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    Asking prices of UK homes show smallest October rise since 2008

    Average asking prices for homes increased by 0.5% between Sept. 10 and Oct. 7 from the previous four weeks, well below the average increase for the period of 1.4%, Rightmove said.Prices were down 0.8% compared with a year earlier and the number of agreed sales was down 17% in annual terms.Other measures of Britain’s housing market – which boomed during the COVID-19 pandemic – have also cooled with the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors’ measure of house prices showing the most widespread falls since 2009 in September.The Bank of England raised interest rates 14 times in a row between December 2021 and August this year, before pausing its increases in September. Rightmove director Tim Bannister said the mortgage market was more stable after 11 weeks of falling mortgage rates and the number of buyers enquiring about each home for sale remained 8% higher than at the same time in 2019 before the pandemic. More

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    UK law firms concerned over costs as billable hours fall

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.Cost pressures from high inflation and an inability to pass the burden on through pricing to clients are among the biggest concerns of the top 100 law firms in the UK, according to a survey, as billable hours fall across the board.Staff and support function costs are growing at a faster rate than fee income, according to the annual PwC law firm survey, which polls the top firms by global revenue. The issue is one of the industry’s main concerns, along with macroeconomic volatility and cyber threats.Law firms enjoyed a boon during the Covid-19 pandemic, with rising fees, a reduced cost base and a jump in deal activity. But mergers and acquisitions have slowed over the past year while inflation and the cost of living have risen. This has meant chargeable hours — which remain a primary way for lawyers to bill their clients — have stayed flat or fallen at most levels across law firms, from trainees to partners.“Firms have achieved fee income growth but in the context of high inflation and reducing profit margins,” said Kate Wolstenholme, leader of PwC UK’s law firms advisory group that undertook the survey, published on Monday. “Going forward, firms will need to consider cost control in the context of more radical changes to their future operating model.”Chargeable hours fell 8.3 per cent for full equity partners at the biggest firms by revenue. Equity partners are the most senior — and often the most expensive — lawyers who share in a firm’s profits.Despite cost pressures, UK firms have had to keep pace with their US rivals, which have outposts in London and have been hiring aggressively. Rivalry from US peers was cited by the top 10 UK firms in the survey as their greatest competitive threat. That may have helped increase average headcount among the top 10 — from support staff to equity partners — by 1.8 per cent on the previous year. For firms in the 11-25 bracket, headcount grew 3.3 per cent. Hiring new rainmakers to improve deal flow, and increasing commercial training for partners are among the measures being considered by firms as they try to power growth.Clients keeping more work in-house was also seen as a challenge, according to the survey, which covered the period May 2022 to April 2023. Despite the tough environment, no law firm said they were pursuing alternative funding or ownership structures in the next three to five years, and only a small number were considering minority investment from private capital investors. Law firms in the UK have been able to publicly list their shares for more than a decade, though very few have chosen to.Artificial Intelligence is being discussed widely as a way to become more efficient, but the survey found “few to date have taken meaningful steps to capitalise on the opportunity”. Generative AI presents both an opportunity and a threat to the legal industry, with the speed of technology change seen as a risk to growth, the report said.“The legal sector has had another strong year, but our survey highlights some challenges ahead, with bold steps needed to transform into a top-performing law firm of the future,” Wolstenholme said. More

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    Marketmind: Amid the fog, look out for China GDP this week

    (Reuters) – A look at the day ahead in Asian markets from Jamie McGeever, financial markets columnist.Asian markets on Monday look set to open on a cautious footing in the wake of Wall Street’s slide and oil’s surge on Friday, against a backdrop of escalating violence in the Middle East, and ahead of top-tier Chinese economic data later in the week.In terms of the Asian economic calendar on Monday investors have Japanese industrial production, Indonesian trade and Indian wholesale price inflation figures on their plate, while on Thursday the central banks of South Korea and Indonesia deliver their latest policy decisions and outlooks.But the most important day could be Wednesday when Chinese unemployment, industrial production, retail sales and business investment figures for September will be released, along with third-quarter GDP.GDP is the biggie. Everyone knows the continent’s largest economy has not emerged from the COVID lockdown restrictions anywhere near as strongly as most observers had expected. The property sector’s travails, threat of deflation, soaring youth unemployment, foreign outflows from Chinese stocks and bonds, and the exchange rate’s slide to a 16-year low are well documented. How much damage will all that do to China’s growth in Q3?Economists polled by Reuters expect growth to rebound on a quarterly basis to 1.0% from 0.8% in the April-June period, but to slow on a year-on-year basis to 4.4% from 6.3% in Q2. Many private sector forecasters in recent months have slashed their outlook for this year and next. The numbers on Wednesday will go a long way to determining whether Beijing’s official 2023 goal of around 5% GDP growth will be met. On the political front, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping meet this week. Putin will attend the Belt and Road Forum in Beijing on Oct. 17-18, his first trip outside the former Soviet Union since the International Criminal Court issued a warrant for him in March over the deportation of children from Ukraine.On the market front there was a mixed performance last week, with sentiment dominated by twists and turns in U.S. Treasuries and Fed rate expectations against the backdrop of tension and uncertainty surrounding events in the Middle East. The week ended with Asian stocks up 6%, their first rise in four weeks, and world stocks adding 4.5%, their best week in six. Stocks got a boost from the broad decline in U.S. bond yields across the curve.The move was most dramatic at the long end – the 30-year yield fell more than 15 basis points, its biggest weekly fall since March. But that followed five consecutive weekly increases and an accumulated rise of around 65 basis points. Oil, meanwhile, jumped nearly 6% on Friday, its biggest rise since early March, and the dollar strengthened again, chalking up its 12th rise in the last 13 weeks. Here are key developments that could provide more direction to markets on Monday:- Japan industrial production (August)- Indonesia trade (September)- India wholesale inflation (September) (By Jamie McGeever; Editing by Diane Craft) More

