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Italy Vows to Keep Euro despite Brussels Standoff

Italy will not leave the eurozone, populist Deputy Prime Minister Luigi Di Maio said on Friday, despite a standoff with Brussels over Rome's big-spending budget.

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Britain's Economy Picks Up before Expected Slowdown

Britain's economy accelerated in the third quarter as higher exports and household spending offset slumping business investment, data showed Friday as the country hopes to imminently seal a Brexit deal.

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N. Korean Worker Files Polish Shipyard 'Slavery' Claim

A North Korean worker with a Dutch company operating at a Polish shipyard has filed a lawsuit alleging inhumane and slavelike conditions, his lawyer said Thursday.

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French Court Fines Jeff Koons Guilty of Plagiarism

A French court on Thursday ruled that celebrity U.S. artist Jeff Koons copied an idea from an advertisement used by a French clothing chain, fining him along with the museum which exhibited the contested work.

Franck Davidovici, a French advertising executive, had sued Koons for plagiarism over Koons' "Fait d'Hiver" from 1988, which shows a pig standing over a woman lying on her back, her arms sprawled behind her head.

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Populists Battle over Italy-France Train Project

A contested high-speed train line between Italy and France has become a key battleground for a divided populist government in Rome, with part of the coalition demanding the project be scrapped.

Business leaders are expected to lead a rally on Saturday urging Rome to forge ahead with the 8.6-billion euro ($9.8-billion) tunnel through the Alps for the line linking Turin to Lyon, which has already been partially dug.

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Seoul Earmarks More than $260M for Rail, Roads in North

South Korea has earmarked more than $260 million to build new railways and roads in the North, an official said Thursday, as Seoul pushes ahead with cross-border projects despite international sanctions on Pyongyang.

The figure comes as Seoul and Washington follow increasingly divergent approaches to Pyongyang, with the South pursuing engagement while the U.S. insists pressure on it should be maintained until it denuclearizes.

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Russia Seeks to Dump Dollar as New U.S. Sanctions Loom

Moscow is intensifying efforts to wean its economy off the dollar as Washington considers tough new sanctions that could deny Russia access to foreign debt markets and cut its banks from the greenback.

President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly slammed the U.S. unit's dominance on the world's stage but the country's previous efforts to de-dollarize its economy have so far had little success.

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Adidas Lifts Profit Outlook but Europe Sales Lag

German sporting goods maker Adidas Wednesday lifted its profit expectations for 2018 after a "strong" third quarter saw brisk global demand for its sportswear and sneakers, but sales in western Europe slipped.

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EU Hopes Fade for November Summit to Seal Brexit Deal

EU officials on Tuesday poured cold water on hopes of holding a special summit this month to seal a Brexit divorce, saying talks have made some progress -- but not enough.

One source close to the negotiations with London told AFP: "I think the summit will be in December. For the time being not enough progress on Irish border question to have a summit in November."

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U.S. Stocks Open Higher after Election Yields Split Congress

Wall Street stocks rose in opening trading Wednesday after Democrats won control of the House of Representatives in key midterm elections even as President Donald Trump's Republican party increased its Senate majority.

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