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    ECB resists spring interest rate cut as price expectations ease

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.European Central Bank officials are pushing back against investors’ bets that they will start cutting interest rates this spring, despite consumers’ increasing belief that the worst of eurozone inflation is over.Consumer expectations for eurozone inflation have “declined noticeably” to their lowest level since shortly after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine triggered a surge in prices almost two years ago, according to an ECB survey published on Tuesday.Economists said the change in expectations would be welcomed by the ECB as its officials looked for signs of whether price pressures would ease sufficiently to bring them down to its 2 per cent inflation target in the next year.The data seemed to strengthen investor bets that the ECB would start cutting rates in April. The euro fell 0.6 per cent against the dollar and Germany’s 10-year bond yield dipped slightly on Tuesday after the survey results were published.However, several members of the ECB governing council spoke out to question whether markets were being too optimistic ahead of their meeting next week to discuss monetary policy. “It’s too early to declare victory,” French central bank governor François Villeroy de Galhau told the World Economic Forum in Davos on Tuesday. While the ECB’s next move was likely to be a rate cut, the timing was unclear, he said, adding: “The job is not done yet.”Finnish central bank board member Tuomas Välimäki said the ECB should be careful not to jump the gun by cutting rates too early only for inflation to pick up again. “It’s better to wait a bit longer than doing a premature exit from this restrictive level, and then perhaps having to do a reversal,” he told Reuters.German central bank head Joachim Nagel went further, saying: “The markets are from time to time, they are optimistic — maybe from time to time they are over-optimistic. It’s their view. I have a different view.” Speaking to Bloomberg TV in Davos on Monday, he added: “Maybe we can wait for the summer break or whatever [to decide whether to cut rates].” Swap markets have priced in 1.5 percentage points of cuts in the ECB’s deposit rate next year from its current record level of 4 per cent, starting as early as April. Yet IMF deputy head Gita Gopinath said at a Davos event on Tuesday that markets were being “a bit premature” as rate cuts were “more likely in the second half of this year”.Eurozone inflation has fallen from a peak of 10.6 per cent in October 2022 towards the ECB target over the past year, but it picked up again from 2.4 per cent in November to 2.9 per cent in December because of the phasing- out of government energy subsidies.The ECB said its survey of consumers in November found their median expectation for inflation in the single currency bloc in one year’s time dropped from 4 per cent to 3.2 per cent, while their outlook for inflation in three years fell from 2.5 per cent to 2.2 per cent.Tomasz Wieladek, an economist at investor T Rowe Price, said the decline was unexpected because Israel’s conflict with Hamas started in November and could have raised fears that energy prices could rise again. “Normally, Middle East conflict should have led to a significant rise in medium-term expectations,” he said. “The fact that this didn’t happen is an indicator of very strong disinflationary forces shaping consumers’ inflation expectations.”Speculation that the ECB would start cutting rates in the first half of this year helped to brighten investor sentiment about the outlook for the struggling German economy, according to a survey by the ZEW Institute.ZEW president Joachim Wambach said more than half of the investors it surveyed expected the ECB to cut rates in the first six months of this year. That raised its index of expectations for conditions in six months’ time in the German economy from 12.8 to 15.2, its highest level for almost a year.  More

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    Will slowing UK wage growth lead to early rate cuts?

