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    China to replace $140 billion LGFV debt with local bonds – Bloomberg News

    Debt-laden municipalities represent a major risk to China’s economy and financial stability, economists say, after years of over-investment in infrastructure, plummeting returns from land sales and soaring COVID-19 costs.The International Monetary Fund estimates 66 trillion yuan ($9.1 trillion) in total debt is held by LGFVs, which cities use to raise money for infrastructure projects critical to the country’s development.The finance ministry has informed relevant authorities about the “refinancing bonds” programme, Bloomberg said, citing unnamed people with knowledge of the matter. Quotas have been set for each region, it added.The ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.Chinese leaders last month pledged to unveil a “basket of measures” to tackle local debt risks, without announcing details, signalling worries that a potential chain of municipal debt defaults could destabilise the financial sector and put more pressure on the sputtering economy.Policy advisers and economists have said measures are likely to include debt swaps, loan rollovers and possible debt issuance by the central government to bail out some localities.The reported new step would be small – 1 trillion yuan is just 1.5% of the estimated total LGFV debt.LGFVs play a key role in infrastructure projects, which are a major growth driver for the world’s second-largest economy. But some analysts say they have become the “black holes” of the country’s financial system, with surging debt loads and weak revenues beginning to alarm investors.”This step will help tackle local debt risks and more measures will be rolled out,” said Nie Wen, a Shanghai-based economist at investment firm Hwabao Trust.”Authorities hope to gradually resolve the debt issue with a basket of measures, which could take some time.”The move, which mirrors an earlier scheme, will allow local governments to issue bonds at an interest rate of around 3%, to replace expensive LGFV debt. Some cities and LGFVs pay 7-10% interest.From 2015 to 2018, local governments issued some 12 trillion yuan of bonds to swap for off-balance sheet debt, but liabilities have continued to climb.Local government debt rose to 92 trillion yuan, or 76% of economic output, last year from 62.2% in 2019. No LGFV in China has defaulted in the public markets, but delinquencies in the private market are increasing. Big state-owned banks have recently rolled over loans to LGFVs or lent more to them.Typically, Chinese banks are the largest buyers of local government bonds and they also issue the largest amount of loans to local entities.”We believe that commercial banks rather than the central government will bear most of the costs of local government debt restructuring,” analysts at ANZ said in a note in late June, adding they did not expect a large number of defaults in the near term.The finances of LGFVs have deteriorated alongside a severe slump in China’s property sector, which has caused a growing number of developers to default on their debts. Municipalities’ main source of revenues – land auctions to developers – fell off a cliff at the same time their spending needs rose sharply to cope with pandemic spending.All provincial-level governments but Beijing, Shanghai, Guangdong and Tibet will be able to use the bonds to repay off-balance-sheet liabilities, or “hidden debt”, according to Bloomberg.Authorities also identified “high-risk” provinces and cities – including Guizhou, Hunan, Jilin and Anhui provinces and Tianjin city -where more support will be provided – the report said.Economists say last month’s pledge on debt cleanup was more constructive than the message in April, when Communist Party leaders led by President Xi Jinping demanded “strict control” of local debts. The change suggests Beijing has realised it needs to urgently throw cash at the problem, economists say.($1 = 7.2280 Chinese yuan renminbi) More

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    Take Five: Are we there yet?

