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    Bank of Israel denies report governor will declare not seeking new term

    JERUSALEM (Reuters) -The Bank of Israel denied a report that Governor Amir Yaron will on Monday announce that he will not to seek a second term, reiterating he would make his decision around September-October.Earlier, Army Radio – one of two main radio channels in Israel – reported that Yaron would on Monday make public his decision to not seek another term. His current five-year appointment expires at the end of the year.”The report this morning by Army Radio that the governor will deliver his decision today regarding the extension of his term is incorrect. As he has said until now, the governor will deliver his decision on extending his term around the (Jewish) holiday season,” Bank of Israel said.A spokesperson for the central bank did not immediately respond when asked what Yaron’s decision was.The issue of whether he would seek or be reappointed to a second term has been looming over financial markets for months. Yaron has said he would make his decision around the Jewish high holy days, a three-week period which runs from Sept. 16 through Oct. 7.Yaron has not tipped his hand either way but he has been critical of the economic impact of a plan by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government to overhaul Israel’s judicial system. Yaron has also clashed with lawmakers over sharp interest rate increases since April 2022 that have boosted bank profits while hurting mortgage holders.Army Radio also reported, without citing sources, that Netanyahu would choose economist Leo Leiderman to replace Yaron. Netanyahu’s office declined to comment.Leiderman, a former professor of Yaron, in 2013 was chosen by Netanyahu to replace outgoing governor Stanley Fischer but he withdrew his candidacy.He told Reuters that he has not been approached for the central bank governor’s role and wants to stay in his positions as economist at Bank Hapoalim and Tel Aviv University.”I strongly recommend the government to nominate again Professor Amir Yaron for a second term as governor of the Bank of Israel,” he said.Netanyahu in 2018 chose Israeli-born Yaron, a professor at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, to head Israel’s central bank, citing the need for an expert on the global economy.Yaron succeeded Karnit Flug, who opted not to seek a second term.Later on Monday, Yaron and the monetary policy committee will decide on interest rates. A Reuters poll showed 15 of 16 economists expect the benchmark rate to stay at 4.75% for a second straight meeting in the wake of the inflation rate easing to 3.3% in July.In early trading, the shekel was 0.3% weaker at a 3.805 rate versus the dollar, its weakest level since March 2020. More

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    Italy’s Tajani heads to Beijing to discuss Belt and Road

    Good morning. Ukraine will replace its defence minister, Oleksiy Reznikov, in the biggest change to the country’s government since Russia’s full-scale invasion (and in the middle of a major counteroffensive). Rustem Umerov, who is currently in charge of privatisation, is set to be his replacement.Today, our Rome correspondent explains why Italy’s foreign minister is in China hoping for a miracle, while our Moscow correspondent assesses the chances of Turkey’s president convincing Russia to rejoin the Black Sea grain deal. Thoughts and prayersBeijing’s Church of the Saviour had a high profile international visitor at mass yesterday: Italian foreign minister Antonio Tajani, who had just arrived for an official visit to China.Appealing for divine grace was probably not a bad idea given the complexity of Tajani’s mission: to help Italy extricate itself from China’s Belt and Road Initiative without invoking Beijing’s wrath, writes Amy Kazmin. Context: Italy’s prime minister Giorgia Meloni has fiercely criticised her predecessors’ decision to sign up to China’s infrastructure development programme. The move had dismayed Italy’s western allies, especially the US. The agreement is set to be renewed for another five years, unless Rome formally withdraws by the end of the year. With tensions between Washington and Beijing rising, Meloni’s rightwing government has signalled that it hopes that Italy — the only G7 member to have signed up to the BRI — can formally wriggle out of the programme, while maintaining friendly diplomatic relations and strong commercial ties with China. But Italy’s business community is increasingly anxious about potential Chinese retaliation if Rome formally opts out of President Xi Jinping’s flagship foreign policy initiative. These fears have been stoked by Chinese diplomatic warnings of “negative consequences” if Italy pulls out. During his visit, Tajani is due to meet Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi and commerce minister Wang Wentao to discuss the relationship, and lay the groundwork for a visit by Meloni to Beijing later this year. Ahead of his trip, Tajani suggested that the 2019 BRI agreement had not lived up to the expectation that it would boost trade.Meloni has also sought to downplay the BRI’s importance, saying in a recent interview with Italian media that other European countries, which did not sign up to the BRI, have even stronger bilateral trade ties with China than Italy. But in the face of an economic slowdown, Meloni said parliament would also have to ponder Italy’s options. Some analysts said that this indicates the Italian leader’s growing anxiety about the potential withdrawal.Italy’s tightrope act comes as the wider EU is seeking to recalibrate its relationship with China, reducing dependence on Beijing for sensitive technologies and critical materials while also pushing China to open its market to more European goods.In this tense climate, omens emerging from Tajani’s visit will be closely watched.Chart du jour: Spare parts

