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    Tariffs against America

    Unlock the US Election Countdown newsletter for freeThe stories that matter on money and politics in the race for the White HouseThis article is an on-site version of Martin Sandbu’s Free Lunch newsletter. Premium subscribers can sign up here to get the newsletter delivered every Thursday. Standard subscribers can upgrade to Premium here, or explore all FT newslettersThe US tariffs on Chinese green tech announced this week are rank electioneering. “So you like the sound of Trump’s mooted 10 per cent across-the-board tariff? Try a 100 per cent duty on Chinese electric cars!” seems to be what President Joe Biden wants voters to hear. In this mine-is-bigger-than-yours contest, don’t be surprised if Donald Trump soon promises 1,000 per cent tariffs. As for the real effects, though, here are some thoughts on why they may do as much if not more for Europe as for the US.Electioneering aside, the new suite of tariffs — the whole range is set out by my colleague Aime Williams here — marks a turn in the long-running tug of war between the de-couplers and the de-riskers in the US administration. For a while it looked like Treasury secretary Janet Yellen had prevailed over the protectionist-security complex in favour of “mere” de-risking, in step with the European Commission’s approach. There is a tale yet to be told about how the pendulum swung back.I suppose many in the administration see the tariffs as buttressing the green industrial agenda of the Inflation Reduction Act. The argument would be that just like the IRA increased the incentives for US consumers to buy US-made electric vehicles and other green tech (through subsidies), and the rewards from producing them in the US (through tax credits), the tariffs will further encourage domestic manufacturers to expand by raising even more the relative price of Chinese substitutes (or forestall a fall in that relative price). There is a certain logic here, which suggests the tariffs are not merely voter bait but a substantial part of the programme also for a second Biden term.But it is a logic that’s naive if not flawed. There are a lot of reasons to think green tech protectionism will hurt the industrial transformation the Biden administration wants to engineer. Take the doubling of the tariff on solar cells (from 25 to 50 per cent) and reflect on another time this sort of tactic was used to protect a domestic industry: when the EU placed restrictions on Chinese solar panel imports in 2013 because of the threat to until-then successful European (especially German) manufacturers. It didn’t work. The domestic industry declined anyway, and so did the uptake of solar electricity generation. As I have written before, a better policy would have been to welcome the Chinese imports but increase demand so much that even more expensive domestic producers could be confident in having a market. Europe would have been much further along its energy transformation today.We should expect similar consequences from the new US tariffs. Take the headline-grabbing change, to a 100 per cent duty on imported Chinese EVs. So few of these are imported to the US at the moment that the number basically can’t fall (my colleagues cite a figure of 2 per cent of all EV imports — so a razor-thin sliver of the import share of the small EV share of US car purchases). The idea is, presumably, that it will simply forestall a repeat of the soaring Chinese EV shipments to Europe and that this will make US EV makers more secure.But look, first, at some of the other tariffs. Those on batteries, magnets and critical minerals jump to 25 per cent. Those on semiconductors to 50 per cent. All of these will drive up the price of important inputs into EV and other green tech manufacturing (even domestically produced ones, because that’s what tariffs do).More importantly, the whole protectionist move actually counters the most important way in which the IRA looked like it would work. Its transformative effect was not just the subsidies, but the confidence it gave US consumers and producers — as well as investors elsewhere — that a big, stable market for EVs, renewable energy equipment and other green tech would come into being, and that there was money to be made by joining it. For this reason, an inflow of Chinese EVs — especially in the low-price segment where China’s industry excels in — could have been a good thing for the IRA’s goals. A much larger uptake of EVs by consumers would have accelerated the shift from fossil-fuelled to electric cars, by creating more demand for charging stations, encouraging the training of EV mechanics, familiarising buyers with how they work, and so on. And all that would have been very good for the US-based manufacturers of EVs and of the inputs going into them.The best-case scenario is that these tariffs will not do too much harm to America’s fledgling green industrial shift. The bigger effect may, paradoxically, be in Europe.One is at the political level. Europeans freaked out, to use the technical term, about the IRA. There is a good chance they will freak out again over these big tariff jumps. Not because they hurt European exporters (they benefit them, on which more in a moment), but because they show the scale and speed with which the US government can favour its industry (or do what it thinks favours it). The contrast with the EU’s laboured policymaking process and its fragmented and confusing industrial policy tools is stark, as will no doubt be self-flagellatingly pointed out left, right and centre in the months to come. Don’t be surprised to hear European industry lobbies bleat about how they are now left even more exposed to unfair Chinese competition. The fact is, of course, that EU exporters are now in a much more price-competitive position in the US market than they were, since Chinese rivals just became 60 per cent more expensive. If anything, this mitigates a little the discriminatory measures EU exporters complain about in the IRA. And US-based EV plants will now want to see if they can replace Chinese batteries with non-Chinese ones, widening the market for EU manufacturers.European policymakers could undo all of this if they were tempted to copy US protectionism and push global green tech trade further towards fragmentation — indeed there are already calls to match the US tariff move. That would not be a good look for a continent with the ambition to be the first to go carbon-neutral. Instead, the EU could show that there is a better way of combining openness, industrial strategy and strategic nous. That would be to accelerate green tech adoption through subsidies and procurement policies, thereby securing a big enough market that European manufacturers are confident to expand, while making use of Chinese imports to keep all this affordable and intensify competitive pressure on domestic producers (subject to carbon taxes on the border, of course).On the whole, Washington’s latest policy move will probably push both global decarbonisation and a US industrial transformation a little further out of reach. That is enough for Europeans to lament, without having to pretend they are hurt commercially.Other readablesChinese President Xi Jinping’s visit to Europe was a huge missed opportunity for France and Emmanuel Macron.My colleagues have tracked down the smuggling routes that let Russian airlines get hold of sanctions-hit aeroplane parts.How did Sweden come to have one of the world’s highest concentration of billionaires? A BBC podcast explores.Some good news: EU carbon emissions fell by 4 per cent from the end of 2022 to the end of 2023.Raiffeisen Bank has been a rogue operator in Russia for too long, writes FT deputy editor Patrick Jenkins. Recommended newsletters for youChris Giles on Central Banks — Your essential guide to money, interest rates, inflation and what central banks are thinking. Sign up hereTrade Secrets — A must-read on the changing face of international trade and globalisation. Sign up here More

