BoE cavalry will arrive too late for Rishi Sunak 8 May 2024 After a local polls rout, the UK prime minister badly needs an economic boost before this year’s national elections. But Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey will only cut rates when inflation drops from the current 3.2%. By then, it could be too late for the government.
Europe has little to fear as ECB and Fed part ways 7 May 2024 The European Central Bank is set to cut rates before the US Federal Reserve for the first time in its history. Hardliners warn that will weaken the euro and feed inflation. But the effects are likely to be muted. Besides, a lower currency helps exports more than it hurts imports.
China property fix aims to restock speculation 6 May 2024 Reducing unsold inventory is Beijing’s latest directive and replaces the mantra “houses are for living in, not for speculation”. It’s a prelude to removing some investment curbs. Allowing people to get rich off the sector is a necessary evil to restore overall confidence.
FOMO finally returns to Chinese equities 3 May 2024 After a $5 trln crash, a bull market in Hong Kong and surging inflows to mainland bourses are prompting some investors to up their allocations. Policy support from Beijing, buying by long-only funds and attractive valuations suggest the start of a long road to recovery.
Hurricanes threaten to stir perfect economic storm 1 May 2024 Warmer oceans portend an unusually fierce 2024 season in the Atlantic, with two states already propping up their home insurance systems. The nightmare scenario is $200 bln of losses. Insolvencies would be a problem, but not as big as exorbitant premiums and lower property values.
Jay Powell might wish for the sound of silence 30 Apr 2024 With inflation at 3.7%, the Federal Reserve chair is stuck. Signal lower rates are coming, and he may have to backtrack. Talk about increasing them, and bonds may go haywire. With a potential change in the White House, Powell’s intentions carry even greater weight, too.
Von der Leyen’s China plan is all bark and no bite 30 Apr 2024 To keep her job atop the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen will talk tough but wield a small stick towards Beijing. Open supply lines from the People’s Republic are key to Europe’s economic well-being. Brussels’ rhetoric will likely be harsher than sanctions and tariffs.
Yen intervention is a lost cause worth pursuing 29 Apr 2024 Tokyo may have acted to prop up the currency after it dropped below 160 to the dollar. It’s a losing bet until the US Federal Reserve cuts rates or the Bank of Japan tightens monetary policy further. But there is value in signalling to the world that this is not a one-way street.
Sánchez’s psychodrama leaves Spain at loose end 29 Apr 2024 PM Pedro Sánchez is staying on after threatening to resign over a court probe into his wife’s dealings. He appears weakened before a series of elections, raising doubt on his ability to push for reforms and ensure the country remains the fastest-growing major European economy.
Ukraine’s $61 bln lifeline is not enough 29 Apr 2024 The United States last week cleared a vital aid package, but Kyiv still needs a medium-term funding plan to withstand Russia’s onslaught. Mobilising Moscow’s $320 bln of frozen central bank assets to provide compensation for war damages should be central to this.
US economy is a victim of its own success 25 Apr 2024 The United States emerged as the world’s growth engine at the IMF summit last week. In this Viewsroom podcast, Breakingviews columnists debate whether this debt-fuelled strength means that interest rates will stay high for longer and how that could raise the risk of a recession.
How one firm made child’s play of tricky M&A games 24 Apr 2024 Imagine buying a company without tedious negotiations, rival bids or pricey premiums. A Saudi investor pulled it off by snapping up enough shares to gain control of US retailer The Children’s Place. The feat will be hard to replicate, but there’s now a model for deal masterminds.
Macron wades into a very French debt crisis 24 Apr 2024 Some investors are avoiding the country’s bonds after its budget deficit topped 5% of GDP. Paris is unlikely to require an IMF or European bailout. But President Emmanuel Macron has to bring public finances under control. That will come at a heavy political and economic price.
Chinese stocks have found a bottom 23 Apr 2024 After a $5 trln crash, there are early signs of healthy buying. In this Exchange podcast, Herald van der Linde, HSBC head of equity strategy, Asia Pacific, unpicks the shifting sentiment of Chinese households and implications for the rest of the region’s capital markets.
What to do about the EU’s relative decline 22 Apr 2024 The European Union will become marginalised if it continues to shrink compared with other regions. Two former Italian prime ministers, Enrico Letta and Mario Draghi, are coming up with remedies. But anxious leaders may lack the will to drink the necessary medicine.
UAE is timely reminder of climate plan B urgency 18 Apr 2024 Torrential rains have flooded Dubai’s airport. Spending cash to prepare for the impact of global warming often takes a back seat to slashing emissions. The more richer states upgrade climate defences, the more they highlight the need to help poorer ones do so too.
EU bank-saving raid can boost tired capital market 17 Apr 2024 European households have 33 trln euros of rainy-day cash, but not much invested in equities. Former Italian PM Enrico Letta reckons savers could fund the green transition if they had access to better stock funds. Forcing countries to lower tax and other barriers would help.
Why rich nations have to keep helping poorer ones 16 Apr 2024 The world faces many onerous financial and climate challenges. Still, as Axel van Trotsenburg, the World Bank’s Senior Managing Director, explains in this Exchange podcast, governments and companies in advanced economies cannot afford to stop supporting developing ones.
Look out for a return of the US bond rollercoaster 16 Apr 2024 As short-term interest rates spiked, longer-term borrowing costs have lagged. The yield on three-month US Treasury bonds has exceeded the return on 10-year securities for 76 weeks, a near record. If this anomaly unwinds, falling bond prices could hurt fund managers and Uncle Sam.
Oil traders make risky bet on calm in Middle East 15 Apr 2024 Crude prices fell after Iran attacked Israel, probably because the Islamic Republic telegraphed its strikes in advance. Still, the unprecedented move may elicit an Israeli response. With oil supplies tightening, regional tensions and prices could yet reset at a higher level.