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    Fed speakers in focus following Treasury yield commentary from Logan, Jefferson

    Fed Governor Christopher Waller is scheduled to speak at an event in Washington, D.C., while Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic, San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly and Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari are also set to make statements at different gatherings around the country.These appearances come after two top-ranking Fed officials on Monday commented on a weeks-long surge in the borrowing costs of U.S. government debt. Since the Fed’s last meeting in September, yields on 10-year Treasuries have touched their highest levels in 16 years, leaving policymakers the task of assessing whether this is a result of expectations for a stronger economy or investors asking for better returns to carry interest-rate risk.Speaking at a conference, Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan posited that the rise in yields may ultimately offset a need to further lift the key Fed funds rate. Fed Vice Chair Philip Jefferson later flagged that the central bank must now “proceed carefully” in the wake of the jump in long-term yields.The perceived dovishness of these remarks helped to soothe investor jitters that the Fed may choose to keep rates higher for a longer than anticipated period of time to corral inflation, giving some support to stock markets. Treasury yields were also driven lower, thanks in part as well to a flight to safe havens in the wake of the escalation of violence in the Middle East. Yields typically move inversely to prices.On Wednesday, more insight into the Fed’s policy plans is expected when minutes from the central bank’s September gathering are due to be published. Meanwhile, all-important consumer price figures are set to be released on Thursday. More

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    Ripple’s chief financial officer steps down amid SEC lawsuit

    According to Campbell’s LinkedIn, her employment at Ripple ended in October after more than two years without explanation other than a “memorable” time at the crypto firm. She joined Ripple in April 2021 after more than four years as CFO at payments platform PayNearMe.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Seeing China’s side of the EM debt debate

