the high teens in rupee terms, even with severe pressure in the Middle East. Egypt, Turkey, Bangladesh and the UK each recorded strong double-digit growth in rupee terms.

Dabur said elevated inflation during the quarter, especially in hair care, was managed through calibrated price hikes, helping maintain stable operating margins. Profit after tax is expected to grow at a double-digit level. The company said detailed financial results will be announced after board approval.

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LME approves Adani’s major copper smelter in India as listed brand

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LME approves Adani's major copper smelter in India as listed brand
The London Metal ​Exchange has approved ​the Adani Copper brand for ​delivery against its copper contracts, the exchange said on Friday.

Warrants for the ‌brand can ⁠be ⁠issued from July 10, although the ​LME-registered warehouses holding Adani Copper metal must include ​the brand in their off-warrant stock reports with immediate effect, the LME ​added.

The brand ⁠is produced ‌by Adani Enterprises-owned Kutch ​Copper, one ​of India’s largest copper ⁠smelters, with annual production capacity of ​500,000 metric tons. The company applied ​for LME registration in August 2025.
According to Adani, this $1.2 billion Kutch Copper facility in the western state of Gujarat ‌is the world’s biggest single-location plant of its type, expected ​to ​reduce India’s reliance ⁠on imported copper.
India imported 238,080 tons of refined copper in 2025, down ​18% from a year earlier, according to Trade Data Monitor data, with Japan remaining the country’s largest supplier. (Reporting by Polina Devitt; Editing by Louise Heavens)

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Germany bans phone-in sick notes: workers must see a doctor on day one

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Germany bans phone-in sick notes: workers must see a doctor on day one

German employees will be required to visit a doctor in person and obtain a sick note on the first day of illness, under tough new rules unveiled by Chancellor Friedrich Merz as part of a sweeping package to revive the country’s stagnant economy.

The measure scraps the current system, under which workers could secure a certificate over the phone and did not need one at all until their third day off. It is a marked contrast with Britain, where employees can self-certify for a full seven days before a fit note is required.

“The number of sick days is too high,” Merz told journalists. “We are creating a set of tools that will enable those involved, both employees and companies, to correct this. We know this is a tough decision. But we can no longer afford the competitive disadvantage caused by prolonged absences from work.”

Germans take an average of roughly 15 working days of sick leave a year, according to figures from the Federal Statistical Office, lower than France and most Nordic countries but well above Sweden, the Netherlands, Denmark, Poland and Italy. By comparison, the latest Office for National Statistics data shows around 149 million working days were lost to sickness or injury in the UK last year, some 2 per cent of all working hours, or just over four days per worker. British absence rates have nonetheless been climbing, with UK sick days recently hitting a 15-year high, driven in large part by mental health conditions.

While employers’ groups welcomed the German move, it has infuriated the country’s powerful trade unions. Frank Werneke, head of the services union Verdi, accused Merz of fostering “a culture of distrust of employees”.

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Doctors are equally unimpressed, warning the requirement will overwhelm general practice with appointments that serve no clinical purpose. “Our practices would be flooded with patients who don’t need in-person care and would be better off in bed,” said the German Association of Family Physicians, which branded the measure “an absolute catastrophe”.

The sick note crackdown forms part of a broader reform programme negotiated between Merz’s centre-right Christian Democratic Union and its coalition partner, the centre-left Social Democrats. Alongside a promised bonfire of red tape, the retirement age could rise gradually from 67 to as high as 70 in the coming decades, while tax cuts for lower and middle earners will be funded by higher rates on incomes above €250,000 (£215,000).

For UK business owners watching from across the Channel, the episode is a reminder that absence management remains a live policy battleground, and that handling staff sickness fairly and lawfully is as much about trust and process as it is about cost. It also underlines how seriously Germany’s slowdown is being taken in Berlin: sluggish growth in Europe’s largest economy is one of the factors expected to shape the continent’s economic pecking order through 2040.

Carsten Brzeski, an economist at Dutch bank ING, said the reforms were overdue but should not be oversold. “It may have taken longer than many hoped, but Germany’s long-awaited summer of reforms has finally arrived,” he said. “It is not a package that will morph a stagnating economy into a booming economy overnight. But it is a package that could create the preconditions, the framework, for future growth.”

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Amy Ingham

Amy is a newly qualified journalist specialising in business journalism at Business Matters with responsibility for news content for what is now the UK’s largest print and online source of current business news.

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Laurence Escalante resigns from VGW

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Laurence Escalante resigns from VGW

VGW has announced chief executive and founder, Laurence Escalante, will step down from his role, effective immediately.

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Pope Leo praises US history of welcoming immigrants at 250th anniversary

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Pope Leo praises US history of welcoming immigrants at 250th anniversary


Pope Leo praises US history of welcoming immigrants at 250th anniversary

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How to avoid fees when spending abroad

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Martin is revealing everything you need to know right now to cut the cost of getting away.

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