Prolonged Red Sea attacks can hurt global economy 11 Jan 2024 Freight costs are soaring as militants target ships on a crucial trade route. In this Viewsroom podcast, Breakingviews columnists debate how inflation could rise and which companies could suffer if the tensions aren’t resolved soon.
Imperial dollar is impervious to lower rate hopes 9 Jan 2024 In theory, the currency should weaken as the Federal Reserve readies to cut borrowing costs. But it is up 1% in 2024 and just had its best week since July. The US economy’s resilience is one reason. But the greenback’s strength also becomes a perpetual problem for everyone else.
EU hitches anti-Orbán plot to Draghi trial balloon 9 Jan 2024 European Council chief Charles Michel’s decision to leave early means Hungary’s Viktor Orbán could take charge of leaders’ meetings and represent them in high-profile summits. Doing whatever it takes to fill the void, even tapping Italy’s former PM for a short time, makes sense.
Capital Calls: Cognac, Euro zone inflation 5 Jan 2024 Concise views on global finance: China’s new brandy probe may not be French drinks giants’ main headache; new euro area inflation figures sit all the more awkwardly with the ECB’s refusal to consider rate cuts.
Red Sea windfall will only delay shippers’ pain 4 Jan 2024 Maersk and Hapag-Lloyd have gained some $18 bln in market value, as militant attacks shut the Suez Canal and caused freight rates to soar. Yet investor hopes for a lasting boost may be disappointed. And carriers will still face a reckoning from a weak economy and idle fleets.
Bond deluge will nudge ECB to softer rate stance 4 Jan 2024 European countries’ fiscal needs and the end of central bank buying mean a record 675 bln euros of sovereign debt will be on sale in 2024. That may keep borrowing costs high for states like Italy. ECB President Christine Lagarde can help by meeting investor hopes for swift cuts.
Green backlash will spread to European Parliament 3 Jan 2024 Pro-environment parties risk losing clout in June’s pan-EU vote. That will reinforce a strengthening bond between conservatives and far-right forces wary of the industrial and social cost of the clean transition. The EU’s ambitious Green Deal will get a paler hue.
The world’s paradigm shift will create a busy 2024 2 Jan 2024 Surprise IPOs, a wave of M&A activity and changing recruitment patterns are just a flavour of predictions from Breakingviews. In this Viewsroom podcast, columnists explain how a better understanding of the rates environment and inflation will make it easier to get things done.
Rival narratives will battle for supremacy in 2024 2 Jan 2024 As inflation peaks, war rages and trade conflicts harden, new ways of thinking about how and why the world has changed are emerging. The lessons drawn by voters, central banks, tech titans and bureaucrats will shape economies, companies and markets for years to come.
Jay Powell could land on the ballot in 2024 2 Jan 2024 Central banks’ fight against inflation may produce slower growth, joblessness and recession in the US, Europe and the UK, just as elections loom. The Fed chief and peers argue their mandate is to slay high prices, not to appease voters. They shouldn’t assume it will always be so.
Deflation will help big grocers gobble up minnows 29 Dec 2023 Supermarkets like Walmart and Tesco are expecting goods prices to finally fall. That will help larger chains to cut shoppers’ bills by putting pressure on suppliers such as Unilever. Smaller rivals may find it harder and end up losing customers, making them ripe for takeovers.
Breakingviews readers’ year of living dangerously 29 Dec 2023 Our best-read stories of 2023 reflect an audience trying to navigate a complex world of conflict, unpredictable interest rates and novel inventions. Familiar obsessions, including dramatic deals and the risks of a rocky energy transition, held your attention too.
Dear Chancellor: inflation will fall…when it falls 28 Dec 2023 Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey has to write to the UK finance minister when consumer price growth is above or below 2%. Yet it’s clear mere central bankers can’t influence the behaviour of people or firms. Breakingviews imagines a letter in 2024 which says as much.
Western support for Ukraine will wobble – but hold 22 Dec 2023 Foreign donors have given $66 bln in fiscal aid to the country since Russia’s invasion. A prolonged conflict will test the US and Europe’s solidarity with Kyiv. But allies will keep backing President Volodymyr Zelenskiy once they consider what will happen if they don’t.
Capital Calls: Angola and OPEC 21 Dec 2023 Concise views on global finance: The African state’s decision to quit the oil producer group isn’t a huge deal in the short term, but will raise fears of more meaningful exits.
EU debt rules offer unity at price of relevance 21 Dec 2023 European Union finance chiefs reached a deal on a new fiscal pact, breaking a post-pandemic stalemate. Germany won austere deficit and debt targets, yet pain will be diluted by French-fought delays and concessions. The net result is an overly complex system that may not work.
Green investors will learn the art of stockpicking 21 Dec 2023 Wind and solar stocks had a torrid 2023, as stars like Orsted crashed. But renewables investment is strong, input cost inflation is abating and rates may have peaked. Investors able to pick developers in the right sector, or suppliers in the right regions, may find bargains.
US defense minnows will storm the barricades 20 Dec 2023 Even as conflict in Ukraine leads American arms makers to boost production, the political mood is turning against giants like Lockheed Martin. With half the $415 bln handed to American defense contractors not receiving a competitive bid, newcomers will make battlefield gains.
Suez crisis may finally jolt Egypt out of stasis 20 Dec 2023 Cairo was wobbling even before militant attacks threatened its $9 bln of annual revenue from the Suez Canal. With inflation at 36%, re-elected President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi’s foreign aid needs are spiking. He will need to stop dawdling on reforms required by donors like the IMF.
New Red Sea blockage may be both longer and milder 19 Dec 2023 Militant attacks have forced groups from Maersk to BP to avoid the conduit for over 10% of world trade. Re-routing round Africa will hike fuel costs and could last six months. Yet weaker global demand relative to a six-day 2021 stoppage may limit the wider economic fallout.