    China’s post-COVID bounce doesn’t seem to have happened, while, in the West, Britain and the euro zone have skirted recession and the chances of a soft landing in the U.S. appear to be picking up. Here is a look at the week ahead in markets from Kevin Buckland in Tokyo; Ira Iosebashvili in New York and Naomi Rovnick, Karin Strohecker and Amanda Cooper in London. 1A TIRED RABBIT It’s been a tough few weeks (or months) for China – the world’s second-largest economy: housing market turmoil is flaring up again, growth and private investment remain fragile, and consumption and services are struggling to deliver on that much hoped-for post-COVID boom.Markets have been disappointed over the lack of concrete stimulus action following the end-July Politburo meeting, and various sets of PMI data have charted a less than clear path ahead. China retail sales data due on Tuesday will show whether spending can cling to the around-3% growth rate in June – a far cry from the double-digit readings earlier in the year.Industrial production is due the same day, as is fixed asset investment and NBS housing sector data, which will provide a health check on the all-important property sector.2HOLD ON A FED MINUTEAs the market’s attention shifts to the Federal Reserve’s meeting in Jackson Hole, Wyoming at the end of the month, investors will be focused on minutes from the central bank’s latest policy meeting, as well as U.S. retail sales. The Fed minutes, to be released on Wednesday, could offer more clarity on the views policymakers held during their July 25-26 meeting, at which the central bank raised rates and left the door open to another hike in September. July’s inflation data certainly suggests that this possibility is starting to look like a distant one.Meanwhile, investors will get another look at the health of the U.S. consumer with Tuesday’s retail sales report. June retail sales, released last month, rose less than expected, but nonetheless showed consumers weathered higher interest rates. A similar result could support the so-called “soft landing” narrative of cooling inflation and durable growth that has buoyed markets. 3TECHNICALLY, NOT A RECESSIONThe euro zone managed to avoid a technical recession in the first quarter of this year, after an upward revision by the statistics agency showed GDP was flat in that time, following a 0.1% contraction in the last quarter of 2022.Data on Aug 16 could confirm that growth picked up in Q2. A preliminary estimate in late July showed GDP expanded by 0.3% in the second quarter versus the first. A number of indicators are pointing to a slowdown, including a measure of business activity, which has skidded into recession territory and yet unemployment is at a record low. Money markets show traders think the European Central Bank might raise interest rates one last time this year, before it starts cutting in the spring. The GDP figures could offer a steer on what kind of message investors might get next month from ECB President Christine Lagarde. 4FINDING EQUILIBRIUM    Following a tumultuous couple of weeks, JGB investors finally seem to have found an appropriate level for 10-year yields below the new de-facto 1% ceiling – and it’s not far from where they were before the Bank of Japan’s surprise policy tweak.    After shooting to a nine-year peak of 6.55% – prompting the central bank to step in to restore calm – yields have settled around 0.58%.     The reason is not the BOJ’s heavy hand. Ultimately, there’s just too much demand for the bonds after years of sub-0.5% yields.    Investors have also realized that despite the loosening of long-term yield restrictions, the negative short-term rate isn’t going anywhere. Policymakers are worried whether a rise in wages will continue, and about the potential shock to exports from China’s struggles.    The tug-of-war between rekindling animal spirits at home and slowdowns abroad will be showcased in GDP numbers on Wednesday, following a rapid rebound from recession in the previous quarter’s figures. 5A JOB FOR THE BOEUK jobs market reports can have a bigger impact on expectations for interest rates than any other indicator, meaning all eyes will be on labour data due August 15 for signs the Bank of England could turn less hawkish. The BoE, responding to headline inflation of 7.9% in June, hiked rates to a 15-year high of 5.25% on August 3. The UK public sees inflation running at 4.3% by July 2024, a Citi/YouGov survey found. Yet some private data suggests that a strong jobs market, which has helped households keep spending, is slackening off. UK labour supply rose at its steepest pace in July since October 2009, the Recruitment & Employment Confederation said. Analysts widely expect the BoE rate rise cycle to end soon. Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) strategists forecast one more hike in September, with a prolonged pause thereafter. More

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    Core inflation stays down

    Good morning. Everyone likes to make fun of Jim Cramer and Mad Money. Well, bad news, Wall Street snobs: his picks are beating the market. Whether that is down to luck or skill we will leave to readers to decide. The show is not bad! Email us: [email protected] and [email protected]. More good inflation newsFewer wild price swings makes inflation forecasting easier. As a result, yesterday’s largely cheery July CPI surprised no one. The headline annual rate nudged up to 3.2 per cent, thanks to base effects, while core inflation slowed to 4.7 per cent. On a monthly basis, the core matched June’s gentle rise of just 16 basis points. The great disinflation in rents and used cars marches on.A few details. Non-housing core services inflation, or “supercore”, was flat in June, but rose 19bp in July. Blame car insurance and repair inflation (for details, listen to the Unhedged podcast). These reliably hot bits of transportation services more than offset a fall in airfares, which, despite intense volatility, have fully reverted to pre-pandemic price levels and then some:Several measures of underlying inflation now sport 2-handles. These include: the New York Federal Reserve’s underlying inflation gauge (2.3 per cent); the median CPI component (also 2.3); smoothed three-month supercore (2.1); and trimmed-mean CPI (2.6). These probably overstate the degree of improvement, because they amplify recent changes. But things are undoubtedly better now.Sustained improvement lets the Fed hold rates steady in September if it wants, buying time to evaluate if inflation will stabilise nearer to 3-4 per cent or 2 per cent.All eyes remain on the labour market, the hole in the soft landing story. The Atlanta Fed’s wage tracker is at 5.7 per cent, a pace that isn’t historically consistent with 2 per cent inflation. A similar story is under way in job growth, which has slowed significantly, but remains a bit high. Fed economic projections suggest unemployment will have to rise to 4.1 per cent, from 3.5 per cent now, to bring inflation in line. But Carl Riccadonna of BNP Paribas says that historically, unemployment doesn’t begin to increase until monthly payroll growth falls to about 100,000. That could be a few months off:On top of labour market resilience, Don Rissmiller of Strategas notes that inflation often travels in waves. His chart:

    The point is not that the Covid inflation episode is like the others cited above, but that inflation needs to both come down and stay down. This should keep the Fed on notice, and take rate cuts off the table for now.Omair Sharif of Inflation Insights thinks an inflation bounce could be coming later this year, fuelled by smaller declines in used car prices and a few methodology quirks. “I still can’t rule out a December hike,” he wrote yesterday. Chances are that at the Fed’s December meeting, it will have just seen two hotter core CPI reports in October and November, Sharif says. The latter of those is due out on the first day the Fed meets.San Francisco Fed president Mary Daly summed it up well yesterday. The July CPI reading “is good news” but “is not a data point that says victory is ours. There’s still more work to do.” (Ethan Wu)Some replies on Berkshire A lot of people have opinions about the share performance of Berkshire Hathaway — where it comes from, whether it will persist — and a lot of them wrote in after Unhedged’s piece on that topic earlier this week. To reiterate, despite its recent hot streak, I don’t think Berkshire will ever outperform over a long stretch again, because it is too big and diversified. You might as well own an S&P 500 ETF.Many of the reader responses were clustered around the broad idea that Berkshire, even if it has not outperformed the S&P over the past decade or more, is in some sense safer than the S&P. Several readers say we should adjust Berkshire’s performance for its large cash position, which acts as a buffer. Here is one of them:Maybe worth comparing Berkshire to a portfolio of S&P and cash. Berkshire has a cash drag, but has the option to be opportunistic when it becomes a buyers’ market . . . normalising for this by comparing Berkshire to the equivalent “cash & S&P portfolio” would perhaps make for a more appropriate comparison?I agree that Berkshire’s cash provides optionality, but comparing Berkshire to a blended portfolio of cash and the S&P would be a mistake. The cash position at Berkshire is there to earn high returns opportunistically and to ensure the insurance companies are never caught short of funds. That is a strategic choice by Berkshire designed to improve long-term returns, so to lower the performance benchmark by diluting the S&P performance with cash holdings would be unfair.Further on the option value of its cash holdings — $147bn as of the second quarter — Unhedged friend Dec Mullarkey of SLC Management writes that:The other big advantage Buffett has is his ability to act quickly and in size. Given his reputation as a value buyer he is one of the first to get distressed calls. For example, in 2008 when Goldman Sachs and GE needed capital infusions, he stepped in on very favourable terms but passed on Lehman and AIG as saw too many red flags. Companies also seek him out as his analysis and participation enhances credibility, creating a magnet for other investors.Indeed, the strongest argument for owning Berkshire is that if there is another crisis, it will be able to rent its excess capital out at exorbitant rates and buy up undervalued companies. But Berkshire’s margin of outperformance following the 2008 crisis was very narrow. If you bought Berkshire at the peak of the market in 2007 and held for the next 10 years, your annualised total return would have been 8.6 per cent; the S&P managed 7.3 per cent. That’s a meaningful difference, but nothing like a blowout, given a perfect set-up for Berkshire (and if you had bought Berkshire at the bottom of the market in 2009, you would have undershot the S&P significantly over the next decade).Buffett’s great outperformance came, instead, after the dotcom crash. If you had bought Berkshire at the 2000 peak, you would have earned over 8 per cent a year through the end of 2010, absolutely trouncing the wider market: Buffett simply didn’t own any tech stocks during the tech bubble (his biggest positions then, in descending order of size: Coke, American Express, Freddie Mac, Gillette, Freddie Mac, Wells Fargo, Washington Post). Is the next crisis likely to miss his portfolio so neatly?One reader, Michael Kassen, argued that Berkshire’s lower volatility and no-dividend policy create advantages over the S&P: Let’s assume that over the next 10 years BRK and the S&P produce identical returns. Assuming the future is like the past, investors should prefer BRK as it has a lower beta. Another reason taxable investors should prefer BRK is that there is no tax leakage along the way (versus the dividend component of the S&P returns).The tax point is right, unless you have to sell the Berkshire shares because you need the money. At that point, it becomes a matter of timing. The beta point is interesting. Berkshire has a beta (volatility relative to the market) of 0.85, according to Bloomberg. Given that, you could in theory lever up your Berkshire position and get higher returns than the S&P for the same risk (where risk is defined in terms of volatility).Note, however, that Buffett himself thinks that equating risk with volatility is stupid, and that only suckers care about beta. He talks about this a lot. What matters is owning companies that compound high returns over time. Volatility is just a thing that offers investors attractive opportunities to buy or sell.Another reader suggested that Berkshire might offer greater safety because of superior governance:One thing to consider is the importance of corporate governance — both ensuring high quality of managers and having appropriate incentives to keep them aligned but not overpaid. Berkshire has excelled at both for decades . . . whereas if you look across the S&P 500 you will always find plenty of examples of poor management or excessive incentives . . . Might that continue to give Berkshire an edge in the future?I don’t know if Berkshire companies are well governed and managed or not. I can think of only one, Kraft Heinz, that seems to have been badly mismanaged, and one is not very many. But there was the time a senior Berkshire executive “resigned” after he was caught doing something that looked a lot like insider trading. And Berkshire’s disclosures about its privately held businesses are notoriously skimpy. So who knows.Several readers pointed out the fact that Berkshire has low-cost, embedded leverage in the form of the “float” — premiums paid, but not yet used to pay claims — from its insurance businesses. In short, when Buffett invests the float, he is buying things with borrowed money. The classic statement of this view of Berkshire is a 2013 article from AQR, called “Buffett’s Alpha”. It concludes: We find that the secret to Buffett’s success is his preference for cheap, safe, high-quality stocks combined with his consistent use of leverage to magnify returns while surviving the inevitable large absolute and relative drawdowns this entails.After a decade in which this leverage did not lead to outperformance, what are we to conclude? Part of the story could be that Berkshire as a whole has grown faster than its insurance arm, reducing the size of the float relative to the company. I’m not sure, but it is a good subject for further research.One good readBumble is diversifying into the “ecosystem of love”. More