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    As manufacturers are confronted with a squeeze on raw materials to make batteries, companies from Europe to the US and Asia are investing in recycling. But questions over different technologies and commercial viability complicate the nascent recycling industry’s future.Against the grainFor two months, the world has been watching to see if Moscow will re-join a UN-brokered deal, which had allowed Ukraine and Russia to safely export grain to Africa, the Middle East and Asia in spite of the war. At last, they might finally have the chance of a new agreement, writes Courtney Weaver.Context: The deal was brokered by the UN and Turkey in July 2022, allowing about 33mn tonnes of grain to be safely exported from Ukrainian ports and temporarily staving off a potential food crisis in countries which heavily rely on those goods. Russia abruptly pulled out of it in July, alleging that western sanctions were preventing a parallel agreement to allow Moscow’s own agricultural exports.Today, Vladimir Putin is set to meet Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in the Black Sea resort town of Sochi, fuelling hopes that the Turkish president may be able to get Moscow back to the negotiating table, as it did when Russia briefly left the agreement last November.Turkey’s foreign minister Hakan Fidan, who flew to Moscow to meet his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov last week, has described Turkish diplomatic efforts on the deal’s revival as “intense”. But there is no guarantee that Russia and the west will come to an agreement on Putin’s demands for a new deal, covering sanctions carve-outs for everything from financial transactions to insurance payments. What to watch today Russian president Vladimir Putin hosts Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in Sochi.EU agriculture ministers meet in Córdoba, Spain.Now read theseDifferent paths: Analysts warn of transatlantic divergence between Europe and the US, as the latter records falling inflation and higher growth.Green race: BMW’s chief has warned that the EU ban of combustion engines by 2035 could lead to a price war with Chinese carmakers.Spare change: As European banks wind down their operations in Russia following its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Chinese banks have stepped in. More

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    Europe grapples with higher inflation than the US

    Europe is facing a stickier inflation problem than the US, with investors and analysts increasingly warning of the risk of transatlantic divergence in both economic fortunes and the responses of policymakers.After surging to multi-decade highs last year, consumer price inflation in the US has fallen faster and now stands at a much lower level. Annual growth in wages for workers in the UK and many eurozone countries has overtaken the pay rises of their American counterparts in recent months.As growth in Europe substantially weakens, the US has recorded a 2.1 per cent annualised expansion. That figure for the second quarter, coupled with signs of labour market weakness, has raised hopes of a US “soft landing” — taming inflation without a recession.“There are real signs of divergence,” said Katharine Neiss, a former Bank of England official who is now chief European economist at US investor PGIM Fixed Income. “US core inflation has been consistently coming off pretty consistently since about the middle of last year, but it has been slower to fall in Europe, and wage growth has been coming down faster in the US.”Huw Pill, the Bank of England’s chief economist, said at a conference in South Africa on Thursday that Europe had “faced a different combination of shocks”, pointing out they were much more difficult for rate-setters to handle than those faced in the US, with natural gas prices on this side of the Atlantic rising to the oil price equivalent of $600 a barrel. “The quantum of that increase [in European energy prices] has not been fully recognised in the global macroeconomic debate,” Pill added.

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    With both corporate and personal incomes hit harder in Europe, businesses and households have fought harder to resist losses than in the US, embedding inflation deeper. Policymakers and economists across the US are more optimistic about the trajectory for inflation too. Most expect price pressures to continue easing — at least in the coming months — as demand moderates, lingering supply snarls unfurl and the labour market continues to cool. New data from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics on Friday showed average hourly earnings growth steadying at an annual pace of 4.3 per cent for August.In contrast, UK pay levels rose 8.2 per cent in the second quarter. Eurozone hourly labour costs are expected to continue rising at close to 5 per cent, near their all-time high. Goldman Sachs’ chief European economist Sven Jari Stehn said: “We expect firmer wage growth to keep services inflation more elevated across Europe than the US.”

