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    China will widen market access for the service industry – President Xi

    Speaking via video at the China International Fair for Trade in Services (CIFTIS) in Beijing, Xi said China would focus on expanding the domestic market, increasing imports of high-quality services and reforming the country’s basic data system.The remarks come as China’s trade slumped in recent months as weaker demand threatens recovery prospects in the world’s second-largest economy, prompting top leaders to introduce further policy support.Xi said China will promote the integrated development of high-end manufacturing and modern service industries. More

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    The story of a crypto influencer’s attempt to bend reality

    An unusual request after so long — especially considering he had already made extensive comments after reading a prepublication draft of the original article. He’d argued at one point that a mention in that article of “haters” who accused him of editing YouTube video titles in order to make past predictions appear accurate was “clearly unprofessional.” He suggested it was analogous to an article about SpaceX CEO Elon Musk’s rockets including comments from flat-earthers.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Ripple legal team opposes SEC appeal over XRP decision

    In a Sept. 1 filing with U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, Ripple’s legal team said the SEC’s grounds for an appeal largely rested on “dissatisfaction” with a judge’s decision that the XRP token did not qualify as a security for sales to retail investors. The lawyers said “exceptional circumstances required for interlocutory appeal” were absent in the case, and called on the judge to both deny any request for an appeal or stay.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Take Five: A September to remember?

    But there are a few snags. This September is chock-full of risk events, including central bank meetings, a G20 summit and make-or-break data, not to mention that it tends to be the worst month of the year for the mighty S&P 500.Here’s a look at the week ahead in markets from Ira Iosebashvili in New York, Kevin Buckland in Tokyo, Dhara Ranasinghe, Libby George and Naomi Rovnick in London. 1/ SCARY SEPTEMBERNow the Federal Reserve’s Jackson Hole confab is over, investors are strapping in for a potentially volatile month. The S&P 500 tends to post its worst monthly performance in September, with an average decline of 0.7%, according to CFRA data going back to 1945.There are plenty of catalysts for volatility. The Sept. 13 U.S. inflation reading would likely have to support the narrative of cooling consumer prices and resilient growth that has boosted stocks for most of the year. Investors will also scrutinise the message from Fed Chairman Jerome Powell after the central bank’s Sept. 20 meeting to determine the likelihood of another hike this year.Meanwhile, there’s a risk of a fourth federal government shutdown in a decade if squabbling lawmakers cannot reach a deal by Sept. 30, when funding runs out with the end of the current fiscal year. On the data front, U.S. services sector activity is due Wednesday.2/ THE SICK MAN OF EUROPEGermany looks likely to be the only major economy to contract this year. Business activity there shrank at the fastest pace in over three years in August, business sentiment has deteriorated and the economy stagnated in the second quarter. No wonder the region’s economic powerhouse is once again being called the sick man of Europe.July industrial orders and production data in the coming week may reinforce that perception, supporting the case for the ECB to leave rates unchanged in September. Germany’s coalition just agreed a 7 bln euro ($7.56 bln) corporate tax relief package to give the economy what Chancellor Olaf Scholz called a “big boost”.But economists are sceptical, noting that at just 0.2% of GDP, the package is no game-changer and that the sick man will need more medicine. 3/ A BRIGHTER G20?Some progress this summer on debt deals for the string of struggling emerging economies in, or facing, default has sharply driven up year-to-date returns for the sovereign bonds for Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Ghana and Zambia.This bright spot could, during the G20 Summit in Delhi, support ongoing efforts to tackle the persistent, damaging debt crisis among developing nations.Multilateral institutions and creditor countries have used most international gatherings to refine the Common Framework agreement that was meant to make recovering from debt distress quicker and easier.But the absence of China’s President Xi Jinping in Delhi could cast a pall. China has become the biggest bilateral lender to some developing nations in recent years, and its reluctance to make bigger concessions during restructuring efforts has been a core sticking point. 4/ SMOOTH TRANSITION    The Reserve Bank of Australia is set to hold rates steady for a third straight meeting on Tuesday, as Governor Philip Lowe prepares to pass the baton to deputy Michele Bullock.    A sharp cooling of inflation hints at an easier road for Bullock, after Lowe’s (NYSE:LOW) controversy-filled legacy of painful backtracks and abrupt shifts that cost him a second term.    Rates are at an 11-year high of 4.1% after 400 bps of tightening since May 2022. Traders expect that to be the peak, after inflation unexpectedly eased to a 17-month trough below 5% in July.    But it won’t be all plain sailing. Economic risks in top trade partner China are ramping up right as things at home look rosier. 5/ BoE ON THE CUSPIs Britain’s economy slowing enough for the Bank of England to end its battle against inflation? UK retail sales for August, as measured by the British Retail Consortium on September 5, may harden the view expressed in other surveys that consumers are deeply cautious. Sentiment has soured alongside a slowing housing market, following 14 back-to-back rate increases. Monthly house price data from Halifax on September 7 will indicate whether the 9-trillion pound ($11.37 trillion) UK residential property sector has weakened further. But the economy, which has defied recession forecasts, could still get a boost. Headline inflation dropped to 6.8% in July, energy costs are set to fall from October and wage growth is now positive in real terms.If this sends Brits flocking back to the shops, it could strengthen the BoE’s resolve to stay tough on inflation.($1 = 0.7914 pounds) More

