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    A US foreign policy for the middle class

    What’s good for America is good for the world. That’s the message the US was trying to sell at the G7 meeting in Hiroshima. The Biden administration has recently been accused by both allies and adversaries of putting America first, if not alone, in some of its economic policies. But in Japan, the US team tried to connect the dots between their people and place-based domestic economic strategies and their new approach to foreign policy.Joe Biden’s national security adviser Jake Sullivan recently gave a speech saying that gross domestic product growth for its own sake isn’t good enough — it must be sustainable and equitable. This is the challenge of the next few decades and a clear move away from the traditional Washington consensus model, which focused on unfettered growth via deregulation and trade liberalisation. Having succeeded in getting the Europeans, Canadians and Japanese on board with shared clean energy supply chain efforts before the G7, the administration used its time in Japan to push forward the details of what a US-led industrial policy around climate might look like — particularly in the global south. This too, is new — the Washington consensus was all about handing a single playbook of growth to the world. Today’s world is far more multipolar, a reality that the US must acknowledge and adjust to as it attempts to bring a greater coalition of nations into a new economic order — albeit one that does not yet have an entirely unified theory. Some principles, however, are starting to take shape, notably that global markets must be incentivised in new ways to prioritise not just the planet, but its people — or, specifically, its workers. One of the core problems with the old system of globalisation was that it consistently prioritised capital over labour. That can result in strong growth, although not always. But it certainly results in more financialisation and financial fragility (as measured by the increasing number of financial crises). It also leads to rising inequality as wealth becomes concentrated in a handful of places. One of Biden’s main goals at home has been to fight this. In a 2021 speech, he laid out a new approach to domestic competition policy, designed to prioritise workers. That approach was in evidence, too, at the G7, in the promise to fight “economic coercion”, whether it comes from companies or from states.The immediate targets on that front are Russia’s weaponisation of commodities and Chinese mercantilism. But the end goal is to avoid economic chokepoints wherever they occur. This builds on the push for resilience over “efficiency”, which is less about “decoupling” with China than in “de-risking” across many markets. By framing a new trade and foreign policy not around US-China conflict but in terms of limiting dangerous concentrations of power in any nation or company, the administration hopes to address multiple problems at once — unfair state subsidies, monopoly issues at home and abroad, and national security concerns — without sparking a new war. That means building more redundancy in supply chains that have the potential to be weaponised. It also means working with new partners in the global south to create more robust supplies of commodities such as rare earth minerals. This was also up for discussion at the summit as the US attempted to show that “friend-shoring” wasn’t something that had to be done with the EU, Japan, Canada and Australia alone. De-risking is a message that G7 nations, and indeed many others, are responsive to. Nobody wants to live in a world where European grain or gas supplies can be turned on and off by an autocrat, or the global supply of high-end semiconductors can be ringfenced by blockading a single island. Hence efforts to work with Europe, Japan, Korea, Taiwan and India to co-ordinate new semiconductor incentives, subsidising more chips everywhere.But coming up with the metrics and institutions for this new world, and figuring out how to better incentivise sustainable and equitable growth, will be a long and challenging process. While the US is open to putting issues such as World Bank reform on the table, it hasn’t spent nearly as much time on the bigger hot-button issue of how to reform the World Trade Organization. And tensions remain. The G7 communiqué made clear the desire to take on any “non-market policies and practices”, which, for the US, includes those in China that adversely affect workers or the environment, and limit access to technologies that compromise national security.Still, Biden did finally give the world a clearer argument about why signature domestic economic programmes such as the Inflation Reduction Act, the Chips Act, and the earmarking of more money for infrastructure linked to high labour and environmental standards, are not about nationalism but a new approach to growth both domestically and globally. “The president believes that a bottom-up, middle-out approach, focused on resiliency, sustainability and empowering workers is the best thing for the US, but for the world,” says deputy national security adviser Mike Pyle.Whether you call it a foreign policy for the middle class, or a new global industrial policy, it is certainly very different to the “market knows best” strategy the US has taken at home and abroad for the past several [email protected] More

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    Markets on edge as US debt ceiling talks approach crunch time

