Time to wrap up for the day. And the week. Here's a reminder of the main points:

The eurozone's club of AAA nations shrank to three today after S&P stripped the Netherlands of its top credit rating. S&P downgraded the Dutch to AA+, citing weak growth prospects and high households indebtedness.

Finance minister Jeroen Dijsselbloem said he was disappointed by the downgrade, but took it seriously, and suggested structural economic reforms would help stimulate growth.

S&P had better news for Cyprus, which was upgraded, and Spain, whose outlook was raised to stable. Here's the analyst reaction.

Eurozone youth unemployment hit a new record high of 24.4% last month. It hit 57.4% in Spain.

Data from Eurostat also showed that the headline rate dropped for the first time in three years.

And inflation also rose, to 0.9%, easing fears the disinflation was setting in.

In Greece, there is confusion tonight over whether the Troika has cancelled its next visit to Athens. Finance minister Yannis Stournaras tells us that it may be postponed....

And campaigners keen to clean up the City were alarmed to see that the number of EU-based bankers earning at least €1m rose 11% last year, with three quarters based in the UK.

Have good weekends, all. See you next week. GW