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    UBS sees two Fed cuts in 2024, yields falling below 4%

    Both headline and core U.S. consumer prices (excluding food and energy) rose slightly less than expected, up 0.3% month-over-month. Retail sales were weaker than anticipated, remaining flat compared to the expected 0.4% increase.The reports added to investor optimism, lifting the S&P 500 to an all-time closing high of 5,308, gaining 1.2%. Indexes more vulnerable to interest rates saw even larger increases.In fixed-income markets, yields fell across the curve, with the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield falling 11 basis points to 4.34%.As a result, markets have now re-priced rate cuts to occur in the second half of 2024.“Fed funds futures markets are now pricing in around 51 basis points of cuts in 2024, in line with our own base case for two 25-basis point Fed rate cuts this year, starting in September,” UBS strategists commented.“April US retail sales were weaker than expected (flat compared to expectations for 0.4% growth) on top of downward revisions to prior months, supporting our view for a soft landing,” they added.The control group, which excludes autos, gas, and other specific categories, also fell short of estimates, leading to a downward revision in the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow estimate from 4.2% to 3.8% for Q2.UBS expects to see further downgrades as more data becomes available. Moreover, consumer confidence has declined, with the University of Michigan survey showing the lowest level since November and the NFIB survey indicating persistent pessimism among small business owners.The ISM services PMI for April also entered contraction territory.Thus, UBS sees Fed Chair Powell’s Tuesday remarks as a reiteration of the Fed’s data-dependent approach and expects the central bank to cut rates by 50 basis points this year if favorable data continues.“We expect 10-year US Treasury yields to decline to 3.85% by year-end, and maintain our positive outlook on both quality bonds and quality stocks,” they added. More

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    Foreign investors snap up long-term Japan bonds after three-week selling streak

    They bought 1.7 trillion yen in long-term bonds in the week ended May 10, the largest purchase in eight weeks, according to Ministry of Finance data. Foreigners offloaded about 2.43 trillion yen worth of short-term local bonds after netting approximately 3.78 trillion yen the previous week, data showed.After raising interest rates in March, the Bank of Japan held rates steady at the end of April and continued its usual bond purchases.While some perceived this stability positively, there are concerns that the Japanese bond market still faces challenges, including the potential for tighter monetary policy, yen volatility and rising inflation. In the Japanese equities market, cross-border outflows eased to 17.28 billion yen during the week ended May 10, from about 263.31 billion yen outflows in the previous week, data from stock exchanges showed.Overseas investors still purchased about 263.61 billion yen worth of cash equities, thanks to a downside surprise in U.S. job growth that rekindled hopes of rate cuts by the Federal Reserve this year.They sold derivative contracts of about 280.89 billion yen last week.Japanese domestic investors, meanwhile, remained net sellers of long-term foreign bonds for a third successive week, withdrawing about 396.6 billion yen on a net basis. They, however, poured about 21 billion yen into short-term debt instruments.Meanwhile, domestic players shed about 387.3 billion yen of overseas equities after two weeks of net purchases in a row. More

