More stories

  • in

    CEOs leave Davos to game out 2024 geopolitical scenarios

    DAVOS, Switzerland (Reuters) – Business leaders in Davos say they are increasingly turning to scenario planning to safeguard supply chains and lessen the potential hit from unexpected geopolitical crises.Many CEOs and executives told Reuters they foresee an upbeat U.S. economy in 2024, but are concerned about China and Europe, and the impact of unexpected global shocks on inflation.The World Economic Forum (WEF) this year took place against the backdrop of conflicts in the Middle East and Ukraine, as well as impending elections in dozens of countries. “Just when governments and companies get their arms around how to deal with one flare-up, another emerges,” said David Garfield, Global Head of Industries, adding a big issue at board level and executive leadership level is scenario planning.”Sophisticated companies are saying: ‘What happens if raw materials for critical production cuts off?” Garfield added. With supply chain disruptions caused by the pandemic barely in their rear-view mirrors, CEOs are now grappling with the impact of Houthi militant attacks in the Red Sea.Many described the global situation as unusually worrisome. “In terms of scenario planning, the last few years has upped the ante,” said Ishaan Seth, Senior Partner at global consulting group McKinsey. “It is not about forecasting the future but it is about having a perspective on how the world may play out. The key is: How do you pivot an organization quickly?”An Alix Partners survey showed 68% of CEOs report U.S.-China tensions are causing them to adjust their strategy, while 66% worry about the U.S. presidential election. “The (board level) concerns are geopolitics and elections around the world,” said BCG Global Chair Rich Lesser. “When there is so much uncertainty, CEOs and boards ask ‘What can I do to be better prepared,'” he added.Some have been looking to diversify supply chains.”Every Japanese company is seriously considering (changing) the origins of over reliance – it is so risky,” Takeshi Niinami, CEO of Suntory, Japan’s second-biggest domestic drinks group, told the Reuters Global Markets Forum. “So we like to move to, for example, India or some other countries like Vietnam, but it can’t be done overnight.” ABB (ST:ABB) Chairman Peter Voser said geopolitical risks, including China and Taiwan, were part of boardroom scenario planning.”One takes steps to deal with it on a day-to-day basis, but also as a Plan B or C depending on what is going to happen,” said Voser, adding: “There should be no board in the world who takes this very lightly at this stage.”INFLATION Some bankers and CEOs were concerned about the potential for supply chain dislocations to reignite inflation. Most were upbeat about the U.S., but concerned about Europe and China.”I will be cautiously optimistic,” said Srini Pallia, an executive at technology services and consulting company Wipro (NYSE:WIT), adding: “People expected U.S. to be in recession, now it’s a soft landing.”The WEF meeting came as the global economy shows mediocre growth, while central banks hold interest rates high.”Clients are cautiously optimistic. We are getting back to more of a normal environment. There is slower growth but sustainable growth,” Bank of America’s Chief Financial Officer Alastair Borthwick said.The International Monetary Fund in October forecast that global GDP growth in 2024 would be 2.9%, a dip from 2023’s 3%. It cut its 2024 growth forecast for China, which has been hit by a property crisis, to 4.2% and the Euro area to 1.2%, but raised its U.S. forecast to 1.5%.Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon expects the U.S. to avoid a big slowdown this year, but warned that inflation could remain more stubborn than expected and weigh on growth. “I still think there’s a risk, particularly around labor, food, gas, that inflation could be stickier than people expect,” Solomon told Reuters.Many doubted that the U.S. Federal Reserve will cut interest rates as rapidly as markets forecast. The Fed is gauging whether inflation is headed firmly enough back to its 2% target to cut.After 525 basis points of hikes since March 2022, the U.S. rate futures market has priced a rate cut as early as at the Fed’s March policy meeting.CEOs said they had hopes the economy would be resilient.”We are slightly optimistic about the coming 18-24 months that economies can turn, interest rates can come down,” Jesper Brodin, CEO at IKEA-owner Ingka Group.But some sectors are challenged. Aggressive rate hikes, combined with reduced office space demand after the pandemic, have hit commercial real estate in particular.”I talk to people who say, this is the worst time ever,” said JLL CEO Christian Ulbrich. “And my next meeting could be with somebody who says, this is the best time ever – we will see some of our best deals ever over the next 12 to 24 months.”The mood was uneven, with Europe lagging on growth. Siemens sees some markets in the euro zone slowing, said executive board member Matthias Rebellius.”As a global company, we can balance this, but from a local perspective, there’s always I would say higher positive notion on Asia and on Americas,” he added.(Join GMF, a chat room hosted on LSEG Messenger, for live interviews: https://lseg.group/3TN7SHH) More

  • in

    Manta Network weathers DDoS attack as MANTA token lists, price fluctuates

    The introduction of the MANTA token to exchanges initially resulted in a price surge. However, the token’s value experienced a downturn, dropping by over 5%, following a controversial move by the project’s Korean Business Development representative. The representative sold 2 million MANTA coins, converting them into a substantial amount of Ether.Even with the price volatility and the attack, Manta Network continues to hold a significant position in the market, boasting a market capitalization exceeding $533.99M post-incident. The network is acknowledged for its high total value locked (TVL), underscoring its status as a key player in the blockchain scalability arena.This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C. More

