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    Citi sees hawkish risk at FOMC, says Fed may have to hike again in June

    The market expects the Fed will conclude its rate-hiking cycle tomorrow with the final 0.25% increase. However, the economists see “mainly hawkish risk” as investors will closely digest the exact wording of forward guidance in the statement.“More important will be the exact wording of forward guidance in the statement. The committee will likely remove that they ‘anticipate some additional policy firming.’ But rather than signaling a pause, the committee will want to preserve the option for further rate hikes,” the economists said in a note to Citi’s clients.Citi’s against-consensus projection sees the Fed rising by an additional 25 basis points in June to a terminal policy range of 5.5-5.75%.Morgan Stanley equity strategists warned yesterday that the market is not prepared for a hawkish Fed.“We believe that equities are priced for an optimistic policy outcome (rate cuts in ’23 without the growth downside). If the message delivered at this meeting is more hawkish, it could provide a near-term negative surprise for equities,” the strategists wrote in a note. More

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    BOJ chief upbeat on Asia’s economy, points to bank resilience

    INCHEON, South Korea (Reuters) – Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda said on Tuesday the downside risks to Asia’s economy were smaller than those to other parts of the world, partly due to the region’s resilience to U.S. and European banking sector woes.His remarks underscore optimism over the outlook for Asia’s economy, which has a big influence on Japan’s fragile recovery due to its proximity and huge market size.”The risks Asia faces are smaller than those for other regions,” Ueda told a briefing after attending a meeting of finance leaders from the ASEAN+3 – which comprises the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and Japan, China and South Korea.While Asian policymakers must be vigilant to the potential fallout from U.S. and European banking sector woes, the region’s financial institutions have sufficient capital buffers and have little exposure to the problematic banks, he said.”But policymakers must guard against possible spillovers from uncertainties over U.S. and European economies,” he said.Global recession risks are among key factors that will likely determine how soon the BOJ phases out its massive stimulus programme.Asia has been among few bright spots in the global economy as China’s rebound, thanks to the end to COVID-19 lockdowns, underpin the region’s consumption and exports.The ASEAN+3 economies grew by 3.2% in 2022 and is expected to expand by 4.6% in 2023, led by robust domestic demand, the group’s joint statement said on Tuesday.But Ueda said the group’s finance leaders also discussed risks associated with China’s outlook.”China’s economy is in good shape now due to the re-opening. But from a somewhat medium- to long-term perspective, there’s a chance geo-political risks could hurt growth and have negative effects on the region’s economy,” Ueda said. More

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    Trader Shares Latest and Upcoming ADA Upgrades in Video

    Popular crypto trader Cheeky Crypto uploaded his latest analysis for Cardano (ADA) to YouTube yesterday. In the video, the trader highlighted that the Cardano network has seen a lot of traction recently. The biggest sign of Cardano’s increased traction is the 1,230 new projects that are building on the network, according to Cheeky Crypto.Other updates from the Cardano community shared in the trader’s video include the 72K token policies that have been released on the Cardano network over the last week. Furthermore, the trader shared that there is currently an average of around 65.4 million transactions being processed on Cardano.The trader went on to share that there are some layer-1 updates being implemented to the network through the course of this week, which will have a positive impact on validators within the Cardano ecosystem. The Hydra scaling protocol will also be coming to Cardano soon. This protocol should increase Cardano’s throughput to 1,000,000 transactions per second.In related news, CoinMarketCap shows that ADA’s price, along with the rest of the crypto market, declined over the last 24 hours. At press time, ADA’s price is down 1.02% – taking the altcoin’s price down to $0.3867. Despite the 24-hour drop in ADA’s price, the altcoin’s weekly performance remains in the green at +1.86%.ADA also weakened against the leading altcoin Ethereum (ETH) over the last 24 hours. Currently, ADA’s price is down 0.22% against ETH. The crypto was, however, able to strengthen against the market leader Bitcoin (BTC) by 1.04% during this time period.Furthermore, ADA’s price was able to reach a daily high of $0.3912 but has since retraced to its current level. Meanwhile, the altcoin’s 24-hour low sits at around $0.3816 at press time.Disclaimer: The views and opinions, as well as all the information shared in this price analysis, are published in good faith. Readers must do their own research and due diligence. Any action taken by the reader is strictly at their own risk. Coin Edition and its affiliates will not be held liable for any direct or indirectThe post Trader Shares Latest and Upcoming ADA Upgrades in Video appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    MATIC Price Dips, Bulls Await Chance to Reassert Dominance