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    Ukrainian government bonds surge as Kyiv’s cash pile climbs

    Ukraine’s government bonds have surged in price over the past two months as investors grow more optimistic about how much of their money they will get back in an eventual restructuring of the war-torn country’s debt.Kyiv’s debt tumbled following Russia’s invasion in February 2022, and prices sank further still after overseas creditors voted in favour of freezing interest payments on the country’s $20bn of international bonds.But prices have climbed by more than 50 per cent since early June — putting Ukrainian bonds among the best performers in global fixed income markets this year — as a steady flow of foreign aid bolsters Kyiv’s currency reserves, while forecasts for the country’s economy have recently become somewhat less bleak.“The market is trying to work out: when we do finally have the restructure, what level will the bonds trade at?” said Daniel Wood, an emerging markets portfolio manager at William Blair. “Any piece of good news — growth, a high level of foreign exchange reserves, a deal with the IMF — will be treated well by investors, because that means the recovery value of [Ukraine’s] bonds will be higher than the market is currently pricing,” he noted.Kyiv’s foreign reserves have climbed to an all-time high of $41.7bn as financial aid from western countries continues to flow, according to central bank data published earlier this week. Investors say that the IMF’s review in June of its four-year $15.6bn loan programme to Ukraine, which allowed Kyiv to immediately withdraw $890mn for budget support, has also helped fuel the recent rally.The IMF had signalled at the end of June that Ukraine’s economy is set to grow by between 1 and 3 per cent in 2023, upgrading earlier forecasts that pointed to a 3 per cent contraction this year. Russia’s invasion caused Ukraine’s GDP to fall 29 per cent last year. With the conflict dragging on for more than 18 months, Ukrainian debt continues to trade at levels that imply a restructuring is a certainty and creditors will receive a harsh writedown of the value of their bonds. But the market’s assessment of how much investors are likely to recover has risen.A dollar-denominated bond maturing in September 2025 currently trades at 31 cents on the dollar, up from 20 cents in early June. Other foreign currency bonds have chalked up similar gains.The biggest holders of Ukraine’s international bonds are BlackRock, Pimco and Fidelity, according to filings data compiled by Bloomberg.“It’s a pretty good return in two months,” said Giancarlo Perasso, the lead economist at PGIM fixed income, which also holds some Ukrainian debt.“We were thinking of a certain haircut, but now we think the restructuring might be more favourable to us [ . . .] because the country has a higher capacity to pay than we thought before,” Perasso added. More

