GRAPHIC-Take Five: From Budget blues to Black Friday
BY Reuters | ECONOMIC | 11/24/25 02:43 AM EST(Updates story first published on Friday, changes references to next week to this week, adds new story links to Section 2 and 4)
*
UK budget to test market confidence
*
Black Friday, Alibaba
*
A G20 summit without the U.S.
Nov 24 (Reuters) - Global markets head into another packed week where political leaders, policymakers and consumers take centre stage against a backdrop of nervy markets - with tech stocks and the likes of bitcoin coming under fire.
G20 leaders gather in South Africa, Britain's finance
minister delivers a highly anticipated budget, while Alibaba's
Here's all you need to know about the coming week in markets by Dhara Ranasinghe and Amanda Cooper in London, Gregor Stuart Hunter in Singapore, Lewis Krauskopf in New York and Colleen Goko-Petzer in South Africa.
1/ SHOPPING SEASON Focus on U.S. consumer spending will come into view this week with Black Friday heralding the important holiday shopping season. Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving that ushers in holiday sales, arrives as data have shown consumer sentiment slumping and inflation staying firm.
Still, a solid few years for the U.S. stock market could be making particularly higher-income consumers feel wealthier and ready to shop. Tuesday's delayed release of September retail sales will also offer insight into consumer spending, which makes up more than two-thirds of U.S. economic activity.
2/ REEVES' WAIT IS OVER Pre-budget leaks and speculation are par for the course for UK finance ministers. Yet the build-up to Rachel Reeves' November 26 budget has been on another level entirely. Reeves must raise tens of billions of pounds in taxes to stay on track for her self-imposed fiscal rules. Reports a week ago that she had no plans to raise income tax took markets by surprise. Just days earlier investors had taken an unexpected speech by the finance minister as a sign of tax hikes coming. No doubt, Britain's Labour government is walking a tightrope as it tries to reassure bond markets that it can be trusted to be fiscally prudent while appeasing voters that manifesto pledges to not hike taxes will not be broken. Recent selling in bonds, sterling and bank shares shows markets on edge. The budget wait is almost over but UK market volatility is likely not.
3/ CHINA TECH RALLY FACES ALIBABA TEST
Alibaba's
The stock, the largest component of Hong Kong's Hang Seng
Tech index, has almost doubled this year as investors
vie for a slice of the red-hot Chinese AI sector.
But shares fell this month as the company faced allegations that
it provides tech support for Chinese military operations against
targets in the U.S., the FT reported. Alibaba
4/ G20 MINUS ONE
South Africa hosted the final G20 leaders' summit of its presidency before handing the baton to the U.S., as global economic growth slows, debt pressures mount, and poorer economies face severe climate-related impacts. The meeting proceeded without U.S. representation, as President Donald Trump had announced the world's largest economy would not take part.
Pretoria intends to conclude its term by advancing priorities such as debt relief for struggling nations, fairer global trade regulations and improved climate financing for vulnerable countries.
But the absence of the group's largest economy raises questions about the bloc's ability to resolve critical global challenges.
5/ TRACKING BITCOIN'S 'DEATH CROSS' Bitcoin, the apparent runaway market success story of the past two years, is in a funk. It has lost roughly a third in value since early October's record $126,223, as investors grow increasingly nervous of anything that has risen that much that quickly, like AI-related stocks.
Even gold has been reined in by that same concern to some extent. The crypto market as a whole has lost over $1 trillion in value since bitcoin's all-time high, as capital has flooded out of anything from meme coins to exchange-traded funds. With little in the way of new fundamental catalysts, traders often latch on to technical charts to determine where a price should go next. Bitcoin is firmly below $90,000, and a so-called "death cross" has materialised on the charts this week - where the 50-day moving average crosses below the 200-day - often a harbinger of more losses ahead.
(Graphics by Kripa Jayaram, Compiled by Samuel Indyk; Editing by Conor Humphries and Toby Chopra)
Print