    Polygon (MATIC) bulls encountered resistance at $0.9862 early in the day, and as a consequence, bears took market control and sunk the price to $0.9494, where support was formed. The bearish dominance was still in play at press time, resulting in a 2.46% drop to $0.9601.If negative momentum continues and the $0.9494 support level is breached, the next level of support to look for is around $0.9350, which may cause more selling pressure in the market. However, a price recovery is possible if the support level holds and buyers step in, pushing the price back above the $0.9862 resistance level.During the fall, MATIC’s market capitalization and 24-hour trading volume plummeted by 2.45% and 9.56%, respectively, to $8,878,775,281 and $347,171,084. MATIC/USD 24-hour price chart (source: CoinMarketCap)The MATIC price chart’s average directional index (ADX) value of 20.24 indicates that the negative momentum is weak and the price is now in consolidation. Given its upward trajectory, bulls may soon reassert their dominance in the market; an ADX reading above 25 would indicate an even more robust bullish trend.A Chaikin Money Flow score of -0.06 on the MATIC price chart indicates that there is still some selling pressure in the market. However, it is not strong enough to completely override the potential bullish trend indicated by the upward-pointing position. MATIC/USD chart (source: TradingView)On the MATIC price chart, the rate of change (ROC) score of -1.94 indicates that the price of MATIC has decreased relatively quickly over the last 4 hours. However, the fact that it is pointing upwards suggests a possibility of a price reversal or a temporary halt in the downtrend, indicating a possible buying opportunity for traders looking to enter the market.With a stochastic RSI reading of 28.53 and trending higher, the negative momentum in MATIC may fade, suggesting that traders consider establishing a long position in preparation for a future price gain. MATIC/USD chart (source: TradingView)MATIC faces bearish pressure, but consolidation may signal a potential price reversal, making it a buying opportunity for traders.Disclaimer: The views, opinions, and information shared in this price prediction are published in good faith. Readers must do their research and due diligence. Any action taken by the reader is strictly at their own risk. Coin Edition and its affiliates will not be liable for direct or indirect damage or loss.The post MATIC Price Dips, Bulls Await Chance to Reassert Dominance appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    German finance minister rejects industrial power price plan -Handelsblatt

    Such a move would be “economically unwise” and it would contradict market principles to rely on direct state aid as a means to achieve industrial transformation, he wrote in a guest article published by business daily Handelsblatt.The economy ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.The ministry had planned to introduce a concept for industrial electricity pricing this week as part of government efforts to support transition away from fossil fuels.However, Lindner argued that an industrial electricity price would be unfair because it would come at the expense of other electricity consumers and taxpayers. “Increasing competitiveness for some would thus mean a loss of competitiveness for others,” Lindner wrote, adding that there was “no leeway in the already strained budget for correspondingly high subsidies”.Chancellor Olaf Scholz has also expressed scepticism over the plan.”We will not be able to sustain subsidising everything that takes place in normal economic activity in the long run – nor should we get into the habit of doing so,” Scholz said late on Monday.Last year Berlin introduced electricity and gas price caps to shield industry and households from rising energy prices, but companies in Germany say electricity prices are still too high compared with other countries. More

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    Perfect storm in Minnesota labor market is worrying harbinger for the Fed

