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Here’s your quick read to start the day: a chatty, no-fuss look at overnight moves, the big story, what’s on the docket, and the tickers you need to watch.

November 11, 2025 at 1:31 AM IST
GLOBAL MOOD: Risk-on
Drivers: US Shutdown Deal Progress, UK Retail Slowdown
Asian markets traded risk-on, lifted by Wall Street gains and optimism over a possible end to the prolonged US government shutdown. Fiscal deal progress buoyed sentiment, though uncertainty over final approval and mixed US data kept upside capped
TODAY’S WATCHLIST
- India AMFI Monthly Data
THE BIG STORY
The longest US government shutdown in history may finally end this week after a compromise funding deal cleared an initial Senate hurdle late Sunday. The proposal, which would restore funding for agencies whose budgets lapsed on 1 October, brings potential relief to millions affected by the closure including low-income families hit by food subsidy disruptions, federal workers who have gone unpaid for over a month, and travellers enduring thousands of flight cancellations. The agreement extends funding through 30 January, temporarily putting the government back on a fiscal track that continues to add roughly $1.8 trillion annually to its $38 trillion debt burden.
In a procedural vote, the Senate secured the minimum 60 votes needed to advance the measure, with eight Democratic senators breaking from party leadership to support the bill. They agreed to drop a key demand for extending Affordable Care Act tax credits, a central Democratic priority excluded from the final draft. The package would fund the Departments of Agriculture, Veterans Affairs, and Congress, among other agencies, but still faces a full Senate debate and uncertain House approval before becoming law.
Data Spotlight
UK retail sales growth slowed in October, rising 1.5% year-on-year on a like-for-like basis it is the weakest pace in five months and down from 2% in September. Consumers largely delayed purchases ahead of Black Friday and possible budget-related tax hikes, softening momentum across categories. Food sales eased to 3.5% from 4.3%, as households conserved cash for the holidays, while non-food sales edged up just 0.1%, constrained by mild weather and discount anticipation. Notably, furniture and homeware sales outperformed, buoyed by early festive spending preparations.
Takeaway: Weaker October sales highlight cautious consumer behaviour and heighten pressure on Black Friday to deliver a vital lift for UK retailers.
WHAT HAPPENED OVERNIGHT
Day’s Ledger
Economic Data
Corporate Actions
Policy Events
Tickers to Watch
Must Read
See you tomorrow with another edition of The Morning Edge.
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