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    Tech suppliers in China skip seasonal hiring rush amid weak demand

    Normally at this time of year, the manager of a speaker maker in Dongguan, China, says he is scrambling to recruit temporary workers for the traditional peak production season.But this is far from a normal year. The Amazon supplier has not had to make any special recruitment efforts, and its hourly wage for temporary workers remains at Rmb16 ($2.19), the minimum basic rate for the area in 2023. “There is no need to hire any additional workers for the traditional peak season,” said the manager, who asked not to use his name. “That’s unusual . . . but demand is really weak this year.”China’s massive tech manufacturing industry usually ramps up hiring in summer, recruiting hundreds of thousands of temporary workers to help handle the rush of orders from Apple, Amazon, HP, Dell and others ahead of the year-end holiday shopping season.This yearly race for labour is a boon for workers, who can command higher hourly wages, signing bonuses and other perks. For suppliers, it represents a massive cost, as they not only foot the higher wage bills but also pay fees to outside recruitment companies.The unusually weak hiring stems from a combination of slumping electronics demand — both globally and in China — and an ongoing shift of supply chains away from the country. The lull is all the more notable for its contrast with artificial intelligence, an area of the tech industry that is attracting massive investment and high hopes for future growth.“This year it’s so easy to hire workers,” an executive at an Apple supplier told Nikkei Asia. “And they are not expensive at all.”An executive at another Apple supplier said the company used to pay an additional Rmb450mn or so to human resources agencies to help finding enough workers during the summer surge. “But this year, we haven’t spent an extra penny on the agencies,” the executive said. “Labor recruitment and the increasing wages every year used to be a headache for us. But not this year.”Foxconn, a major Apple supplier, has offered wages of up to Rmb35 an hour plus extra bonuses in previous years. The highest rate Nikkei Asia could find being offered this year was just Rmb25 an hour, based on an analysis of multiple online job recruitment ads. Some smaller tech manufacturers were offering less than Rmb20 an hour in Dongguan and Suzhou, two important tech manufacturing hubs in the country, sources said.“Although there are some rush orders, we still see demand being quite slow and uncertain in China till the end of this year and next year,” an executive with chip developer Sunplus told Nikkei Asia, adding that consumption and confidence had yet to return.“We also find some of our clients — not only from the US but also Japan and South Korea — want to have their products built out of China due to the geopolitical risks,” the executive said. “That kind of push could also have impacts on the country’s tech manufacturing industry and jobs.”Apple, Google, Microsoft, Amazon and others have all asked suppliers to build additional capacity outside China, much of it in south-east Asia. Apple has also unveiled ambitious plans for iPhone production in India.“This megatrend of regional manufacturing is irresistible. We are also struggling to find new orders to fill in our existing plants in China amid the slowing global economy,” said a manager at an Apple supplier, adding that the company had halted adding more capacity in China while it was expanding in India. “Many small to medium satellite factories previously serving big electronics manufacturers [in China] have gone out of business because of the supply chain shift to other nations.”A procurement manager of a supplier to HP, Dell and Lenovo told Nikkei Asia that many of his company’s small and midsize suppliers in China were asking for advance payment so they could maintain a healthy cash flow.Weak hiring in such a vital industry is an added headache for Beijing.The Chinese government on August 15 suspended publication of youth jobless data for July, citing a need to revisit the methodology of how data was collected. The move came after China’s youth unemployment rate climbed six straight months in 2023 and hit a record high of 21.3 per cent in June.