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    Biden to raise solar import tariffs in bid to protect US industry

    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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    Swap old for new: China’s latest property market plan off to a poor start

    BEIJING/HONG KONG (Reuters) – A campaign by Chinese authorities to encourage people to replace their old apartments with new ones is attracting interest, but faces one major hurdle: the participants in the scheme are struggling to sell their current homes.Flagged at a key political meeting last month, the campaign is meant to help cities across China offload their growing stock of new apartments and provide crucial cash flow to ailing developers. As of May 6, more than 50 cities have launched their own versions of the “swap old for new” scheme, according to a private survey by China Index Academy.But analysts, real estate agents and developers say buying interest in second-hand homes is very limited, casting doubt over the success of the campaign and suggesting the property sector downturn in China has further to run.”Some people have enquired about the campaign, but so far we haven’t had any successful transactions,” said Qin Yi, a property agent in Shanghai.”The biggest problem is selling the second-hand properties.”The swap scheme is the latest in a string of support measures China has taken since 2022 as it tries to breathe life into a sector that represented around a fifth of economic activity at its peak and remains a major drag on growth.China has lowered interest rates and down payments and most cities have eased or removed prior purchase restrictions. A whitelist developer funding programme for project completion is also struggling to get traction.Demand for both new and second-home properties in China has been falling, especially in smaller cities, as would-be buyers worry prices may drop further and that some developers would not be able to complete projects. At the same time, the number of both types of properties listed for sale has been growing.There were 395 million square metres (4.25 billion square feet) of new housing for sale in January-March, up 24% year-on-year, the latest official data show. Meanwhile, new home sales stood at 189.42 million square m in the same period, down 28% year-on-year.’OFF A CLIFF’In the secondary market, the number of properties listed for sale was 20 times higher than the number of transactions in April, according to a survey of 14 cities by Zhuge Real Estate Data Research Centre. Listings were up 294% year-on-year in Shenzhen, and 39% in Shanghai, it said.Additionally, tens of millions of apartments are yet to be completed in China.”Sales have been falling off a cliff,” says Ma Hong, senior analyst at GDDCE Research Institution in Shanghai, who estimates the swap programme will have a limited impact. “Very few people dare to buy a house.””Absent more innovative tools, such as a property stabilisation fund, the market downtrend will continue.”Some 96% of Chinese households already own at least one home. Before the market turned, the Chinese had for decades regarded apartments – especially the new, more modern ones – as the safest place to park their savings.Most of the cities taking part in the scheme are asking buyers to put down a deposit for a newly built apartment, which they can take back in full after two or three months if they fail to sell their existing homes to finance the purchase. Cities are offering lower taxes and fees for the transaction if completed.A property agent in the tech hub of Shenzhen, who only gave his surname Zhou, said more than a dozen people have placed deposits, but that their homes “don’t seem to have sold yet.” In Chongqing, a city of more than 30 million in southwestern China, which has piloted the scheme since February, an agent surnamed You said it “had no obvious effect” on demand. Zhengzhou, a central city of about 13 million, has asked developers to purchase second-hand homes.One executive at a Chinese developer, asking for anonymity due to the topic’s sensitivity, said their firm “had no interest in participating” because the second-hand market was “very bad.” An executive from another developer described the swap programme as “meaningless.””Nobody is buying, so how do you sell to swap?” the second developer said.Given limited success of existing incentives to spur demand, China is considering a plan for local governments nationwide to buy millions of unsold homes, Bloomberg News reported.”The government may need to intervene and manage secondary market supply if housing price expectations remain negative,” Goldman Sachs analysts said in a note this week. More

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    Chinese overcapacity claims by US, Europe are ‘trade protectionism’, ministry says