    FARIBAULT, Minnesota (Reuters) – Demand for Daikin Applied Americas Inc’s climate control equipment is soaring, and worker recruitment is in hyperdrive, with hiring trips to women’s shelters and immigrant support groups and an open door for applicants with no high school degree or manufacturing experience.For Minnesota’s healthcare industry, an estimated 5,000 open nursing positions have sparked the invention of a new specialty, the nurse retentionist who is focused on convincing colleagues to stay on the job. It has also prompted talk of capping workloads and led to up to an 18% pay increase over three years for unionized nurses. Government officials, worried about a constrained labor force in a state where population growth has stalled, have taken a cover-the-waterfront approach. That includes proposals for training in high-growth occupations and subsidies for accommodations at small businesses looking to hire workers with disabilities, efforts to pull members of minority groups off the employment sidelines, a push to reintegrate ex-offenders into the workforce, and grants to study how to speed occupational licensing for immigrants trained abroad.”It’s a pretty basic supply and demand curve,” Jeff Drees, chief executive of the U.S. unit of Japan’s Daikin Industries Ltd, said in an interview from the company’s Faribault plant about 50 miles (80.5 km) south of Minneapolis. “We will hire as many as we can take right now … because every employee we bring on will just help us reduce our lead time.”After raising starting wages from $17 an hour to around $24 and overhauling hiring strategies, Drees still has 200 open jobs at this and two nearby facilities, where he is hoping to add to current staffing of 1,200. Daikin’s order book is bulging, he said, amid demand driven by buildings being upgraded with better air conditioning systems in the wake of the COVID pandemic, a rush of new data centers and electric vehicle plants, and federal dollars flowing under recent infrastructure and environmental legislation. To Federal Reserve officials wondering when wage growth might slow as they try to cool the economy and inflation, his prognosis is not soon. “I don’t think it’s leveling off.” Graphic: The jobs mismatch – https://www.reuters.com/graphics/USA-ECONOMY/LABOR/klvygbbjkvg/chart.png WORKER DEMANDLabor shortages have plagued the U.S. since the first months of the pandemic. Initially, reopened businesses found workers reluctant to return to jobs because of health concerns and an ability to wait it out because of pandemic relief payments, enhanced unemployment insurance and other programs.As health fears eased and support programs lapsed, a realization set in that the pandemic had realigned American work, from the occupations in demand to the willingness of people to do them. That reshuffling may be one reason the Fed is finding it harder than expected to slow a job market struggling to match workers into open positions. It also may mute any job losses from U.S. central bank efforts to curb overall demand and tame inflation. Recent Bureau of Labor Statistics data suggest that while some key occupational gaps were driven by the pandemic, others were well-established when the health crisis struck in 2020, and continue to fuel the high demand for workers the Fed wants to ease.Some of those gaps may eventually respond to Fed efforts to slow the economy. Food preparation and service jobs, for example, fell by about 1 million from 2019 to 2022, the BLS data shows. But the industry’s high rate of job openings – more than 8% of potential positions were open as of February – shows firms are still trying to attract employees. If a Fed-induced slowdown causes households to cut down on restaurant meals, hiring pressure should ease.The dislocation, though, is nearly as bad for services like healthcare, where spending is less by choice and demand, and thus less influenced by economic conditions. Healthcare employment surged by 3 million from 2016 to 2019, before the pandemic, and by another 463,000 from 2019 to 2022. Yet the industry’s job openings rate remains above 7%. GRAPHIC: Job openings to unemployed – https://www.reuters.com/graphics/USA-ECONOMY/VACANCIES/zdpxobkxmvx/chart.png ‘NEXT TO NO GROWTH’Along with sectoral gaps, geographic ones exist as well. The experience of Minnesota, where a strong industrial and corporate base has collided with flatlining population growth, suggests the process of finding a new balance, so central to the evolution of the economy, wages and inflation, will be neither fast nor cheap.On the upside, there is some evidence for a hope shared by many Fed officials that as the economy slows, companies will trim the current high level of job openings but not fire employees who may be hard to recruit back.At roughly 10 million open positions nationally as of the end of February, there were about 1.7 jobs open for each of the roughly 5.9 million unemployed jobseekers, down from the peak of around 2-to-1 last year but well-above pre-pandemic levels.Minnesota has had a particularly large imbalance: The 12-month moving average of available positions last year reached 2.75 for every unemployed person. That has edged down to around 2.6, yet the unemployment rate has remained at or below 3% since December 2021. The number of unemployed has risen since last year, but the three-month average has stabilized at about 90,000 since November – similar to the state’s pre-pandemic lows. Still, given the outlook from companies like Daikin or the chronic shortages seen across industries like healthcare, it remains unclear how fast or far labor demand will fall.Supply, meanwhile, is likely to improve only slowly, if at all. In a dilemma offering a glimpse of the country’s future if birthrates and immigration remain low, companies are competing for workers from a labor pool little changed since 2017 and projected to see “next to no growth over the next decade,” Minnesota State Demographer Susan Brower estimated in a February labor-force outlook.The U.S. as a whole isn’t there yet. But recent Congressional Budget Office projections estimated that by around 2040 the net number of births over deaths will approach zero, with any population increase from then the result of immigration. GRAPHIC: Minnesota job market – https://www.reuters.com/graphics/USA-ECONOMY/LABOR/lbvggzzzrvq/chart.png PART-TIME NURSESThe situation has been great for job hunters and job switchers.Juan Munhen moved to Faribault from Brazil last year to join his wife, who is originally from the city. Once his immigration documents and other papers were in order, things moved fast: nine days from his online application to receiving a job offer and a request to start as soon as possible.For Anthony Clammer, the booming job market meant a switch that cut his commute from a previous job that was 40 minutes away by car, provided more flexibility to help care for his kids when needed, and offered a dependable first-shift schedule – a plum in the manufacturing sector.”Nowadays you look online and there are just hundreds of day-shift job positions,” he said. “I don’t think in 2019 I would have gotten a day shift right away.”In areas of chronic shortage, like nursing, the battle is not just getting bodies into jobs but keeping them there. It has become an expensive proposition, particularly as worker preferences have changed during the pandemic, said Rahul Koranne, president and CEO of the Minnesota Hospital Association. The number of nurses only willing to work part-time, he said, has surged from between 30% and 40% before the pandemic to 57% last year.”Was that the pandemic? Maybe,” Koranne said. “We also think it is generational,” with younger employees wanting better work-life balance.Since those part-time positions typically still carry full-time benefits, it drives up the cost of filling the equivalent of a full-time employee. State officials acknowledge the problem is one of numbers, and are putting efforts into marketing in hopes of convincing people to move there. But Steve Grove, who was until March the commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development, said the state can’t count on a reversal of the population trends and must focus as well on reducing barriers for current residents. “You have to get the number of warm bodies up,” he said, but “there is not one silver bullet … It is housing, training, benefits, retention. We are looking to be more assertive.” More