    China is also struggling with debt woes in its property sector that could have spillover effects on the broader economy.While Beijing says the economy is on a steady path to recovery, with gross domestic product growing 5.5 per cent in the first half of 2023, foreign economists are cutting their outlooks for the country. JPMorgan now predicts 4.8 per cent GDP growth for the year while Barclays forecasts 4.5 per cent.“China faces a complex set of [economic] problems, and the fact that they are connected makes sorting it out particularly challenging,” Willy Shih, professor of management practice at the Harvard Business School, told Nikkei Asia.Shih said property development, for example, was an important source of funding for other economic development projects, whose problems would spill over to local government funding for additional projects.Meanwhile, slow demand continues to weigh on much of the tech sector.Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, the world’s biggest contract chipmaker and a barometer of the wider industry, trimmed its full-year revenue guidance from mild growth to a 10 per cent decline, citing a slow recovery in China and prolonged macroeconomic uncertainties. Foxconn cut its 2023 revenue forecast to a year-on-year decline due to overall sluggish demand for smartphones, PCs and traditional servers.Chiu Shih-fang, a tech supply chain analyst with the Taiwan Institute of Economic Research, said easier recruitment and lower labour costs would not slow the tech supply chain’s shift away from the country.“The key driving force for this wave of shift is not just about the surging costs in China but for the risk concerns of the US-China tech war and geopolitical uncertainties,” Chiu told Nikkei Asia. And the easy recruitment situation might only be temporary, Chiu added, as labour costs could rise again once China’s economy recovers.“Although suppliers are also facing challenges to build new ecosystems in south-east Asia and India, the diversification trend away from China to reduce risks will not slow,” the analyst said.The supply shift could exacerbate the economic woes facing China, creating a cycle of lower demand and depressed hiring.“Of course, as manufacturers move some portion of their volume out of China, we’ll see an impact on China’s economic recovery,” Harvard Business School’s Shih said. “When you move production to places like Vietnam or Malaysia or Thailand or even India, a lot of jobs go with them.”A version of this article was first published by Nikkei Asia on August 25. ©2023 Nikkei Inc. All rights reserved.Related storiesTaiwan’s Foxconn to invest ‘billions’ in India expansion pushInside Apple’s India dreamIntel to quadruple cutting-edge chip packaging capacity by 2025Global semiconductor investment dips for first time in 4 years More

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    Meta may allow Facebook, Instagram users in EU to pay to avoid ads – NYT

    Those who pay for the subscriptions would not see ads while Meta would also continue to offer free versions of the apps with ads in the EU, the report said, citing three people with knowledge of the plans.The report added that the possible move may help Meta combat privacy concerns and other scrutiny from the EU as it would give users an alternative to the company’s ad-based services, which rely on analyzing people’s data.Meta did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.The social media behemoth has been in the crosshairs of EU antitrust regulators and lost a fight in July against a 2019 German order that barred it from collecting users’ data without consent.It is unclear how much the paid versions of the app would cost, the NYT report said. More