    SYDNEY (Reuters) – Asian stocks and Wall Street futures slipped on Monday as U.S. debt ceiling negotiations approached crunch time after stalling last week, while lingering banking fears and fresh geopolitical worries capped sentiment.U.S. President Joe Biden and House Republican Speaker Kevin McCarthy will meet to discuss the debt ceiling on Monday, less than two weeks before the June 1 deadline after which Treasury expects the federal government will struggle to pay its debts.A failure to lift the debt ceiling would trigger a default, sparking chaos in financial markets and a spike in interest rates.In early trade on Monday, S&P 500 futures lost 0.1% while Nasdaq futures were flat.MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was last flat, struggling for direction. Japan’s Nikkei was also mostly unchanged and Australia’s resources-heavy shares slipped 0.2%.South Korea bucked the sluggish trend, gaining 0.6%.”In the art of brinkmanship, it feels that to get a deal we must see greater market volatility,” said Chris Weston, head of research at Pepperstone.”While for much of last week the headlines were that a deal is within reach, the breakdown in talks from Republican negotiators on Friday has many thinking that we could be pushed right to the June deadline before we see an agreement.”On Friday, reports that debt ceiling negotiations had reached an impasse rattled markets even as Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said U.S. interest rates might not need to rise as much given the tighter credit conditions from the banking crisis.The Fed chief also flagged that after a year of aggressive rate increases, officials can afford to make “careful assessments” of the impact of rate hikes on the economic outlook, a stance that was viewed as dovish by markets.That has knocked the dollar off a two-month top against a basket of major peers and was last at 103.06 on Monday, flat for the day. Futures are again pricing in an about a 90% chance that the Fed would keep rates unchanged at its next meeting in June, and a total of almost 50 basis points of cuts by the end of the year.Meanwhile, regional U.S. bank shares continued to fall on Friday, as Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen reportedly warned that more mergers may be necessary after a series of bank failures.In Asia, China is expected to keep its key lending rates unchanged on Monday even as the ongoing economic recovery disappointed. Traders are also digesting the implications of the Group of Seven’s “de-risk, not decouple” approach to China and supply chains flagged at the group’s summit on Sunday. Beijing has summoned the Japanese ambassador to register protests over “hype around China-related issues” at the summit. The government also banned U.S. memory chip manufacturer Micron Technology (NASDAQ:MU) from supplying to operators of key infrastructure in the country.Later in the week, the Fed will release minutes of the May meeting on Wednesday while U.S. personal consumption expenditures (PCE) inflation data is due out on Friday. In the Treasuries market, debt ceiling concerns have created large distortions in the short-end of the yield curve as investors avoid bills that come due when the Treasury is at risk of running out of funds.The yield on the 1-month Treasury bill jumped 15 basis points to 5.6677% on Monday. Two-year yields were four basis points lower to 4.2510%, pulling away from a recent two-month high, while the 10-year yield also dipped two bps to 3.6707%. Oil prices were higher in early trade. U.S. crude futures were up 0.1% to $71.6 per barrel, while Brent crude futures rose 0.2% to $75.75 per barrel.Gold prices were 0.2% higher at $1,980.10 per ounce. More

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    Australia to regulate buy-now-pay-later sector

    BNPL companies typically offer on-the-spot interest-free short-term loans with minimal credit checks that spread payments and are largely used by cash-strapped people taking debt, sometimes more than they can afford to buy.”They are very popular but we need to make sure that we can manage them appropriately,” Treasurer Jim Chalmers told ABC television. “Best way to do that is to legislate, to regulate as a credit product, so that we can manage some of the risks.”The absence of interest charges has exempted them from consumer credit regulation and the sector has seen its business surge during an online shopping frenzy spurred by COVID-19 stimulus payments and ultra-low interest rates. But concerns about repayment have been rising as Australia battles high inflation, which now sits at near 30-year highs.The services will be required to have a credit licence, make allowances for financial hardship and minimum standards for conduct that could subject them to the same laws as credit card providers, Financial Services Minister Stephen Jones will say in a speech on Monday, local media reported.Australia, home to about a dozen listed BNPL providers, has about 7 million active accounts that resulted in A$16 billion ($10.9 billion) of transactions in 2021-22, up 37%, data showed.Australia’s biggest BNPL company Afterpay, bought in 2022 by Twitter founder Jack Dorsey’s Block Inc, have argued against tough regulations while PayPal Holdings Inc (NASDAQ:PYPL) had said it wanted BNPL loans subjected to consumer protection law.The government will unveil the draft legislation for consultation later this year and the bill will be introduced into parliament by the end of this year, media reported. ($1 = 1.4743 Australian dollars) More

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    China’s exports to North Korea surge in April

