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Sharjah 24
an hour ago
- Sharjah 24
AC Milan signs Samuel Ricci
Strengthening the squad Milan, who finished eighth in Serie A last season, strengthened their squad on Thursday by acquiring Ricci. The deal was finalized for a fee exceeding €23 million. Contract details The Lombardy club stated in a statement, "Ricci has signed a contract that runs until June 30, 2029, with an option to extend for an additional year until June 30, 2030." Financial aspects While Milan did not officially disclose the value of the deal, Italian newspapers reported that the club paid €23 million, which could rise to €24.5 million after incentives. Additionally, the club pledged to give 10% of any future transfer fee to Torino.

Gulf Today
a day ago
- Gulf Today
Three Britons can win but Piastri has his own script
Three British winners have their sights on a home grand prix victory this weekend but Oscar Piastri could rain on that particular parade as Formula One returns to where the championship started 75 years ago. Australia's championship leader can still count on plenty of support as a McLaren driver but much of the crowd, and certainly the 10,000 in Silverstone's sold-out 'Landostand', will be cheering more for British teammate Lando Norris. Norris won Piastri's home grand prix in Melbourne in March, an added incentive for the Australian at Silverstone, and the pair are turning the season into a two-horse race as the campaign reaches the halfway point. Piastri is chasing a sixth win in 12 races while Norris arrives from Austria on a high after dominating every practice session he took part in, taking pole by a huge margin and holding off his teammate to win. The two are 15 points apart, with Red Bull's reigning four-times world champion Max Verstappen third overall but now a hefty 61 points off the lead after a first retirement of the season at his team's home track at Spielberg. Oscar Piastri during an interview at the McLaren event in Londaon. Reuters 'My favourite weekend of the year,' said Norris, who has yet to take back-to-back wins. 'It's already a special circuit but to also have my family, friends, home fans and so many of the team there supporting us takes it to another level. I'll try to make sure I give the fans a wave as I drive past.' Piastri recalled he had fans chanting his name at Silverstone not so long ago. 'I am not sure I will get that again but they have always been very accepting of me. I race for a British team. I am expecting that there will be more Lando fans than there are for me but that's fair enough,' he said. If Norris's support is strong, then Ferrari's Lewis Hamilton will always be the big sentimental favourite. The last two races have been won by British drivers -- George Russell for Mercedes in Canada and then Norris last weekend. Could Hamilton make it three and send the crowd crazy? The 40-year-old won with Mercedes last year for a record ninth time and taking that tally into double figures, in what will be his first home appearance in the Italian team's red colours, would be something else. Ferrari are the only top-four team without a win this season, other than Hamilton's Shanghai sprint success, and the seven-times world champion has yet to stand on the podium for his new employers. Agencies


Gulf Today
2 days ago
- Gulf Today
Italy May jobless rate jumps to 6.5% but 80,000 jobs created in month
Italy's unemployment rate rose sharply to 6.5 per cent in May from an upwardly revised 6.1 per cent in April, national statistics bureau ISTAT reported on Wednesday, but a net 80,000 jobs were created during the month. A Reuters survey of nine analysts had forecast a May jobless rate of 6.0 per cent. April's rate had been previously reported at 5.9 per cent. The reason for the jump in the unemployment rate was that a large number of previously inactive people entered the labour market in May to look for work, ISTAT said. The 6.5 per cent jobless rate was the highest since June last year. The youth unemployment rate, measuring job-seekers between 15 and 24 years old, rose to 21.6 per cent from 19.9 per cent. In the March-to-May period, employment in the eurozone's third largest economy was up by 93,000, or 0.4 per cent, compared with the previous three months, ISTAT said. In May, there were 408,000 more people in work than in the same month last year, an increase of 1.7 per cent. The employment rate, one of the lowest in the Eurozone, edged up to 62.9 per cent from 62.8 per cent the month before, while the so-called 'inactivity rate', measuring those neither working nor looking for work, fell to 32.6 per cent from a previous 33 per cent. Italy's long-running increase in employment has come against a backdrop of weak economic growth and stagnant wages. Italian gross domestic product grew by just 0.7 per cent in each of the last two years, and the government forecasts 0.6 per cent growth this year. Meanwhile Italy risks losing 20 billion euros ($23.6 billion) in exports and 118,000 jobs next year if the US imposes tariffs of 10 per cent on all European products, the head of the main Italian business lobby said on Wednesday. 'Italy does not just export luxury products - with a demand that isn't very sensitive to prices - but mainly machinery, means of transport, and leather goods,' Confindustria President Emanuele Orsini told daily Il Corriere della Sera in an interview. Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni recently downplayed the potential impact of such a level of tariffs on Italian companies, stating it would not be particularly harmful. Orsini, however, warned that tariffs of 10 per cent would be unsustainable for the Italian economy. He added that they would effectively translate into a 23.5 per cent duty as the impact of the dollar depreciation against the euro since the election of US President Donald Trump, amounting to 13.55 per cent, needed to be taken into account too. 'A product that a year ago an Italian company was selling in the United States for 100 now costs our American customer 123. We fear very heavy setbacks,' he added. A deadline for countries to finalise trade agreements with Washington is set to expire on July 9. The European Commission, which coordinates EU trade policy, accepts the US baseline tariff of 10 per cent as unavoidable but wants immediate relief in key sectors as part of any agreement, according to diplomats. The euro has risen some 9 per cent against the dollar since April as investors, spooked by Trump's unpredictable economic policy, warmed to the European Union's newfound military and industrial ambitions. Meanwhile sales of new cars in Italy fell by 17.44 per cent in June, transport ministry data showed on Tuesday, in the biggest year-on-year drop this year. Total sales in June stood at 132,191 vehicles. Market leader Stellantis, whose brands include Fiat, Jeep, Chrysler and Peugeot, suffered an even bigger crash, with sales down 32.83 per cent year-on-year, according to Reuters calculations. Its market share dropped to 24.55 per cent from 28.06 per cent in May, according to the same calculations. Meanwhile the number of people registered as unemployed in Spain fell in June to the lowest figure since May 2008, before the bursting of a real estate bubble led to a deep crisis in the country. According to data from the Labour Ministry released on Wednesday, a total of 2.41 million people were registered as unemployed in June, down by 48,920 from the previous month. The number was not that low since 2.38 million jobless people in May 2008. Unemployment traditionally falls in Spain during the summer when the hospitality industry hires thousands of workers to serve the millions of tourists who visit the country. Spain gained 40,399 net formal jobs in June, bringing the number of people with a formal job to 21.6 million, on a calendar-adjusted and excluding seasonality, a separate report from the Social Security Ministry showed. Reuters