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    Taylor Swift vs the Bank of England

    Standard DigitalWeekend Print + Standard Digitalwasnow $75 per monthComplete digital access to quality FT journalism with expert analysis from industry leaders. Pay a year upfront and save 20%.What’s included Global news & analysisExpert opinionFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit appFirstFT: the day’s biggest stories20+ curated newslettersFollow topics & set alerts with myFTFT Videos & Podcasts20 monthly gift articles to shareLex: FT’s flagship investment column15+ Premium newsletters by leading expertsFT Digital Edition: our digitised print editionWeekday Print EditionFT WeekendFT Digital EditionGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionSpecial featuresExclusive FT analysisFT Digital EditionGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionSpecial featuresExclusive FT analysisGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit appFirstFT: the day’s biggest stories20+ curated newslettersFollow topics & set alerts with myFTFT Videos & Podcasts10 monthly gift articles to shareGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit appFirstFT: the day’s biggest stories20+ curated newslettersFollow topics & set alerts with myFTFT Videos & Podcasts20 monthly gift articles to shareLex: FT’s flagship investment column15+ Premium newsletters by leading expertsFT Digital Edition: our digitised print editionEverything in PrintWeekday Print EditionFT WeekendFT Digital EditionGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionSpecial featuresExclusive FT analysisPlusEverything in Premium DigitalEverything in Standard DigitalGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionSpecial featuresFirstFT newsletterVideos & PodcastsFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit app10 gift articles per monthExclusive FT analysisPremium newslettersFT Digital Edition10 additional gift articles per monthMake and share highlightsFT WorkspaceMarkets data widgetSubscription ManagerWorkflow integrationsOccasional readers go freeVolume discountFT Weekend Print deliveryPlusEverything in Standard DigitalFT Weekend Print deliveryPlusEverything in Premium Digital More

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    The US had an exceptionally good inflation report. Now what?

    Standard DigitalWeekend Print + Standard Digitalwasnow $85 per monthBilled Quarterly at $199. Complete digital access plus the FT newspaper delivered Monday-Saturday.What’s included Global news & analysisExpert opinionFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit appFirstFT: the day’s biggest stories20+ curated newslettersFollow topics & set alerts with myFTFT Videos & Podcasts20 monthly gift articles to shareLex: FT’s flagship investment column15+ Premium newsletters by leading expertsFT Digital Edition: our digitised print editionWeekday Print EditionFT WeekendFT Digital EditionGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionSpecial featuresExclusive FT analysisFT Digital EditionGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionSpecial featuresExclusive FT analysisGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit appFirstFT: the day’s biggest stories20+ curated newslettersFollow topics & set alerts with myFTFT Videos & Podcasts10 monthly gift articles to shareGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit appFirstFT: the day’s biggest stories20+ curated newslettersFollow topics & set alerts with myFTFT Videos & Podcasts20 monthly gift articles to shareLex: FT’s flagship investment column15+ Premium newsletters by leading expertsFT Digital Edition: our digitised print editionEverything in PrintWeekday Print EditionFT WeekendFT Digital EditionGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionSpecial featuresExclusive FT analysisPlusEverything in Premium DigitalEverything in Standard DigitalGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionSpecial featuresFirstFT newsletterVideos & PodcastsFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit app10 gift articles per monthExclusive FT analysisPremium newslettersFT Digital Edition10 additional gift articles per monthMake and share highlightsFT WorkspaceMarkets data widgetSubscription ManagerWorkflow integrationsOccasional readers go freeVolume discountFT Weekend Print deliveryPlusEverything in Standard DigitalFT Weekend Print deliveryPlusEverything in Premium Digital More

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    Volatile yen keeps currency market on edge