  • in

    Talk in Davos of ‘high for longer’ as CEOs wrestle with rates

    DAVOS, Switzerland (Reuters) – Business leaders and financiers in Davos this week said they are preparing for “high for longer” borrowing costs, despite markets betting on large-scale interest rate cuts this year.Jose Minaya, CEO of global investment manager Nuveen, which manages $1 trillion in assets said markets were “likely overestimating” the extent of rate cuts by central banks and investors need to prepare for a different environment.”The next ten years are likely going to have lower returns than the previous ten years, you haven’t seen inflation in almost two decades,” he told the Reuters Global Markets Forum.The U.S. Federal Reserve is gauging whether inflation is sustainably back at its 2% target in order to lower interest rates, after 525 basis points of hikes since March 2022.AlixPartners CEO Simon Freakley said executives globally are “hoping for the best but preparing for the worst,” as company boards plan for a high-for-longer scenario, while hoping rates will come down at least towards the end of the year.The discussion within boardrooms was around having to manage increased interest costs than previously thought and having to accommodate that within their plans and budgets, Freakley said.”Rates will be slow to come down, and it’s partly because international central banks were slow in taking them up,” said Nicolai Tangen, CEO of Norges Bank Investment Management.”You don’t want to come back to some kind of 70s situation,” said Tangen, who leads the world’s largest sovereign wealth fund with $1.5 trillion in assets, referring to sustained hyperinflation in the 1970s.U.S. rate-futures contracts are now pricing in a year-end policy rate of around 3.88% from the Fed’s current 5.25% to 5.50% target range, and expecting rate cuts to begin in March.”March is a very realistic starting point,” said Jan Hatzius, chief economist and head of global investment research at Goldman Sachs, who forecasts five U.S. cuts for 2024.Nevertheless, some doubt the U.S. central bank will cut interest rates as rapidly as markets are forecasting.”My personal view is that there’s a better than 50% chance that the Fed doesn’t cut rates this year,” Minaya said.Barclays CEO C.S. Venkatakrishnan said in Davos he saw “maybe one” U.S. interest rate cut by year-end.”I don’t expect it to turn on a dime. I think if you look at the questions which we were asking ourselves a year ago or two years ago, they’re very different from the questions we ask ourselves now,” he told a Wall Street Journal event at Davos.(Join GMF, a chat room hosted on LSEG Messenger, for live interviews: ) More

  • in

    Ark’s Cathie Wood Touts Bitcoin (BTC) as World’s Most Secure Asset: Details

    There have always been some forms of criticism about Bitcoin, especially from prominent figures like CNBC’s Mad Money Host Jim Cramer, JPMorgan CEO, Jamie Dimon and Peter Schiff. The network statistics presented by the Ark Invest CEO validate the counterargument that shows Bitcoin has value, and most importantly, that it has a high level of security.Cathie Wood noted that Bitcoin’s intricate network is “orders of magnitude larger than the combined size of the clouds that Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), Google (NASDAQ:GOOGL), and Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) have built over the last 15-20 years.”These comments were a direct response to the post from Yassine Elmandjra, Ark Invest’s director of digital assets, who highlighted that Bitcoin’s hash rate has hit an all-time high (ATH) of 500 exahashes/s this month. Yassine shared insane statistics, including how Bitcoin, by the number of raw operations per second, performs approximately 500x more than the world’s most powerful supercomputer.However, the ecosystem has continued to grow, with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) validating this growth when it approved 11 spot Bitcoin Exchange Traded Fund (ETF) applications from the likes of Ark Invest and BlackRock (NYSE:BLK).While this move has given corporate investors exposure to the protocol, the forthcoming Bitcoin halving event is also a major indicator that the coin is designed with much intentionality in hopes of making it as valuable as it is turning out to be today.Amid all the positive trends surrounding it, Bitcoin has dropped by 3.38% in 24 hours to $41,401.15 to lead the ongoing market’s bearish consolidation.This article was originally published on U.Today More

