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    Japan’s corporate service inflation steady in February

    The year-on-year rise in the services producer price index, which measures what companies charge each other for services, was unchanged from January, Bank of Japan (BOJ) data showed on Tuesday.The data underscores the BOJ’s view that rising service prices will start to replace cost-push inflation as a key driver of price gains, and help sustain inflation around its 2% target.Service price moves are closely watched by the BOJ as a key indicator of whether wages and inflation are rising in tandem, which it set as one of the prerequisites for raising interest rates.The BOJ ended eight years of negative interest rates and other remnants of its unorthodox policy last week, making a historic shift away from decades of massive monetary stimulus that was aimed at reviving the economy and quashing deflation. More

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    China’s zombie car plant problem

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.Policymakers from Brussels to Washington are fretting over the security and economic risks posed by a fast-rising wave of Chinese electric vehicle imports. But for Xi Jinping’s administration in Beijing the rapid emergence of the nation’s advanced EV industry has created a different dilemma: how to manage the terminal decline of the sector devoted to internal combustion engines?China’s auto industry is the world’s biggest across sales, production and, since last year, exports. In 2023, a record 30.1mn cars were produced, up from the prior peak of 28.9mn in 2017, according to data from Automobility, a Shanghai consultancy. However, the growth in China’s EV industry, which now accounts for more than 30 per cent of domestic passenger vehicle sales, has masked the staggering decline in sales of non-EVs. Last year, China produced 17.7mn cars with internal combustion engines, a 37 per cent fall from 28.3mn in 2017. The collapse of the legacy car market after decades of growth poses an existential threat to scores of foreign and state-backed carmakers operating in China. But it also presents serious long-term economic and social challenges for the country, according to auto sector analysts, academics and economists.The leadership in Beijing has publicly acknowledged the risks of excess manufacturing capacity that has been a feature of China’s industrial development over recent decades. According to remarks from Xi released after December’s Central Economic Work Conference, an annual meeting that sets economic policy for the following year, “overcapacity in some industries” was among the key “difficulties and challenges that must be tackled to achieve further economic recovery”.But a clear plan to address the problem of an industry in terminal decline has not been laid out. Some factories will be able to be repurposed for EVs, some geared towards exports, but scores are already surplus to requirements, raising the spectre of hundreds of zombie factories emerging over the coming decade. At a national level, Chinese economic planners must combat a “classic transition problem” of labour reallocation as the world’s second-biggest economy shifts from traditional manufacturing towards new clean-tech industries, said Keyu Jin, an associate professor at the London School of Economics and author of The New China Playbook.In response, Jin said, government officials have started expanding the quantity and the quality of vocational schools to help match labour skills to jobs. “If anything, the Chinese government will do better than many other governments, including the US, which utterly failed in terms of helping their workers transition away from low-end manufacturing,” she said. But a key “barrier” to China’s reallocation of labour resources lies in the country’s hukou household registration system, Jin added. This core institution constrains the migrant population of almost 400mn by denying their families equal access to basic services when they move to new areas in search of jobs.Despite the growth of the EV industry, the number of people employed in auto manufacturing in China reached close to 5mn in 2018 and has fallen by 500,000 workers since, according to data group CEIC. Albert Park, chief economist with the Asian Development Bank, said the bank had forecast that the number of jobs created in new green industries Asia-wide would outpace losses from declining industries linked to fossil fuels. But he said the picture was less clear in China because of problems such as opaque employment data, sluggish economic demand and the property sector downturn. “The adjustment issues are pretty substantial,” he said. As more factory closures loom, data from China Labour Bulletin, a Hong Kong NGO, showed that more than 60 protests had been organised by auto workers over the past five years. Abbey Heffer, a China labour and governance expert at the University of Tübingen in Germany, said government officials in some localities had experience in dealing with factory closures and sudden, large-scale unemployment. But there remained a risk that labour disputes in the auto sector could “snowball” and draw the attention of the central government in Beijing. “It’s not nice to be a local official right now . . . they’ve got the anger from below and the anger from above: what are they supposed to do?”[email protected]  More

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    SEC seeks $2 bln from Ripple Labs over XRP sales, legal officer says

    Stuart Alderoty, chief legal officer at Ripple, said in a series of social media posts that the SEC had asked District Judge Analisa Torres in Manhattan for the fines in confidential court papers filed on Monday. The commission is scheduled to file the documents publicly on Tuesday, with redactions.XRP curbed a bulk of its intraday gains after the news, and was last trading up 1.3% at $0.64079.The payout, if passed, could be potentially one of the biggest fines slapped against a crypto firm. It comes after Torres ruled in July that Ripple Labs’ sales of XRP worth nearly $730 million to hedge funds and sophisticated investors were unlawful sales of unregistered securities.Ripple is set to appeal the decision in April.The SEC has been engaged in a legal battle with Ripple since 2020, when the regulator sued CEO Brad Garlinghouse and co-founder Chris Larsen over allegations of raising more than $1.3 billion in illegal sales of unregistered securities. Torres had ruled that Ripple’s sales of XRP on public exchanges did not amount to sales of unregistered securities. The SEC-Ripple case is a key point of focus for the crypto industry, given that its overall outcome could potentially dictate the nature of crypto tokens and their regulation. The SEC has long argued that crypto tokens are securities and should be governed under securities law. But crypto proponents have argued that securities laws are incapable of addressing digital assets, and have called for new, dedicated regulation.Some proponents have also argued that cryptocurrencies are digital commodities and as such, should be governed by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.   More

