China can afford to holster monetary bazooka 11 Mar 2024 Consumer prices rose 0.7% in February, the most in nearly a year but far below Beijing’s 3% target. Still, the central bank's piecemeal easing is starting to add up. Expected US rate cuts will make it easier for China to stimulate the economy and avoid a deflationary doom loop.
Basel climbdown would make the shadows less scary 6 Mar 2024 Tough new rules on bank capital are likely to be watered down. That would be a victory for lenders like JPMorgan that complain they’re already smothered by safeguards. It’s less good for so-called shadow banks like Blackstone and Apollo that stand to grow fat on their castoffs.
Japan faces a reckoning with its zombie companies 5 Mar 2024 Big firms are ready for the onset of higher wages and the end of negative rates. Smaller rivals, which employ 60% of workers, risk being crushed. One in six already struggles to cover interest payments. If too many fail, they can derail confidence and the economic recovery.
A plot twist threatens Jay Powell’s artful script 27 Feb 2024 Higher borrowing costs are helping achieve the Fed’s 2% inflation target without a recession, but US wages and consumer spending tell a different tale. The upward price pressure augurs elevated interest rates for longer. To ensure a happy ending may require revising the story.
Why central banks risk making more mistakes 27 Feb 2024 Western rate-setters were late in fighting inflation. In this Exchange podcast, TS Lombard economists Dario Perkins and Davide Oneglia argue that, as price growth abates, the US Federal Reserve and European Central Bank may be too slow in easing monetary policy.
Rivian swerves dangerously into crowded slow lane 22 Feb 2024 The electric-truck maker’s market value fell by a quarter to $11 bln after warning that production would flatline at about 57,000 vehicles. It joins rivals rapidly rewriting growth-to-profitability manuals copied from Tesla. Grinding down costs instead will be a far tougher road.
Central banks’ waiting game plays with fire 21 Feb 2024 Western policymakers fret that if they cut rates too soon inflation may rebound. But keeping monetary policy tight has costs. Staying put as price growth abates means rate-setters squeeze consumers and companies, raising the odds of blowups in areas like commercial real estate.
Capital Calls: S&P/Visible Alpha 20 Feb 2024 Concise views on global finance: The financial analytics firm’s $500 mln bid for alternative data provider underscores the importance of bringing proprietary data to funds that trade on momentum. But as Lyft’s rally after a typo showed, automation has its limits.
Maxed-out shoppers put fire under Fed’s status quo 31 Jan 2024 American consumers are powering the economy. But their spendthrift ways are a big concern for central bank Chair Jay Powell. Credit card balances have just recorded the biggest jump on record and now top $1 trln. Rates are steady for now. The next move will be much riskier.
Economic slack gives Bailey cover to cut rates 31 Jan 2024 The market wants the Bank of England to lower borrowing costs soon. Governor Andrew Bailey is set to keep them steady on Thursday because inflation remains high. Yet sub-par economic performance in the next few years could pave the way for easier monetary policy from May.
Close the Volcker playbook and open Greenspan’s 30 Jan 2024 Fed Chair Jay Powell wisely embraced Paul Volcker’s inflation-fighting approach from the early 1980s and quickly raised borrowing costs. With price pressures abating, it’s time to change tactics. Leaning into Alan Greenspan’s tactical 1995 interest rate cuts makes more sense now.
Revamp of the world order will have to wait 29 Jan 2024 Developing countries last week called for a rethink of global governance. While it’s possible to imagine an order more conducive to peace, justice and prosperity, the chances of creating it are slim. Better to shore up the existing multilateral system and wait for better times.
Take China’s easing signal with a pinch of caution 25 Jan 2024 Beijing is releasing $140 bln of liquidity at banks, trimming some lending rates, and talking up measures to boost the appeal of stocks. It is also pressing on rebalancing the world’s second largest economy. In a grand overhaul, short-term pain can only be managed to a point.
ECB is battling an imaginary wage spiral 24 Jan 2024 European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde is set to hold rates this week because she fears rising salaries will boost inflation. Yet euro zone workers are getting raises of just 3.8%, down from a year ago. Frankfurt may not want to cheer bigger pay, but it can ignore it.
Fixed income investors have reasons to be fearful 23 Jan 2024 Uncertainty over the direction of inflation and monetary policy is buffeting markets. In this Exchange podcast Jim Grant, founder of ‘Grant’s Interest Rate Observer’, discusses his gloomy outlook for US bonds and sounds a warning about the risks of shadow banking.
Overdraft fee reform has a big, small-bank flaw 19 Jan 2024 The US consumer watchdog’s assault against charges levied when accounts go into the red is a win for customers – but only those of the biggest banks. Small lenders are exempt, partly because of their political clout. Trouble is, they often bank the neediest bunch.
China’s war on corruption turns into high wire act 18 Jan 2024 Xi Jinping is declaring victory in his decade-long war on graft. He has made more progress than India and the US over the same period by some global standards. Yet the decision to double down on cleaning up the finance sector when the economy is weak could come at a heavy cost.
BoE can win inflation race but lag on rate cuts 17 Jan 2024 UK price growth could drop in the spring due to lower energy bills, enabling the Bank of England to hit its 2% target before the US and Europe. But wage and services inflation will stop Governor Andrew Bailey from reducing borrowing costs. So will a likely UK fiscal splurge.
China consumers keep Beijing, and world, on edge 17 Jan 2024 The economy expanded 5.2% last quarter, thanks to manufacturing. But local demand remains weak, forcing factories to look abroad. That will stoke global trade tensions and add to fears that China will export deflation. All eyes are on how Beijing stimulates domestic consumption.
Goldman’s new durability message cuts two ways 16 Jan 2024 After failing in consumer finance, the investment bank wants to emphasize the predictability of its existing businesses. Boss David Solomon makes a good case that a chunk of revenue is more reliable than it once was. And yet arch-rival Morgan Stanley generates even more of it.