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.Clear evidence of a slowdown in UK wage growth is one of the crucial changes that Bank of England policymakers want to see before they can conclude that inflation is sustainably on the way down and start cutting interest rates. Tuesday’s official data, showing a sharp decline in the pace of earnings growth in the three months to November, raised hopes among some economists that pay pressures had already eased enough for inflation to fall below the BoE’s 2 per cent target within months.Such a decline could pave the way for a loosening of monetary policy, with investors betting that the BoE will starting lowering its benchmark rate from a 15-year high of 5.25 per cent from May.But others said the true state of the labour market was still clouded in uncertainty, while the Office for National Statistics continued to grapple with problems that have prevented it publishing many of the figures on which policymakers usually rely.On the face of it, the data suggests the central bank now stands a much better chance of steering the economy into the kind of “soft landing” it would like to achieve: cooling the labour market and returning inflation, which stood at 3.9 per cent in November, to target without a painful jump in unemployment.The ONS said vacancies, while still above pre-Covid levels, fell for the 19th month in succession in December, while the number of payrolled employees remained broadly stable. Annual growth in earnings — both including and excluding bonuses — remains high by historic standards, at 6.5 per cent and 6.6 per cent, respectively. But it is well below the peaks reached in the summer of 2023. Monthly figures, while volatile, show average earnings in the private sector have barely risen since August.“This means that annual pay growth will continue to fall in early 2024 — and is no longer fuelling inflation,” said Hannah Slaughter, senior economist at the Resolution Foundation think-tank.Jack Meaning, economist at Barclays, said private sector wage growth was now below the rate consistent with keeping inflation on target at 2 per cent. This suggested that the BoE had “baked in too much caution” when it published forecasts in November that estimated private sector wage growth of 7.25 per cent for the final quarter of 2023, he added.But Chris Hare, senior economist at HSBC, said a “cloud of uncertainty” around labour market data made it hard to assess the extent of any slowdown in wage growth, or to tell what was driving it.The big issue is the ONS’s continued inability to publish its usual estimates of employment, unemployment and economic inactivity while it contends with a drop in the response rate to its labour market survey and reweights the results to take account of new population estimates. The agency, which last released full figures in September, had been due to resume publication this week. But it has delayed for another month to perform further checks for quality.In the meantime, it is publishing stop-gap estimates based on tax and benefits records. On Tuesday, these suggested unemployment had remained steady at 4.2 per cent since last summer — below the 4.5 per cent level the BoE now thinks is consistent with inflation remaining sustainably at target.But business surveys and recent trading updates from big recruitment companies suggest the jobs market may have softened more than this. Hays, Robert Walters and PageGroup have all reported weaker hiring conditions in the past week.James Smith, economist at ING bank, said that “part of the issue for policymakers is that we still don’t have a true grip on what’s happening to unemployment”. He added that the Monetary Policy Committee would want to see “more progress” on wages in both official data and alternative surveys “before kick starting an easing cycle”.The central bank has called attention to discrepancies between the official earnings figures and other survey-based measures of wage growth, which mean it is not placing too much weight on any single data source.Michael Saunders, a former MPC member now at the consultancy Oxford Economics, said the ONS data, recent company pay awards, and survey evidence all suggested pay growth was still too high for inflation to return sustainably to 2 per cent. “Lower inflation and rising unemployment may reduce pay growth further . . . but it’s far from guaranteed,” he said.Economists said there were other reasons why the BoE might want to wait until early summer before cutting interest rates.By then, it should have a clearer view of unemployment. It will also want to see how April’s planned uprating of the minimum wage, the state pension and working-age benefits affects overall pay growth and feeds through to consumer spending. It will also be able to assess the likely impact of any tax cuts announced in the Budget on March 6.“The MPC will need to see pay growth subside further before it seriously contemplates bringing interest rates down,” said Philip Shaw, economist at Investec.Saunders said that even if inflation fell rapidly in the near term, “the MPC’s focus will be mainly on whether conditions for a sustained return to 2 per cent inflation are in place”. “On this score, the evidence looks less reassuring,” he added. More

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    Gillian Tett: Look back to judge chances of a global future