    SINGAPORE (Reuters) – The yen was volatile on Friday after a sharp surge in the previous session in the wake of U.S. consumer prices unexpectedly dropping in June, stoking speculation that Tokyo had intervened to lift the currency away from 38-year lows.The Japanese currency swung between gains and losses and was last at 158.90 per dollar in Asian hours, having spiked nearly 3% to as high as 157.40 immediately after the CPI report published on Thursday.News outlet Asahi, citing government sources, said officials intervened in the currency market while a Nikkei report, also citing sources, said the BOJ conducted rate checks with banks on the euro against the yen on Friday.Tokyo’s top currency diplomat, Masato Kanda, said on Friday authorities will take action as needed in the foreign exchange market but declined to comment on whether authorities had intervened.The usual absence of any official comment on intervention leaves investors guessing and focus will now be on data due at the end of the month that shows whether authorities did step in or not.”The reaction from yen to the latest two rounds of suspected intervention has been very different,” said Charu Chanana, head of currency strategy at Saxo. “Japanese authorities need to follow-up with more measures such as stern verbal intervention, or better-still, tightening at the BOJ July meeting.”Tokyo intervened in April end and early May, spending roughly 9.8 trillion yen to support the currency.However, the yen has since gone beyond those levels, touching a 38-year low of 161.96 last week as the wide difference between U.S. and Japan rates weighed. This gap has created a highly lucrative trading opportunity, in which traders borrow the yen at low rates to invest in dollar-priced assets for a higher return, known as carry trade.”Looks like it will be a volatile day today with markets nervous about intervention but carry still very attractive to short the yen and the shift in the fundamental story is only marginal after last night’s cooler U.S. CPI,” said Saxo’s Chanana.The surge in yen was triggered after data on Thursday showed U.S. consumer prices fell for the first time in four years in June, firmly putting disinflation back on track and keeping an interest rate cut from the Federal Reserve on the table.Tom Hopkins, senior portfolio manager at BRI Wealth Management, said the CPI report should bring further confidence to markets. “Despite not being quite there yet, the road is open to a rate cut in the near term and we still expect the Federal Reserve to reduce a restrictive federal funds policy rate by 25 basis points in September,” Hopkins said.Traders are pricing in 93% chance of the Fed cutting rates in September, compared with 73% before the CPI reading, CME FedWatch tool showed. Markets are pricing in 61 basis points of easing this year.The dollar as a result has been on the defensive, with the dollar index, which measures the U.S. currency against six rivals, was at 104.38, not far from the one-month low of 104.07 it touched on Thursday.The euro last fetched $1.087325, just below the one month high of $1.090 touched on Thursday.Sterling was hovering close to the nearly one-year high hit on Thursday and was last at $1.2922 after data showed the UK economy grew more quickly than expected in May, potentially lowering the chances of an August rate cut. More

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    Japan’s top FX diplomat says authorities to take action as needed on yen

    TOKYO (Reuters) -Japan’s top currency diplomat, Masato Kanda, said on Friday authorities will take action as needed in the foreign exchange market, after the yen’s spike overnight raised market speculation about currency intervention.Kanda, who is vice finance minister for international affairs, also told reporters that recent yen moves were somewhat rapid, but declined to comment on whether authorities had intervened in the currency market to prop up the yen.The Japanese yen surged nearly 3% on Thursday in its biggest daily rise since late 2022, a move that local media attributed to a round of official buying to prop up a currency that has languished at 38-year lows.”Interest rate differentials (between Japan and other countries) are narrowing, so it’s natural” to believe that recent yen moves are speculative, Kanda told reporters.”I’ve felt puzzled about recent big currency moves, from the perspective of whether they were in line with fundamentals, and it would be highly concerning if the excessive volatility, driven by speculation, pushes up import prices and negatively affect households,” he said. Kanda said the Japanese currency has dropped about 21 yen per dollar since the beginning of this year, one of the largest moves since 1990, and has moved about 5% recently. More

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    Large distressed Hong Kong realty deals set to rise as more sellers accept losses