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    Biden to push Israel, Ukraine aid package over $2 billion this week

    Sullivan, in an interview on CBS’s “Face the Nation,” said U.S. President Joe Biden will have intensive talks with the U.S. Congress this week on the need for the package to be approved.Republicans’ struggles to pick a speaker for the House of Representatives after party hardliners ousted Kevin McCarthy nearly two weeks ago has delayed action on legislation.Biden has been considering a budget request lumping together aid for Israel, Ukraine and possibly Taiwan to improve the chances of getting it approved amid calls from some Republicans to cut money for Kyiv.Asked whether the request would be for $2 billion, Sullivan said: “Well, the number is going to be significantly higher than that, but it will, as I said, certainly include the necessary military equipment to defend freedom, sovereignty and territorial integrity in Ukraine, and to help Israel defend itself as it fights its terrorist threat.” More

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    Geopolitical volatility returns to the financial markets

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.Rarely since the 1970s has the global economy seemed so turbulent. The march of globalisation has slowed. The dual shocks of the Covid-19 pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine have muddied monetary policy and upset energy markets and supply chains. Economic nationalism, US-China tensions, and fragmentation have taken root. Governments are taking a bigger role in economic management, particularly faced with the urgency of the climate transition. The tragic return of conflict to the Middle East only underscores the pattern of rising geopolitical risk.Market indicators reflect this. The Vix index — a measure of expected volatility — has averaged notably higher since 2020 than in the decade before. The World Uncertainty Index, which measures the prevalence of the word “uncertain” in analysts’ reports, has been trending upwards for years and has jumped significantly since 2021. The more uncertain future is altering the playbook of market participants, from investors to central bankers. First, quantitative models used to price assets and assess trends are less meaningful. A couple of decades of relative stability, underpinned by growing global trade and few political shocks, made it easier to forecast macroeconomic variables, such as growth, interest rates and inflation. It was simpler to assess how these would evolve when underlying assumptions about the world were fewer and simpler. Today, the economics is increasingly influenced by politics and foreign policy.Looking beyond charts, balance sheets and ratios has its own implications. Markets do not have a great record of pricing geopolitical risk and assessing low-probability, high-impact events, or “tail risks”. Studies show that economic activity and financial markets are often more affected by geopolitical threats than actual events. But equally, when there are several threats that are complex and hard to define, markets can be stumped into inertia. Indeed, oil prices rose but not as much as expected in response to Hamas’ attacks in Israel. There may be adjustments ahead.The difficulty of measuring geopolitical premia also raises the reward for those that can get it right. There is a growing demand for professionals who can combine political and macro knowledge with financial fundamentals. Returns at macro hedge funds — actively managed traders that attempt to profit from swings caused by events — surged between 2019 and 2022, following a decade of dull returns. Last September, hedge funds that took bearish bets on sterling, as the then British Prime Minister Liz Truss’ spendthrift agenda ruptured markets, made handsome profits. Volatility may also induce traders to seek returns by adopting more active short-term strategies. Zero-day options, which allow investors to take targeted positions in stock markets around events, have surged in popularity since the start of the pandemic. Institutions with passive long-term strategies, such as pension funds, are also affected. There is now less conviction in even decade-long economic and political trends, meaning diversification, including into alternative assets, becomes attractive. The problem is that the cost of misjudging events is also high: research shows market volatility widens the range of returns for active funds. Policymaking in this environment has already proven challenging. Central bankers’ interventions are based on historical data. But with the world ahead in flux, the chance of errors is higher and the effectiveness of monetary policy, which operates with a lag, is dimmed. Rigid financial institutions, including market regulators, will struggle.Attempts to parse geopolitical events only introduce more human error into markets. Active strategies, shorter time horizons, less focus on models, and policy errors all risk creating a vicious cycle of instability. The world of higher-for-longer volatility may be hard to shake off. More

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    Analyst Benjamin Cowen Highlights Ethereum’s Poor Performance

    Cowen presented compelling data: on May 12, 2023, Bitcoin (BTC) and ETH were priced at $26,800 and $1,804, respectively. Fast forward to October 11, 2023, and BTC’s price steadfastly held at $26,800, whereas ETH had dwindled to $1,564. This downtrend was not just a momentary lapse but was reflected starkly in the ETH/BTC ratio, which progressively slipped from 0.067 to 0.058 in the same period.A counterpoint was raised by a crypto enthusiast who emphasized ETH’s 77% surge from its low, outpacing BTC’s 73% climb. However, Cowen swiftly noted the selective nature of these statistics. He stressed that a holistic view paints a different picture — from their all-time highs, had retracted by 61%, while ETH saw a sharper decline of 68%.Current market analysis further cements Cowen’s stance. As of now, Bitcoin is trading at approximately $26,727.99, maintaining a semblance of stability. In contrast, Ethereum struggles at around $1,551.34, a concerning figure for investors who recall its past highs.This discourse is not just about numbers; it is a lesson in market perception versus reality. Ethereum, despite its groundbreaking contributions to the DeFi and NFT sectors, has not been impervious to market strains. Its trajectory, when juxtaposed with Bitcoin’s, highlights the nuances of market movements and the fallacy of general assumptions.Momentary spikes and troughs can be deceptive, and an asset’s true health is often revealed in longer-term trends and broader market contexts. This revelation does not undermine Ethereum’s potential but serves as a grounding notice to traders to delve deeper, looking beyond the surface-level chatter to make informed investment decisions.This article was originally published on U.Today More