    Just over a century ago, John Maynard Keynes lamented the dangers of being complacent about globalisation. In 1919, in his book The Economic Consequences of the Peace, Keynes noted that, before the recently ended first world war, “the inhabitant of London could order by telephone, sipping his morning tea in bed, the various products of the whole earth, in such quantity as he might see fit, and reasonably expect their early delivery upon his doorstep.”He (economists assumed, then, that economic actors were male) could “adventure his wealth in the natural resources and new enterprises of any quarter of the world” and “secure forthwith, if he wished it, cheap and comfortable means of transit to any country or climate without passport or other formality”. Moreover, this state of affairs was “normal, certain, and permanent, except in the direction of further improvement”.Thus “the projects and politics of militarism and imperialism, of racial and cultural rivalries, of monopolies, restrictions, and exclusion were little more than the amusements of his daily newspaper.” In plain English: people had taken globalisation so completely for granted that they rarely gave it much thought — and assumed that the free movement of people, money and objects would continue indefinitely. War had seemed like a relic of the past.Fast forward a century, and it is tempting to laugh or cry at this state of affairs. After all, during the 1914-18 conflict, such sunny complacency had been shattered by massive economic destruction, the closure of borders, disruptions in trade and a fractured capital market.Globalisation had gone into reverse. Further, the war was followed by the 1929 economic crash, depression and protectionism in the 1930s and, then, another world war. Although globalisation resumed in the middle of the 20th century, it was not until the century’s end that the world returned to the type of globalisation that Keynes observed — ie, a world where it seemed so normal to move goods, capital and ideas around that most observers assumed this would continue indefinitely, and deepen. The only big difference between 2013 and 1913 was that, in the modern era, no one expects to travel “without passport or other formality” across borders. Today, there are inevitably bureaucratic controls.The chilling question we face is whether we are about to see a replay of Keynes’s tale — namely, an era when globalisation suddenly goes into reverse, as geopolitical conflict rears its head again. So far, the answer is “not entirely”. For, while the political rhetoric in many countries has become lamentably populist, protectionist and nationalist, globalisation is far from dead.To appreciate this, look at an annual survey from the DHL shipping group and NYU Stern School of Business. This explores globalisation in terms of four measures: the movement of people; information; money; and trade. The latest reading, conducted in May 2023, shows that the flow of people is lower than a few years ago, primarily because travel has yet to recover from Covid-19.But exchanges of information continued to rise in 2022 (albeit at a slower pace than before), while cross-border money flows remained moderately strong and those of goods and services actually rose — leaving world trade 10 per cent higher in 2022 than in pre-pandemic 2019. As a result, the overall globalisation metric, as calculated by DHL and NYU Stern, is still rising slightly.An outdoor screen in Beijing shows a news programme about President Biden meeting President Xi in California in November to discuss economic co-operation More

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    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

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    Chinese economy expected to have grown by 5.2% in 2023 – Premier Li Qiang

    Li told the closely-watched annual gathering of leaders in business and government that the Chinese economy is making “steady progress,” adding that it will continue to provide “strong impetus” for global growth.”Last year, the Chinese economy rebounded and moved upward,” he said in prepared remarks on Tuesday.Recent data has suggested that China is struggling to regain its footing following the lifting of harsh COVID-era restrictions. Despite posting an increase in exports in December, the world’s second-largest economy continues to face deflationary pressures, weak consumer spending, and an ongoing property sector crisis, prompting some analysts to call on policymakers to roll out more support measures.Li, however, argued that Beijing had promoted economic development in China without needing to introduce “massive stimulus.””We did not seek short-term growth while accumulating long-term risks,” he said.Official Chinese gross domestic product (GDP) data for 2023 is due to be unveiled on Wednesday. A poll of economists conducted by Reuters found that growth likely expanded by 5.2% last year.China’s GDP is expected to decelerate to 4.6% this year, before slowing further to 4.5% in 2025, the Reuters survey showed. More

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    Davos – Chinese premier Li: China economy growth estimated at 5.2% in 2023

    DAVOS, Switzerland (Reuters) – Chinese Premier Li Qiang said on Tuesday the Chinese economy had rebounded and moved upward, and was estimated to have grown around 5.2% in 2023, above the official target of around 5%.Li said at the World Economic Forum in Davos that the Chinese economy could handle ups and downs in its performance, and the overall trend of long-term growth would not change. More