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    The eurozone’s headline rate of inflation stalled at 5.3 per cent in August, as rising fuel prices and the removal of electricity and gas subsidies in countries like France caused energy inflation to rebound.Core inflation, excluding energy and food, declined slightly in Europe’s single currency bloc. But at 5.3 per cent it has only returned to its level at the start of the year and remains close to a record high set in March. Isabel Schnabel, an executive at the European Central Bank, warned in a speech on Thursday that eurozone inflation was likely to fall more slowly than it rose. “While firms are quick to pass large cost increases on to consumers, they may be more reluctant to pass on declines in [their] costs,” she said. In the UK, headline inflation was 6.8 per cent in July, with the core figure registering 6.9 per cent. In the US, meanwhile, headline personal consumption expenditures index inflation is now 3.3 per cent. The “core” PCE index — which strips out changes to volatile items — is 4.2 per cent. Many economists predict lower inflation will allow the Fed to stop raising rates, while forecasting two more such moves by the Bank of England and one more by the ECB. Investors also expect the Fed to start cutting rates several quarters before the other two.“There is a pretty big separation between what Europe is facing and what we’re dealing with,” said Peter Tchir, head of macro strategy at Academy Securities in the US. “It would not surprise me if in a year we’re worried about deflation again, rather than inflation.” More

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    Asia looks to extend rally on China, US rate hopes

    SYDNEY (Reuters) – Asian shares inched higher on Monday as markets wagered the Federal Reserve was done raising U.S. interest rates, and on hopes the drip feed of policy stimulus from Beijing would be enough to stabilise the Chinese economy. A holiday in the United States made for a slow start ahead of key readings on U.S. services and Chinese trade and inflation later in the week. More policy action is also expected from Beijing, including relaxing restrictions on home buying.There was relief that embattled property developer Country Garden won approval from its creditors to extend payments for an onshore private bond.MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan inched up another 0.1%, having bounced 2.3% last week. Japan’s Nikkei rose 0.2%, after rallying 3.4% last week. The broader Topix jumped 3.7% last week to its highest in 33 years, helped by data showing companies made record profits in the June quarter.Yet the Topix still only has a price to earnings ratio of 14, compared to 23 for the S&P 500 and 29.5 for the Nasdaq.Investor sentiment on the tech sector will be tested this week by the initial public offering for chip giant Arm Holdings, which is aiming for a price in the range of $47 to $51 valuing the company between $50 billion and $54 billion.S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures were both little changed early on Monday.Stocks had firmed on Friday after a benign August payrolls report hardened expectations for an end to rate hikes.While the headline jobs number topped forecasts, downward revisions to the previous two months and a dip in wage growth pointed to a loosening in the labour market. The jobless rate also jumped as more people went looking for work, leaving the vacancies to unemployed ratio at its lowest since September 2021.”This continued rebalancing of the labor market is consistent with our view that the July hike in the Fed funds rate was the last of the cycle,” wrote analysts at Goldman Sachs.”We continue to expect unchanged policy at both the September and November FOMC meetings.”The market seemed to agree as futures now imply a 93% chance of rates staying steady this month and a 67% probability that the entire tightening cycle is over. Treasuries initially rallied on the jobs data, but soon ran into selling and longer-dated yields ended Friday higher. There was no trading in cash Treasuries on Monday, but futures eased a little further.At least seven Federal Reserve officials are due to speak this week ahead of the next policy meeting on Sept. 19-20.Central banks in Canada and Australia hold their own meetings this week and both are expected to hold rates steady.The head of the European Central Bank, Christine Lagarde, is speaking later on Monday, with the market now leaning against a hike at its September meeting after a run of soft data. The relative outperformance of the U.S. economy underpinned the dollar at 146.17 yen, not far from its recent 10-month peak of 147.37. The euro looked vulnerable at $1.0772, just a whisker from its recent low and major support at $1.0765. [USD/]In commodities, gold benefited from the diminished risk of a U.S. rate rise to stand at $1,939 an ounce. [GOL/]Oil prices were near seven-month highs on tightening supply as Saudi Arabia was widely expected to extend a voluntary 1 million barrel per day oil production cut into October. [O/R]Brent firmed 35 cents to $88.90 a barrel, while U.S. crude rose 44 cents to $85.99 per barrel. More

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    Xi Jinping puts China’s security ahead of tackling its economic woes

