Markets and policymakers across Europe are juggling fiscal pressure, political risk, and long-term bets on growth.
In London, Rachel Reeves is setting up a key economic checkpoint as confidence remains fragile.
Paris is scrambling to keep the lights on with another stopgap budget amid deficit fears.
Meanwhile, European industry sits at the heart of Samsung’s driverless push, and Washington’s renewed interest in Greenland is stirring geopolitical ripples felt well beyond the Arctic.
Reeves sets March economic test
UK Chancellor Rachel Reeves has pencilled in the next set of economic forecasts from the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) for March 3, 2026, offering a mid-cycle snapshot of the economy and public finances.
The Spring Forecast fits with the government’s promise of one main fiscal event each year at the budget, followed by a statement to Parliament.
The idea is to give families and businesses more certainty in a tricky economic environment, after pre-November budget speculation knocked confidence.
Adding to the backdrop, OBR Chair Richard Hughes stepped down last month over a budget leak investigation, pushing back the appointment of a permanent successor before March.
Reeves’ November budget focused on balancing day-to-day spending with tax revenues by 2030.
France scrambles to avert shutdown
French lawmakers hurried through emergency legislation on December 23 to pass a rollover budget law, heading off a US-style government shutdown spilling into January 2026.
The lower house signed off on the bill, rolling over 2025 spending caps, tax collection, and debt issuance after a joint committee failed to strike a deal on a full 2026 budget amid sharp rows over cuts and tax rises.
Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu’s minority government is under pressure over a 5.4% deficit, the highest in the euro zone, which has already brought down three governments since Macron’s 2024 election defeat.
A similar stopgap last year cost 12 billion euros ($14 billion), unsettling investors and ratings agencies.
The Senate vote followed, buying breathing space for full budget negotiations.
Samsung bets big on driverless tech
Samsung Electronics’ subsidiary Harman International has agreed to buy ZF Group’s Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) business for €1.5 billion ($1.8 billion), strengthening its automotive technology lineup.
The acquisition includes ZF’s automotive computing platforms, smart cameras, radar systems, and ADAS software, positioning Harman to play a leading role in software-defined vehicles (SDVs) by combining cockpit know-how with autonomous driving capabilities.
Around 3,750 employees across Europe, the Americas, and Asia will move to Harman, with the deal expected to close in the second half of 2026, subject to regulatory approvals.
The transaction is Samsung’s first major auto-parts M&A since its 2017 takeover of Harman, tapping into a market forecast to nearly triple to $42.3 billion by 2035.
Trump ignites Greenland power play
President Donald Trump named Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry as US special envoy to Greenland on December 22, underscoring the island’s strategic importance to national security amid rising Arctic tensions with Russia and China.
Landry, who assumed office in January 2024, voiced support for bringing the Danish territory closer into the US orbit without affecting his responsibilities as governor.
The appointment quickly sparked pushback from Danish and Greenlandic officials, who rejected any talk of annexation and reaffirmed Greenland’s right to self-determination.
Trump pointed to Landry’s deal-making experience as key to advancing US interests on the mineral-rich island.
The post Europe bulletin: UK fiscal test, France budget crunch, Samsung’s driverless bet appeared first on Invezz