    Chinese outbound shipments to the isolated country surged 69% year-on-year to $166 million in April, data released by China’s General Administration of Customs showed. The top export items in terms of value were processed hair and wool used in wigs, worth about $11.6 million, and diammonium hydrogen phosphate, a widely used fertiliser, worth $8.84 million. Pyongyang purchased $5.07 million of rice from China in April.In January-April, Chinese exports to North Korea leapt to $603 million from $270.59 million a year earlier, according to the customs data.North Korea has long suffered from food insecurity and South Korea’s DongA Ilbo newspaper reported in mid-February that Pyongyang’s food crisis may have deteriorated. The country has been under U.N. sanctions for its missile and nuclear programmes since 2006. More

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    FirstFT Asia: China bans US chipmaker Micron

    Good morning. China has said that US chipmaker MicronTechnology’s products posed “serious network security risks’‘ and banned operators from buying them. The decision comes amid escalating tensions between the world’s superpowers and marks the first big measure taken against an American semiconductor group. The Cyberspace Administration of China on Sunday announced that the company, which is the biggest US maker of memory chips, “posed significant security risks to China’s critical information infrastructure supply chain”.The move follows a seven-week investigation into the Idaho-based Micron by the CAC, a probe that was seen as retaliation for US efforts to curb China’s access to key technology. Last October, Washington introduced extensive chip export controls and the Netherlands and Japan have since followed. China is an important market for Micron and analysts warned that Beijing’s restrictions could even prompt Chinese companies that did not provide “critical information infrastructure” to seek to eliminate Micron from their supply chains.Here’s what I’m watching today:Turkey election: Turks return to the polls to vote on the presidential run-off, where incumbent Recep Tayyip Erdoğan remains the favourite to win.US debt ceiling: Joe Biden returns from the G7 summit to try to resolve the US deficit ceiling impasse.Who will win the US-China tech war? Join leading FT journalists and a Nikkei Asia colleague for a subscriber-exclusive webinar on May 25 and put your questions to the panel.Five more top stories1. Vladimir Putin claims Russian forces have captured the eastern city of Bakhmut, despite Kyiv insisting the battle “was not over.” The battle of Bakhmut has been the longest and bloodiest fought in Ukraine, claiming more than 100,000 casualties and reducing the city to ruins. Read more about what Russia is hailing as its first major victory since the invasion.2. The G7 issued its strongest condemnation of China, citing concerns over the rising military and economic security threats posed by Beijing. G7 members are “seriously concerned” about events in the East and South China seas and urged Beijing to push Russia to withdraw its troops from Ukraine. Also at the G7: Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy called on Brazil and India to unite behind his proposal to end Russia’s war, confronting the two countries’ leaders who have worked to maintain close ties with Moscow.3. Bhutan is turning to crypto and drone technology in search of fast growth and returns. The Himalayan kingdom is teaming up with Singapore’s Bitdeer, one of the world’s largest bitcoin miners, to raise up to $500mn for a crypto mining business despite sell-offs, contagion, and scandals that have rocked the sector. Read more about the country’s new crypto venture. 4. Allen & Overy is merging with New York’s Shearman & Sterling to form a law practice with combined revenues of about $3.4bn, in one of the biggest transatlantic legal tie-ups in history. Both firms said they were seeking to build stronger expertise in private equity, life sciences and energy transition. Read more about how Allen & Overy’s bid to conquer the US market.5. Exclusive: One of the world’s top media agencies has told clients it no longer considers Twitter “high risk”, just days after Elon Musk appointed advertising stalwart Linda Yaccarino as the social media platform’s new chief executive. The decision by WPP-owned GroupM is likely to lead to an increase in spending on the platform by clients, people close to the company said.How well did you keep up with the news this week? Take our quiz.The Big Read