  • in

    Foreign tourism to Spain beats pre-COVID record in 2023, seen rising

    MADRID (Reuters) -Spain received a record number of foreign tourists in 2023, 17% more than the year before and up 1% from the 84 million who came in the pre-pandemic year of 2019, and Tourism Minister Jordi Hereu said on Friday he expected a further increase this year.The United Nations’ World Tourism Organisation said earlier on Friday that global tourism may only fully recover from the pandemic in 2024.International visitors spent 108 billion euros ($117.5 billion) last year in Spain, one of the world’s most visited countries, up 17% from 2019. “All in all, 2023 has been a very positive year and a record year … we are still on the same path to prosperity,” Hereu told a news conference, predicting 23.2 million foreign visitors in the first quarter, 11% more than a year ago, with destination spending likely to increase by more than 18%.He did not provide a specific forecast for the whole year, but expected a record number of new arrivals, adding though that Spain had to “fight for tourists from other continents”.”We have a lot of work to do in Brazil, in China, in the United States,” the minister said.He acknowledged also that the country needed better rules for tourist accommodation so as not to disrupt the locals’ way of living and to regulate the growing supply of holiday homes that compete with hotels.”We have to govern tourism. The whole tourist offer must be regulated and a sustainable mix must be achieved in each area,” he added.Industry group Exceltur on Tuesday estimated revenues from tourism activity in Spain would surpass 200 billion euros for the first time this year, 8.6% more than in 2023 at current prices, despite uncertainties over the wars in Ukraine and Gaza and over global inflation.Tourism’s contribution to gross domestic product should rise to 13.4% in 2024 from 12.8% in 2023, it said, expecting Spain to attract more tourists than its rivals in the eastern Mediterranean, such as Egypt, which are closer to the Gaza conflict.($1 = 0.9194 euros) More

  • in

    IMF says Sri Lanka still needs deals with official and external private creditors

    COLOMBO (Reuters) – The International Monetary Fund said it remains critical for Sri Lanka to swiftly reach final agreements with its official lenders and reach a deal with external private creditors, after concluding a staff visit to the island nation on Friday.Having received a $2.9 billion bailout loan agreement from the Fund, the South Asian country is on the path to recovery from its worst financial crisis in seven decades, it said.”The economic reform program implemented by the Sri Lankan authorities is yielding the first signs of recovery,” IMF said in a statement. “However, challenges remain as these improvements need to translate into improved living conditions for Sri Lanka’s people.”At the beginning of the year, Sri Lanka had to raise its value-added tax (VAT) to 18% from 15% to meet revenue targets set under the four-year IMF programme.The IMF said swift progress towards the introduction of a progressive property tax is also key to ensuring fair burden sharing while sustaining the revenue-based consolidation.It added that tax policy measures need to be accompanied by strengthening administration, removing exemptions, and actively eliminating tax evasion to make the reforms more sustainable and further build confidence among creditors to support Sri Lanka’s efforts to regain debt sustainability.”A swift completion of final agreements with official creditors and reaching a resolution with external private creditors remain critical,” Peter Breuer, IMF’s senior mission chief in Sri Lanka, added.Sri Lanka also needs to work on converting ongoing negotiations with bondholders into in-principle agreements and completing the process ahead of the second review which will be held in spring, Breuer said.In November, a group of creditors holding Sri Lanka’s international bonds had said that while they welcomed the country’s debt restructuring agreement with its official creditors, the lack of transparency on deals struck so far was regrettable.The IMF said in a statement that it will formally assess Sri Lanka’s progress against the set parameters at the second review.Separately, Breuer said good governance in fiscal policy is important for the continued recovery of the economy and added that the government would release its action plan on the same in February.The IMF said Sri Lanka needs to keep pursuing reforms.”Staying the course on the reform agenda is necessary for this stabilisation to evolve into broad-based and stable growth that will ensure a full and lasting economic recovery benefiting the people,” it said in its statement. More

  • in

    Self-Proclaimed Satoshi Craig Wright Takes Dig at Ethereum’s Vitalik Buterin

    Back then, Buterin had responded to a question about the possibility of building Ethereum on top of Bitcoin, expressing concerns about potential conflicts with Bitcoin’s development team. He cited fears that protocol rules might change, making it difficult for him to build on a base protocol at odds with his vision.Fast forward to January 2024, and Wright seized the opportunity to comment on Buterin’s past remarks. He argued that Ethereum only exists due to centralized development teams that have the power to alter the protocol. Wright mused about the hypothetical scenario of having everything built on Bitcoin, envisioning a more streamlined and less fragmented system.While Ethereum has achieved considerable success as a platform for smart contracts and applications, Wright argues for the stability and originality of Bitcoin’s protocol.Moreover, it revives the centralization debate in both cryptocurrency ecosystems. On the one side is OFAC’s censorship of ETH transactions; on the other side is the enormous concentration of BTC in the hands of whales and miners.This article was originally published on U.Today More

  • in

    Is Bitcoin Creator Satoshi Nakamoto Back? Enigmatic Post Sparks Speculation

    The latest post, shared just seven hours ago, took a different tone, offering only a brief greeting to the world. Despite the absence of substantial content, the post has quickly amassed a staggering 1.8 million views, leaving the crypto community abuzz with speculation.The enigma surrounding the true identity of Satoshi Nakamoto persists, and this recent activity has reignited curiosity. According to Community Notes accompanying the post, there are claims that Craig Wright, the controversial figure who previously asserted he was Nakamoto, once controlled the account. Still, a disclaimer beneath the post asserts that the account is unrelated to Bitcoin or its anonymous creator.As the crypto community eagerly awaits further developments, the question on everyone’s mind is: Will the real Satoshi Nakamoto ever come back? The latest post offers no clear answers, leaving room for speculation and fueling the intrigue that has surrounded the elusive creator since the inception of BTC.This article was originally published on U.Today More