    China’s complex economic problems, including property sector turmoil, rising local government debt and soft consumption, have sparked calls for Xi Jinping to unleash billions of dollars to shore up spending, arrest a slide into deflation and prop up a weakening currency.Yet the Chinese president has refrained from providing broad-based stimulus, the latest example of how his focus on domestic and external security is shaping his response to problems in the world’s second-biggest economy, analysts said.According to experts in Chinese politics and economics as well as government advisers in Beijing, the leadership is comfortable with slower growth rates and is wary of pulling the trigger on any big changes that would add to government debt or risk instability in the financial system.“If you decide to dramatically spend more money on something, you have to cut back on something else . . . it is an extremely hard discussion to have given that you’re not going to cut technology investment, national defence or internal security,” said Victor Shih, a professor of Chinese political economy at the University of California, San Diego. Yu Jie, a China expert at the UK think-tank Chatham House, said a close reading of Chinese government announcements and speeches over recent months, including statements from the politburo, showed the top leadership was clear-eyed about the severity of the economic downturn.But Beijing’s priority in the face of an increasingly hostile external environment was security and self-reliance, not economic growth, she said.“It is no longer about double-digit economic growth but rather seeking security, that broader sense of scientific and economic self-reliance,” she said.In recent weeks Chinese authorities unveiled a series of interventions designed to shore up growth, particularly in property, which accounts for more than a quarter of economic activity in the country. To help stabilise the real estate market Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Beijing and Shanghai have expanded the definition of first-time homebuyers while the central government has also cut both interest rates and downpayment ratios for mortgages.On Friday, the People’s Bank of China cut the amount of foreign currency that financial institutions are required to hold in reserve, providing further support for the renminbi which has fallen more than 5 per cent against the dollar this year. Teams of central bankers and other financial experts have also been dispatched to the most debt-laden provinces to restructure liabilities.There are also expectations of further infrastructure investment.And yet after China’s economic data for July missed market expectations — much of it by a wide margin — economists have been trimming their forecasts for gross domestic product growth to below the government’s target of 5 per cent while calling for stronger stimulus measures. Some have called for more support for the housing sector as distress among developers spills into other parts of the financial system and for measures to boost consumer spending.According to a government adviser, who asked not to be named, Chinese central bankers’ priority is controlling risks, not boosting home sales. “The central government is well aware that the real estate sector will inevitably shrink,” the person said, adding that Beijing saw the adjustment as necessary over the long term as China continued to adjust its growth model away from property and infrastructure development to consumer services and high-tech manufacturing.Liqian Ren, who manages China investments at US fund WisdomTree Asset Management, said Beijing believed expanding central government stimulus to the scale seen in the US in response to the 2008 financial crisis was likely to spark higher inflation and destabilise the renminbi. “The US is exceptional in being able to use fiscal stimulus without significantly impacting other areas,” she said, noting the US dollar’s status as a global reserve currency.Economists’ hopes for deeper reforms in public spending — for instance boosting China’s pension and healthcare coverage to the point where people feel enough security to unlock massive household savings — have also been tempered since Xi made clear his aversion to European-style social welfare systems in 2021. In an article published in the Chinese Communisty party’s Qiushi journal, Xi warned of the limits to state support and of “falling into the trap of nurturing lazy people through ‘welfarism’”.One key piece missing from the government response so far is an attempt to repair the administration’s relationship with private sector entrepreneurs. Andy Rothman, an investment strategist at the Matthews Asia fund, said while fears of impending economic doom were overblown, “the biggest problem” was that confidence among Chinese entrepreneurs had never recovered from Xi’s sweeping “common prosperity” campaign.The policy, rolled out in 2021 in the name of reducing social inequality, also sought to reassert party control over the country’s billionaire class, whose influence had expanded through decades of economic growth. But the policy hammered confidence, wiped trillions of dollars from Chinese companies’ share prices and introduced an overwhelming sense of regulatory uncertainty.“They need to believe that this over-regulatory effort is being rolled back, and that they’re now free to go about and do business and the government’s going to get out of their way,” Rothman said, noting that private sector entrepreneurs not only drove the most wealth creation and GDP growth in China but also employed most of the urban workforce.

    The onset of such a complicated set of economic problems would foreshadow a challenge to the political authority of other world leaders, but experts noted that Xi’s grip on power remained unaffected.Lance Gore, an expert on Chinese politics and economy at the National University of Singapore, said a deeper economic downturn would alarm Xi, who last year secured a precedent-breaking third five-year term as head of the party and military. The Chinese president has installed a leadership team synonymous with one quality above all else: loyalty.Where once the 24-member politburo had a balance of economic experience and ideological leanings, Xi has stacked key positions with mostly trusted leaders with whom he has worked over decades and rising stars who have proven their trustworthiness and alignment with his own views. This means that despite last year’s protests over Xi’s coronavirus controls and record youth unemployment, none are likely to question Xi’s wisdom.“The other part of the story is that during those years of rapid Chinese growth, the state lost no time to build up its [state security] machinery,” Gore said. “He would not like to use it, but it is available.” More

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    India strives for G20 summit deal despite friction over Ukraine war

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