    Gabe Sterne is head of global emerging markets at Oxford Economics.Stricken countries are suffering as China and the Western-dominated IMF engage in a titanic wrestling match over debt crisis-resolution architecture. It’s a massive problem that could be a destructive force for decades.First, a recap on a main source of the deadlock. The IMF cannot lend to a crisis-afflicted government unless its debts are sustainable. So it needs financing assurances that creditors, including China, will provide debt relief. But China has dragged its feet in providing these assurances, and the IMF has refused to use its lending into official arrears framework to overcome China’s intransigence for fear of upsetting one of its major shareholders.There’s been plenty written about the imbroglio here on FT Alphaville, including here, here, and here. But there’s one thing that almost all commentary has missed: China has a strong case to feel wronged. Really!It’s well documented that China has contributed to the problem via flaws in lending policies. This includes cases where its lending did not factor in sufficient debt sustainability implications and onerous penalty clauses included in secretive loan contracts; and an intransigent approach to debt restructuring. Also, the diversity in the nature of Chinese lenders has added to the complexities of restructurings.(Other official lenders also have pretty blemished lending records, of course, but let’s not go there now.)China’s perspectiveThe less-told side to the story is that China also has decent grounds to view existing crisis resolution traditions as outdated, unfair, and discriminatory. The most obvious flaws relate to weaknesses in the case for treating multilateral project lenders — for example the World Bank and Regional Development Bank — as senior in debt restructurings (ie, exempt from taking haircuts). In contrast, bilateral (government-to-government) lending is expected by longstanding precedents to participate fully in debt relief efforts. The combined shares of China and multilaterals in total debt is very big in plenty of sovereigns. As Marina Zucker-Marques, Ulrich Volz and Kevin Gallagher wrote in Alphaville yesterday, it’s a problem that has to be solved.It’s never really made sense to treat loans differently just because one is a loan from a collective purse of various governments, whereas the other is a loan from a single government.The most common case in favour of multilaterals not suffering haircuts is that it’s good to keep concessional development loans flowing, even during a crisis. But that could be done via the long-established “cut-off point” in debt restructurings, which dictates that loans granted after that date are not subject to the restructuring.It’s the size of China’s lending rather than geopolitics that has exposed faultlines The standard IMF argument is that if only China joined forces with the Paris Club of official bilateral creditors, everything would be fine. That’s a major motivation for the Common Framework. It also underpins the frustration expressed by the IMF managing director, Kristalina Georgieva.The crisis resolution faultlines have been accepted for decades by governments in part because the extra haircuts required by bilateral creditors as a result of multilaterals avoiding them tends to average out over time and across sovereigns — after all, western governments dominated both bilateral lending and the IMF. Such arguments that “it all comes out in the wash” apply less when lenders such as China make up such a significant share of total debt. The status quo would imply that China will, on average, provide significantly more debt forgiveness than other governments in proportion to exposures, given other governments’ shares in multilateral institutions. That’s not fair on China.A solution is not difficult to design As Marina, Ulrich and Kevin wrote yesterday, the blanket approach of allowing all multilateral lenders to dodge haircuts no longer works; it just inflicts more pain on other creditors, delays restructurings, and creates moral hazard. It’s time for crisis resolution to take more account of loan characteristics, and less of the nature of lender characteristics. If haircuts are to differ across creditors, they could be graded via objective criteria that include how concessional the original loan was. And to keep money flowing to stricken sovereigns, it would be fairer and more efficient to offer a new lending option on a case-by-case basis as part of a debt-restructuring menu for all creditors, similar to the approach in various important historic cases. The present value contribution could be designed to be similar.But pessimistic outcomes are more likely The more likely long-term scenarios involve extended pain. Here are some entirely subjective probabilities to each.Scenario 1: Status quo persists (20-40 per cent weight). The Zambia restructuring offers a template for slightly smoother crisis resolution. In this scenario, China caves in and accepts its status as junior to multilaterals, realising it’s not ready to act as an alternative to the IMF and World Bank. However, one of the lessons expertly drawn in a recent article on these pages is that China is strongly resisting the suggestion that the Zambia deal setting a precedent.Scenario 2: Major reform in resolution architecture (0-20 per cent). Crises become easier to resolve as the IMF overcomes institutional reticence and lends into Chinese arrears, and seniority rules are reformed to improve inter-creditor equity. This is one for the optimists. Recent experience suggests the IMF and World Bank will challenge China only behind closed doors and will cling to their privileges provided in the existing frameworks.Scenario 3: The system slowly decays (40-60 per cent). The most likely scenario is one where China adopts a pragmatic, yet resentful approach that keeps the system barely functioning with painfully slow restructuring negotiations. The existing system decays further as it’s discredited by moral hazard-related actions. For instance, it’s crazy that loans from the Central American Bank of Economic Integration are senior to other creditors even though they were used by El Salvador to perform a buyback boondoggle. Over time, though, China increasingly channels its loans through various new multilateral organisations that it dominates, thereby slowly converging on seniority equivalence with other multilaterals. Multilateral loans become such a large share of total debt that it’s impossible to exclude them from restructurings.Scenario 4: A bifurcated world of crisis resolution fractures the IMF business model (20-40 per cent). It’s possible that a growing number of economies eschew the Fund and other multilateral financing in favour of China. This could be gradual, such as a country like Ethiopia turning to China because the Common Framework is too hard to access. But the process could snowball quickly should China lend to a government that defaulted to the IMF. For example, if a country in Zambia’s position got so weary of waiting for the fruits of the Common Framework that it gave up on the multilateral option and turned to China instead.Of course, the outcomes can overlap, so they don’t necessarily sum to 100 per cent. Either way, the more likely path will be long and troubled. None of which is good news for crisis resolution. More

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    IMF urges central banks to remain firm on inflation