    Growing alarm over Chinese industrial overcapacity flooding the European Union with cheap products is opening a new front in the West’s trade war with Beijing, which kicked off with Washington’s import tariffs in 2018.”A country cannot be labelled as having excess capacity just because it has more capacity than it needs,” He Yadong, a Commerce Ministry spokesperson said. “Production and consumption are global, and supply and demand need to match and be adjusted according to a global perspective.”On Tuesday, the Biden administration unveiled steep tariff increases on $18 billion of exports, including a quadrupling of tariffs on Chinese new energy vehicles.”Demand for new energy products will continue to expand in this global green transformation,” He said, comparing China’s dominance in green technologies to Boeing (NYSE:BA) and Airbus’ duopoly in the global aviation market. He asserted that global NEV sales needed to increase if the international community is to achieve carbon neutrality by 2030. “The countries concerned are worried about their competitiveness and market share,” He added. “Overcapacity is not a product, it is an anxiety.” More

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    One Trading Extends the Reach of its Institutional Trading Services in Europe Through Integration with Talos

    Talos, the premier provider of digital asset trading technology for institutions, and One Trading, a crypto trading venue headquartered and regulated in the European Union, announced an integration designed to expand liquidity access for institutions. As part of the collaboration, One Trading joins the Talos network of liquidity providers, expanding the possible destinations for their shared clients looking to achieve best execution. Talos users will now be able to access One Trading’s high-speed trading platform, with a matching engine time of just 1 microsecond. In addition to expanding its potential reach to Talos’s institutional clients, One Trading also adopts the Talos trading platform as a sell-side client to support its OTC trading desk. The award-winning Talos trading platform will help One Trading efficiently source liquidity to better serve its clients’ needs. The multi-faceted relationship between the two firms highlights the different ways that the Talos network and platform can enhance a partner’s business. One Trading is an EU-based trading venue built by a highly experienced ex-TradFi team. One Trading provides an institutional-grade digital asset exchange for both retail customers and institutional clients, with a focus on achieving market-leading execution speed, deep order books, and low fees. The exchange provides zero fees for both maker and taker transactions. One Trading operates a regulated spot trading venue and an OTC business with plans to roll out a MiFID II regulated derivatives business in the near future. As the Markets in Crypto Assets (MiCA) European regulation elevates the importance of best execution, Talos’s integration with One Trading will empower shared clients with an additional option for sourcing the best available liquidity.About TalosTalos provides institutional-grade technology that supports the full digital asset trading lifecycle, including liquidity sourcing, price discovery, trading, settlement, lending, borrowing and portfolio management. Engineered by a team with unmatched experience building institutional trading systems, the Talos platform connects institutions to key participants in today’s digital asset ecosystem – exchanges, OTC desks, prime brokers, lenders, custodians and more – through a single point of entry. By streamlining the entire trading process, Talos helps mitigate intermediary risk and facilitate best execution. For additional information, visit www.talos.com. Talos Disclaimer: Talos offers software-as-a-service products that provide connectivity tools for institutional clients. Talos does not provide clients with any pre-negotiated arrangements with liquidity providers or other parties. Clients are required to independently negotiate arrangements with liquidity providers and other parties bilaterally. Talos is not party to any of these arrangements. Services and venues may not be available in all jurisdictions.About One TradingOne Trading is a leading European digital asset trading platform with a VASP registration in Italy with Organismo Agenti e Mediatori (OAM). The One Trading platform has various offerings: Exchange, Instant Trade, and an OTC desk. The Exchange is where registered customers can access the fastest trading venue in the world with zero fees — also boasting a transparent order book with deep liquidity, and charting tools for technical analysis. The team behind One Trading has strong ex-TradFi expertise and is focused on providing an unparalleled product experience.Instant Trade offers a simplified UI for trading a wide range of fiat, stablecoin, and altcoin pairs at 0% additional commission. One Trading retrieves the best prices for customers by plugging into a number of major liquidity providers with access to deep liquidity. These relationships have been established through the over-the-counter (OTC) offering, and are typically only reserved for HNWs or institutional customers. Through Instant Trade, all trader types can access this unique trading mechanism through a simple UI.The OTC desk offers a high-touch trading team to work with clients, typically institutional partners to facilitate trades in any size and digital asset, with access to deep pools of liquidity, rapid settlement, and large asset coverage. One Trading Disclaimer: This material is for informational purposes only, and is not intended to provide legal, tax, financial, or investment advice. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of the future nor a reliable indicator of the likely performance of any investment. Recipients should consult their own advisors before making these types of decisions. One Trading has no responsibility or liability for any decision made or any other acts or omissions in connection with Recipient’s use of this material. ContactAndy KeelaghanOne [email protected] article was originally published on Chainwire More