    HONG KONG (Reuters) -Higher-for-longer interest costs and ample retail and office vacancies have pushed the sales of distressed investment properties in Hong Kong higher in the second quarter, a trend realtors expect to continue in an already tepid real estate market.An increasing acceptance among lenders and landlords to book steeper losses has driven up the number of these deals in a market forecast to remain lacklustre due to the higher interest rates and falling rental income, realtors said. Distressed properties are either on the brink of foreclosure, already owned by a bank or have been repossessed by the mortgage lender. They could offer an attractive investment because of their usually relatively lower prices.Half of the 22 investment properties transacted in the second quarter were foreclosure sales or those that sold at a loss, according to data by real estate services firm Colliers.That compares with a quarter in the previous quarter and 26% for all of 2023. The company counts only deals valued at more than HK$100 million ($12.80 million). “We’ll see more distressed deals and discounted stocks in the market in the second half,” said Colliers Hong Kong co-head of capital markets & investment service Thomas Chak. “That’ll put pressure on market prices.”Colliers set up a restructuring services team in Hong Kong last year, its second in the Asia-Pacific after Australia, to meet rising demand from lenders to recover their loans. “When rates start going down, it could be a turning point,” said Reeves Yan, head of Hong Kong capital markets of real estate consultancy CBRE. “The number of distressed deals could stabilise.”CBRE expects office prices, which have already fallen more than 50% since peaking in mid-2019, to ease about 5-10% for the whole of 2024. Yan said buyers in most of the large office deals in the first half were foreign investors, while funds and mainland Chinese companies were not as active due to high financing costs and their own financial issues.Collier’s Chak also said some family offices from Singapore, Malaysia, mainland China and Hong Kong were putting more money into Hong Kong real estate in the past year, with demand for retail space faring better than office space, where vacancies are at a record high 16% amid an increase in new supply. STEEP LOSSESNot all lenders, however, are keen to sell distressed properties in the current market.Realtors said Chinese state-owned financial institutions are usually more reluctant to book losses than smaller local banks, and would rather put sales on hold until the real estate market recovers.For example, lenders to embattled developer China Evergrande (HK:3333) Group’s headquarters in Hong Kong, led by state-owned China Citic Bank Corp Ltd, have yet to decide whether to offer the property for sale a third time because the valuation has dropped below their loan value of HK$7.6 billion loan, according to an industry source. Two tender sales of the office tower in the second half of 2022 have lapsed, Reuters has reported. Citic Bank did not immediately respond to requests for comment.Currently, a harbourfront office tower in the Kowloon peninsula has been put up for another tender sale that will close next month, with the expected selling price falling by a third compared to last year.The lenders – seven mostly local banks that include Hang Seng Bank – have together extended a HK$4.5 billion loan pledged to the property, called the One Harbour Gate East Tower and which was formerly owned by Chinese property tycoon Chen Hongtian.The banks now expect to sell the office tower for just HK$3 billion after an unsuccessful tender offer last year, according to a person with direct knowledge who declined to be named as the information remained confidential. Hang Seng Bank did not immediately respond to requests for comment.($1 = 7.8099 Hong Kong dollars) More

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    US lawmakers raise worries about China in Microsoft deal with Emirati AI firm

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Republican lawmakers asked the Biden administration for an intelligence assessment of Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT)’s $1.5 billion investment in UAE-based artificial intelligence firm G42 over concerns about transfer of sensitive technology and G42’s historic ties to China. Representative Michael McCaul, chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, and John Moolenaar, leader of the Select Committee on China, made the request for a briefing in a letter dated Wednesday to White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan, the committees said.The Republicans said they want the briefing on the deal, announced in April, before it advances to a second phase involving the transfer of export-restricted semiconductor chips and model weights, sophisticated data that improves an AI model’s ability to emulate human reasoning. The letter is a sign of growing concern about the lack of regulations around the export of sensitive AI models, as fears mount that companies like G42 might share the prized technology with U.S. adversaries like China.”We remain deeply concerned by attempts to move quickly to advance a partnership that involves the unprecedented transfer of highly sensitive, U.S.-origin technology, without congressional consultation or clearly defined regulations in place,” the lawmakers said in the letter.They asked for a U.S. assessment of G42’s ties to China’s Communist Party, military and government before the Microsoft deal advances. They cited a recent visit by UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan to Beijing to discuss, according to Chinese state news agency Xinhua, cooperation in AI.Microsoft said in a statement it was working closely with the U.S. government and “U.S. national security will continue to be a principal priority.” The White House National Security Council spokesperson said in a statement that the administration has been in regular dialogue with lawmakers to ensure they are aware of the risks associated with digital infrastructure. “National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan looks forward to continuing this engagement, including with Chair McCaul,” the person added. Spokespeople for G42 and the United Arab Emirates embassy did not respond to requests for comment. The Chinese Embassy said, “The U.S. has repeatedly undermined cooperation between Chinese companies and other countries on trumped-up security grounds.”CONCERNS ABOUT CHINA A House Select Committee aide told reporters on a phone call on Thursday that based on conversations with Microsoft, the lawmakers expect the U.S. company to export otherwise severely restricted AI semiconductor chips to train models as well as AI model weights.Microsoft President Brad Smith told Reuters in May that the deal with G42 could eventually involve the transfer of sophisticated chips and tools.The Republicans’ letter also cited G42’s past “digital surveillance” work as an area of possible risk. The aide highlighted prior connections between G42 staff and Emirati cybersecurity firm DarkMatter, which was the subject of a 2019 Reuters investigation on its cyber espionage activities. The U.S. has had deepening concerns about China’s influence in the Middle East and the United Arab Emirates, a longstanding U.S. ally. But G42 said in February it divested its investments in China and was accepting constraints imposed on it by the United States to work with U.S. companies. G42 previously had investments or partnerships in China with TikTok owner ByteDance, vaccine developer Sinopharm and U.S.-blacklisted biotech firm BGO Genomics. The New York Times reported in April that the Microsoft deal with G42 was largely orchestrated by the Biden administration to box out China. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo told the paper that the Microsoft deal did not authorize the transfer to G42 of AI models or processors to develop AI applications. Along with Microsoft, Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund Mubadala, the country’s ruling family and U.S. private equity firm Silver Lake hold stakes in G42, whose chairman, Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed Al Nahyan, is the UAE national security adviser and a brother to the president.Reuters reported in May that the Commerce Department was considering rules to restrict the export of proprietary or closed-source AI. Currently, nothing is stopping U.S. AI giants from selling them to almost anyone in the world without government oversight. More