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    French statistics office sinks myth of a cruise ship’s economic rescue

    Economists are wrong to believe a 331-metre-long cruise ship was mainly responsible for dragging the French economy out of its recent rut in the three months to June, according to the country’s statistics office.The delivery of the MSC Euribia from the Chantiers de l’Atlantique shipyard on France’s west coast in May led to a surge in the country’s exports. Many economists assumed this was the main reason for France’s stronger than forecast quarterly gross domestic product growth of 0.5 per cent, which gave the overall eurozone a much-needed uplift.However, the national statistics office Insee told the Financial Times the boost to exports on delivery of the €1bn-plus ship was almost totally wiped out by a corresponding reduction of its value from French inventories, as is standard practice in such cases.“The contribution to GDP from this activity goes through production, which is recorded gradually over the duration of the project — about two years — and contributes to a gradual increase in inventories,” Insee said. “On delivery to the shipowner, there is an export and a decrease in stock.”The high value of the cruise ship — estimated by Insee to be worth more than 0.2 percentage points of quarterly French GDP — helped lift the country’s exports of transport equipment 11.2 per cent from the previous three months. This contributed to quarterly growth in French exports of 2.6 per cent and prompted several economists to cite the cruise ship delivery as the main reason why the eurozone’s second-largest economy had exceeded the quarterly growth rate of 0.1 per cent they had forecast, when the figures were published by Insee late last month.“On our reading of the data, French GDP was indeed somewhat boosted by transport equipment exports,” Mariana Monteiro, an economist at France’s biggest bank BNP Paribas, told the FT this week.“As well as the cruise ship, there was also some contribution from a recovery in Airbus exports,” Monteiro said, estimating that these combined added about 0.3 to 0.4 percentage points to French quarterly GDP growth. She said cruise ship deliveries were “erratic” so would not provide “a sustained boost” to GDP even if more were due in coming years.Jim Reid, a research strategist at Deutsche Bank, said in a note to clients that French GDP numbers were “distorted by the delivery of a cruise ship”. Claus Vistesen, an economist at research group Pantheon Macroeconomics, said he had discussed the issue with Insee and he still thought it was “a pretty straightforward case of a one-off rise in exports adding a boost to GDP growth, holding other things equal”. Net foreign trade added 0.7 percentage points to French GDP in the most recent quarter, but a drop in inventories deducted only 0.1 percentage points. Vistesen said this was “a big surprise” because “falling inventories didn’t offset the rise in net goods trade”, adding that “Insee is hoisted on its own petard here”.

    But Insee said the impact of deducting the MSC Euribia from inventories was partially masked by a surge in coking and refining stocks after these rebounded following strikes earlier in the year.Some economists have changed their minds about the cruise ship’s impact, such as Jack Allen-Reynolds at the consultants Capital Economics. He initially wrote that the rebound of the whole eurozone — with quarterly growth of 0.3 per cent after six months of near stagnation — was “largely due to a huge increase in Ireland’s GDP and the export of a cruise ship from France”.But he told the FT that, after looking into this further, he concluded the MSC Euribia’s contribution to GDP “will have been much smaller than the impact on France’s gross exports” because of its offsetting deduction from inventories. He said this made France’s latest quarterly economic expansion of 0.5 per cent — up from two consecutive quarters of 0.1 per cent growth — “all the more surprising”. More