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    Australia consumer mood darkens anew in March – survey

    The Westpac-Melbourne Institute index of consumer sentiment slipped 1.8% in March, from February when it jumped 6.2%. The index reading of 84.4 showed pessimists outnumbered optimists, much as it has for months now.”Last month we saw some promising signs that the consumer gloom that has dominated over the last two years might finally be starting to lift,” said Matthew Hassan, a senior economist at Westpac. “The March survey update shows that progress continues to be slow at best.”The survey found a sharp deterioration in mood followed a Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) policy meeting last week, even though it kept rates at 4.35% and toned down a warning about the risk of future increases, saying the outlook was finely balanced.Sentiment amongst those surveyed prior to the decision came in at 94.9, compared to 79.3 afterwards.”The RBA’s commentary looks to be tempering consumer expectations for interest rates as well, with fears of rate hikes easing but few expecting rate cuts any time soon,” said Hassan.Markets are wagering the next move in rates will be down, albeit not until later in the year.The survey’s measure of family finances compared to a year earlier fell 1.4% in March, while the outlook for finances over the next 12 months dropped 1.5%.The outlook for the economy for the year ahead slipped 4.5%, but the outlook for the next five years firmed 1.1%. Consumers remained bullish on house prices with that index holding at a high 161.1. The index measuring whether it was a good time to buy major household items fell 2.9%, after jumping 11.3% in February. More

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    Morning Bid: Volatile yuan, fragile yen cool sentiment

    (Reuters) – A look at the day ahead in Asian markets.Chinese markets will be under close scrutiny on Tuesday, as signs emerge that the recovery for much of this year in asset prices and investor sentiment may be fading as the first quarter draws to a close. The broader tone across Asia is fairly muted too with regional stocks on the defensive as investors grapple with a resilient dollar and higher U.S. bond yields in the wake of last week’s central bank fireworks.Tuesday’s calendar is relatively light. The latest reading of Japan’s service sector producer price inflation is potentially the most significant release, while Australian consumer sentiment is also on tap.Exchange rates are in the spotlight, with the yen steadying after Japan’s top currency diplomat said its recent “big slide” against the dollar did not reflect fundamentals. China’s yuan, meanwhile, goes in to Tuesday on the back of a roller-coaster couple of days. It sank on Friday and rebounded on Monday thanks to suspected dollar selling by state-owned banks as the central bank set its daily ‘fixing’ rate much stronger than analysts had expected. The People’s Bank of China set the yuan fixing rate at 7.0996 per dollar, some 1,300 basis points lower than the market’s neutral estimate of 7.23. Analysts at Deutsche Bank said this marked the largest strengthening bias since November.According to analysts at Rabobank, this suggests Beijing does not want the yuan to weaken excessively ahead of the U.S. presidential election in November. Whatever the reasoning, it was a dramatic reversal from Friday, when the offshore yuan slumped 0.75% against the dollar for its biggest fall in over a year. That was on huge volume too – spot volume on trading platform EBS was $24.2 billion, the fourth highest ever, according to CME Group (NASDAQ:CME), which owns EBS.There doesn’t appear to be any clear explanation for the yuan’s swings, so it’s no surprise that the volatility and uncertainty is spilling over into other assets – blue chip stocks fell for a third day on Monday, the longest losing streak since January. Sentiment toward China will not have been helped by news that U.S. and British officials filed charges, imposed sanctions, and called out Beijing over an alleged sweeping cyberespionage campaign that hit millions of people – including lawmakers, academics, journalists and more.Washington and London accused the hacking group nicknamed “APT31” of being an arm of China’s Ministry of State Security and reeled off a laundry list of targets: White House staffers, U.S. senators, British parliamentarians, and government officials around the world who criticized Beijing. Trade tensions are percolating again too, after the FT reported that China is seeking to block the use of Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) and AMD (NASDAQ:AMD) in government computers, and sideline Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) Windows and other foreign-made software in favor of domestic options.Here are key developments that could provide more direction to markets on Tuesday:- Japan services PPI (February)- Australia consumer sentiment (March)- Hong Kong trade (February) (By Jamie McGeever) More

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    SEC seeking $2 billion from Ripple Labs – Chief Legal Officer

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