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    China plenum to deliver policy agenda hindered by conflicting goals

    BEIJING (Reuters) -China’s leaders will seek to inject confidence in the economy at a highly anticipated meeting next week, but conflicting goals, such as boosting growth while cutting debt, may mean little progress toward implementing change.The Communist Party leadership meeting will outline efforts to promote advanced manufacturing, revise the tax system to curb debt risks, manage a vast property crisis, boost domestic consumption and revitalise the private sector, policy advisers say.With business, employment and consumer sentiment near record lows, the four-day plenum starting on Monday will seek to quell concerns that the world’s second-biggest economy is drifting towards a prolonged period of low growth or even the deflation Japan has often faced since the 1990s.But China’s leaders have not shown how they can cut debt and stimulate growth, get consumers to spend more while channelling resources to producers and infrastructure, or increase urbanisation while revitalising rural areas.As a result, the communique at the end of the closed-door meeting, chaired by President Xi Jinping, may contain lofty goals but offer few pathways to them. This could disappoint tense financial markets and global officials calling for China to change its growth model.”Reforms are needed as several risks are overlapping: an ageing population, property bubbles, local government debt risks and financial risks,” said a policy adviser who asked for anonymity due to the topic’s sensitivity. “But implementing reforms will be very difficult.”SEVERE CHALLENGESThe plenum, previously held every five years, was expected last autumn but delayed without explanation to this month.China’s leaders have sometimes used these gatherings to announce significant shifts – such as Deng Xiaoping launching reform and opening policies in 1978 that ignited China’s rise to superpower, and Xi consolidating power with the scrapping of presidential term limits at the last plenum, in 2018.Now, though, policymakers face seemingly intractable challenges. Officials want to double China’s economy by 2035, requiring average annual growth of 4.7%. Few believe that is feasible, with the International Monetary Fund predicting a slowdown to 3.3% by 2029 from 5.2% last year.”We must unleash new growth drivers,” said a second policy adviser. “If we don’t reform, the economy is likely to slow in line with IMF forecasts.”Many economists have called on China to reduce its reliance on debt-fuelled investment projects and exports, instead promoting growth by stimulating household spending – something leaders pledged at a 2013 plenum but have made little progress on. It would require transferring resources from government and business to households through social welfare and higher wages, undermining debt-reduction and industrial goals.Long-held ambitions such as dismantling a Mao-era internal passport system, blamed for huge urban-rural inequality, and raising the retirement age, which is among the lowest in the world, would risk social instability.Beijing says it has an open-door policy to investment from abroad, but foreign companies complain about raids and arrests, broad national security laws and state support to domestic competitors.’GOVERNMENT IS TOO STRONG'”The likelihood is that the meeting will conclude with a long list of pledges of reform,” said Mark Williams, chief Asia economist at Capital Economics. “Typically though, the post-plenum statement offers no suggestions about implementation, no sense of priorities or how tensions between reforms will be addressed.”The party-controlled parliament in March focussed on “new productive forces”, a buzzword coined by Xi last year that envisions scientific research and industrial innovation leading to technological breakthroughs that propel China into a new era of high growth. But this is complicated by U.S. and European trade partners, as well as some emerging economies, erecting barriers against Chinese exports of manufactured goods. Industrial policies also squeeze funding for such consumer-oriented measures as raising unemployment benefits or pensions for the ageing population.”The unintended consequence is that deflationary pressure becomes protracted, unless strong measures to support demand are enacted, which seems unlikely,” said Alicia Garcia-Herrero, chief Asia-Pacific economist at Natixis.China’s private sector feels pressured as the Communist Party tightens its grip over the economy, vowing to “unswervingly” support both state-owned and private companies. “It’s very difficult to let market mechanisms play a decisive role because the government is too strong,” said the first adviser.”We want to open up the economy further and adopt international standards but at the same time we strengthen the party’s leadership by integrating it in government and enterprises, which feels contradictory to the outside world.” More