    The Federal Reserve needs to hold its nerve in its fight against the worst bout of US inflation for a generation, a senior IMF official said, as he urged the central bank to keep monetary policy tight even as global economic momentum slows.Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas, the fund’s chief economist, told the Financial Times, that despite recent falls, inflation remained too high for comfort in the US. Any policy easing would be a “huge risk” given the hard-fought battle to bring inflation down. “What is really important is that monetary policy remains in tightening territory,” he said ahead of annual meetings of the IMF and World Bank being held this week in Morocco. “The cost of easing too early is probably higher than the cost of tightening a little more, especially when you have an economy that keeps surprising to the upside.”He added that keeping US borrowing costs elevated for longer than expected, or even raising rates again from their current target range of 5.25 per cent to 5.5 per cent, would not be “unreasonable”. While a spate of rate rises by multiple central banks is taming price pressures — and weighing on global growth — inflation is still expected to hang above target in 93 per cent of economies with an inflation goal, including the US, the IMF said in its latest World Economic Outlook, released on Tuesday. Inflation is set to remain high despite expectations of weaker global growth of 2.9 per cent next year, down from 3.5 per cent in 2022 and 3 per cent this year, according to the IMF’s latest forecasts. The fund lifted its projection for global inflation next year to 5.8 per cent, an increase of 0.6 percentage points from its previous forecast. Most central banks, including the Fed, European Central Bank and Bank of England, target inflation of 2 per cent. PCE inflation in the US is now 3.5 per cent, against CPI inflation of 4.3 per cent in the euro area and 6.7 per cent in the UK. Returning inflation to target is expected to take until 2025 in “most cases”, the IMF warned, adding that near-term inflation expectations were “markedly” above target. The legacy of central bank tightening is playing out in credit markets, the IMF found, with “clear signs that tighter credit conditions are increasingly affecting real activity”. In advanced economies, credit and investment demand shrank in the first half of the year. House prices have been growing more slowly or going into reverse, while bankruptcy rates are up 20 per cent in the US over the past year. The global economy, the fund found, was “limping along, not sprinting.” Nevertheless, tougher conditions do not amount to a “credit crunch”, the IMF said. Surprisingly robust hiring data in the US helped renew a global sell-off on bond markets on Friday, as investors bet official interest rates would stay higher for longer than originally anticipated. An Ice Bank of America index of US 30-year Treasuries has fallen 13.5 per cent since the start of the year. Yields on 30-year US debt reached a 16-year high of more than 5 per cent last week, before settling to 4.95 per cent when markets closed.The fund lifted its gross domestic product forecasts for the US this year and next, from an earlier round of projections in July. It now predicts an expansion of 2.1 per cent in 2023 and 1.5 per cent in 2024. The upgrade of 0.3 percentage points in 2023 and 0.5 percentage points for 2024 reflects stronger business investment and resilient consumption, as well as “expansionary” fiscal policy this year, the IMF said, predicting the US was set to rack up net borrowing of 8.2 per cent of the country’s GDP. The outlook elsewhere was less positive, according to forecasts that underscored diverging prospects between the major economies. The projection for the euro area was cut to growth of 0.7 per cent this year and 1.2 per cent in 2024. Germany is predicted to be particularly weak, with output falling 0.5 per cent this year before rising by just 0.9 per cent in 2024, as its manufacturing sector struggles.Among G7 economies Japan is set for the firmest growth after the US this year, at 2 per cent, before momentum fades next year with growth tipped to be 1 per cent. The UK economy will barely expand, with GDP seen rising by just 0.5 per cent in 2023 and 0.6 per cent in 2024 — the latter figure about 0.4 percentage points below prior forecasts.The IMF trimmed its predictions for Chinese growth both this year and next, forecasting an expansion of 5 per cent in 2023 and 4.2 per cent in 2024. Recent indicators point to further weakness, with the property crisis in the country ranking as the most important factor holding back growth. The fund said “forceful” action was needed from the Chinese authorities to tackle the problem. Speaking at a press conference in Marrakech, Gourinchas said it was too soon to assess the economic implications of the conflict in Israel. “We are monitoring very carefully the situation in terms of the economic impact it could have on the region and beyond,” he said. Additional reporting by Mary McDougall More