    Late on Thursday afternoon, investors across the world received a note titled Japan’s Rising Sun. According to investors, a confluence of factors, economic and geopolitical, has made Japan more interesting than it has been for some time. A few hours before Japan’s Rising Sun hit inboxes, the broad Topix index of Japanese stocks had hit a fresh 33-year high on a rally driven by an exceptional six straight weeks of buying by foreign institutions. Japan is at last allowing itself — and being granted — some swagger. The question is, how long will the phenomenon last?We’re also reading . . . The AI revolution transforming education: Since ChatGPT, arrived on the scene last year, the powerful, freely available AI software has prompted intense speculation about the long-term repercussions on a host of industries. But nowhere has the impact been felt more immediately than in education, write Bethan Staton and Madhumita Murgia. China’s comedy crackdown: The investigation into and fining of a stand-up comedian in Beijing after a performance last weekend has revived worries about free speech in China and the role of comedy in Xi Jinping’s increasingly authoritarian state. Mass redundancies: There is a wave of mass redundancies that has been ripping through industries, mainly in tech. There is plenty of evidence that the human toll of being laid off can be dire, but what if job cuts have become such a standard business practice that they are changing the nature of the workforce, asks FT columnist Pilita Clark Chart of the dayInvestors are ploughing money into emerging market local currency bonds, as high interest rates and falling inflation make them increasingly attractive compared with dollar assets. This year, local bonds performed better as currencies including the Mexican peso and Brazilian real have strengthened more than 10 per cent against the dollar. “Local markets are far outperforming external debt,” said Paul Greer, emerging markets debt portfolio manager at Fidelity International. “Frankly, I think that trend will probably continue for the rest of the year.” Take a break from the news

    From left, Nathan Lane, Joaquin Phoenix and Amy Ryan in ‘Beau Is Afraid’ © Takashi Seida

    The FT’s six films to watch this week include Ari Aster’s Beau Is Afraid starring Joaquin Phoenix (above), the Nam June Paik profile Moon Is the Oldest TV and Kelly Fremon Craig’s adaptation of the Judy Blume novel Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret.Additional contributions by Gary Jones and Gordon Smith More

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    Hyperbitcoinization is underway, RFK seeks Bitcoin donations and other news: Hodler’s Digest, May 14-20

    FTXs leadership is looking to claw back more than $240 million from insiders and executives that benefited from FTX’s wildly inflated acquisition of stock-clearing platform Embed in September. According to court filings, Embeds own chief technology officer, Laurence Beal, was stunned that FTX paid so much for the company after one short meeting with its then-CEO, Michael Giles. Beal described FTXs due diligence process with a cowboy emoji. Lawyers accused FTX insiders of disproportionate payouts to Embed shareholders, including $55 million paid to its CEO.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Marketmind: China to hold rates steady, markets digest G7

    (Reuters) – A look at the day ahead in Asian markets from Jamie McGeever.The People’s Bank of China is expected to keep key lending rates on hold on Monday, as traders in Asia digest the implications of the G7’s stance on China and the tense and fluid situation in Washington regarding the U.S. debt ceiling standoff. Looking further into the week, the main regional drivers for Asian markets are likely to be policy decisions in New Zealand, South Korea and Indonesia, inflation figures from Singapore and Malaysia, and Japanese unemployment and retail sales figures.In their joint communique on Saturday, G7 leaders said they are looking to “de-risk, not decouple” economic engagement with China. Neither are they turning inward, and nor do they want to hamper China’s economic development, they said. But Chinese markets have weakened sharply in recent weeks as economic indicators have fallen off a cliff, against the backdrop of major world powers appearing to reconsider their long-term investment strategy towards China.The Chinese yuan has fallen through the 7.00 per dollar barrier but is unlikely to get any immediate policy support, as the PBOC is expected to leave one-year and five-year loan prime rates unchanged on Monday at 3.65% and 4.30%, respectively.If anything, the weak economy and evaporating inflation could steer the PBOC towards easing policy in the coming months.It could not be more different in Japan. Stocks have powered to a 33-year high, the economy grew much faster than expected in the first quarter, and the Bank of Japan could soon start to reverse its ultra-loose policy. Investors like what they see. Wider market sentiment on Monday could be set by the mood music in Washington around the debt ceiling. President Joe Biden and House Republican Speaker Kevin McCarthy will meet after a “productive” phone call on Sunday as the president returned from the G7 summit.McCarthy said on Sunday there were positive discussions on solving the crisis and that staff-level talks will resume ahead of his meeting with Biden. Markets will see this as progress.On the other hand, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen reiterated that June 1 remains a “hard deadline” for raising the debt ceiling. If not, the government will likely run out of cash and fail to meet all its commitments through June 15, when more tax receipts are due.Time is running out and as long as there is no deal, a U.S. default, a potential catastrophe for world markets, cannot be completely ruled out. Later this week the Reserve Bank of New Zealand is expected to raise its cash rate one last time by 25 basis points to 5.50%, while Bank of Korea and Bank Indonesia are seen keeping their benchmark rates on hold at 3.50% and 5.75%, respectively.Here are three key developments that could provide more direction to markets on Monday:- China loan prime rates decision- Japan machinery orders (March)- Euro zone consumer confidence (May) (By Jamie McGeever; Editing by Chris Reese) More