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    Futures rise after CPI-powered rally, Walmart to report – what’s moving markets

    1. Futures higherU.S. stock futures pointed higher on Thursday after equities surged to a record high in the prior session following a mild monthly inflation report.By 03:33 ET (07:33 GMT), the Dow futures contract had gained 37 points or 0.1%, S&P 500 futures had risen by 5 points or 0.1%, and Nasdaq 100 futures had climbed by 34 points or 0.2%.Data on Wednesday showed that consumer price growth had slowed as anticipated to 3.4% on an annualized basis in April, powering bets that the Federal Reserve will start to ratchet down interest rates from more than two decade highs later this year. Traders have now priced in two cuts in 2024, up from just one earlier this week.Stocks soared in the wake of the report, with the benchmark S&P 500 rising by 1.2%, the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite adding 1.4%, and the 30-stock Dow Jones Industrial Average advancing 0.9%. The rate-sensitive 2-year U.S. Treasury yield, which typically moves inversely to prices, temporarily touched its lowest mark since early April, while the dollar weakened to multi-week lows against its peers.2. Bitcoin rises amid U.S. dollar slideBitcoin rose on Thursday, boosted by the slide in the dollar, although the token was comfortably rangebound as sentiment towards crypto remained subdued.The world’s biggest cryptocurrency climbed 6.7% in the past 24 hours to $66,159.0 by 03:34 ET. The token had pushed as high as $66,600, before losing some momentum. It had dipped as low as $60,000 earlier this week.Analysts flagged that the year-on-year pace of inflation still hovered well above the Fed’s 2% target level, while a slew of officials at the central bank have warned recently that they will need much more confidence that prices are sustainably easing before trimming rates.This notion limited any major gains in Bitcoin, keeping the token trading comfortably within a $60,000 to $70,000 range established over the past two months. The performance also comes as capital flows and trading activity in spot exchange-traded funds, which were a key driver of a March rally in Bitcoin, largely stagnated in recent weeks. 3. Walmart to reportWalmart is set to highlight the earnings calendar on Thursday, with the big-box store facing stiff competition to entice cost-conscious Americans to purchase its low-price items.Online retail spending in the U.S. surged by 7% between January to April due in large part to strong demand for cheaper merchandise during a time of elevated inflation, according to a report from Adobe Analytics last week. Although such a trend should bode well for Walmart, e-commerce players like Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) and PDD Group’s Temu are presenting alternatives for shoppers keen on finding bargains on products like electronics and clothing.Meanwhile, Walmart is restocking its inventories at a slower rate than its peers, Reuters has reported, citing LSEG figures. High levels of inventory could push up costs and dent profit margins.Even still, shares in the company have jumped by 12.7% so far this year and are exchanging hands at around 25 times expected earnings, in a sign that investors believe that it will unveil solid quarterly results. The earnings release before the bell on Thursday could test this optimism.4. Chubb shares spike after-hours on Berkshire Hathaway stakeWarren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRKb) on Wednesday revealed it had taken a $6.72 billion stake in Chubb Ltd (NYSE:CB), sending shares of the insurer surging to record highs in extended hours trade.Chubb rose 7.5% after-hours to a record high of $271.84, after Berkshire said in a filing it owned 25.9 million shares in the firm as of March 31.Berkshire began buying Chubb since the third quarter of 2023, and had received permission from the Securities and Exchange Commission to temporarily keep the purchase confidential. The conglomerate had received similar permissions for its other purchases in Chevron Corp (NYSE:CVX) and Exxon Mobil Corp (NYSE:XOM), as well as International Business Machines (NYSE:IBM) and Verizon Communications (NYSE:VZ).Chubb clocked strong earnings in the first quarter of 2024. Gross premiums crossed $14 billion and net income surged to $5.23 from $4.54 last year.5. Crude rises after inflation data, inventoriesCrude prices inched up on Thursday following the U.S. consumer inflation release and a bigger-than-expected draw in U.S. inventories.By 03:31 ET, U.S. crude futures traded 0.4% higher at $78.96 per barrel, while the Brent contract climbed 0.4% to $83.07 a barrel.The inflation data bolstered the prospect of lower interest rates, potentially lifting future global economic activity and, by extension, oil demand.Official data on Wednesday also showed that U.S. oil inventories shrank by a bigger-than-expected 2.5 million barrels in the week to May 10, increasing hopes that demand was improving in the world’s biggest fuel consumer, especially as the travel-heavy summer season approaches. More