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    Analysis-Biden travel, Congress recess to squeeze debt limit timeline even more

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – For months, the U.S. crisis over the debt limit has been a political abstraction. Not anymore.The U.S. Treasury’s new June 1 estimated deadline for Congress to raise the debt ceiling or risk default has ratcheted up the heat on Washington’s lawmakers to avert an economic crisis.If the U.S. government is set to run out of money to pay some of its bills by then, U.S. President Joe Biden and Republicans may have just seven working days to craft a deal.That’s the length of time in which the House, Senate and the president are all physically in Washington, D.C. in May.The next time Biden and his House and Senate colleagues are all scheduled to be in Washington is Tuesday, May 9. Not coincidentally, that’s when Biden has invited Republican House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Republican leader Mitch McConnell to the White House to discuss the issue. There, Biden plans to “stress that Congress must take action to avoid default without conditions,” a White House official said. Biden and McCarthy haven’t sat down to discuss the issue since February.The House will have four day weeks the week of May 15 and 22, taking Fridays off. Then, the House is out of Washington the week of May 29, returning June 5. The Senate will be out from May 22 to 29 for a state work period.”There is very little time on the legislative calendar to reach a deal,” wrote Goldman Sachs Group Inc (NYSE:GS) analyst Alec Phillips in a note to clients. “The next few weeks are going to be unpredictable.”Although there is plenty of precedent for Congress’s scheduled state work visits to be changed, Biden’s May travel schedule is less flexible. The Group of Seven leaders’ meeting in Hiroshima, which the White House says Biden is attending, starts May 19, and he’ll need to leave earlier than that to reach it in time. After that ends on May 21, he will attend the May 24 meeting of the Quad Leaders’ Summit in Sydney, Australia, the White House said. While plenty is negotiated in Washington by Zoom, text or over the phone, touchy political compromises are still typically the province of in-room dealmaking. Congress could add more days in Washington. Late on Monday, Schumer worked to fast-track a “clean” two-year debt limit suspension, so that it can come more quickly to the Senate floor for a vote.But the parties remain far apart. House Republicans passed a bill to raise the debt limit last week that includes steep spending cuts from healthcare for the poor to air-traffic controllers, which the Democratic-controlled Senate say they will not approve.Biden has steadfastly said he will not negotiate over the debt ceiling increase, but will discuss budget cuts after a new limit is passed. A White House official said his position would not change by next week. More

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    FirstFT: First Republic aftershocks

    Top investors have warned against complacency following the second-biggest bank failure in US history.Gathering for the opening day of the annual Milken Institute conference in Beverly Hills following the sale of First Republic to JPMorgan hours earlier, David Hunt, chief executive of $1.2tn asset manager PGIM, told delegates: “There is a little bit of a tendency to kind of breathe a sigh of relief on mornings like this,” as the dust settled on the latest US bank collapse. “Actually, we’re just starting the implications for the US economy,” he added.He went on to say there would be “a real ratcheting-up” of regulation on the banking system now, following the collapse of three banks in less than two months. He said the new rules would “hinder the supply of credit.”Others focused on the challenge ahead for the Federal Reserve as it kicks off its latest rate-setting meeting. Karen Karniol-Tambour, co-chief investment officer of hedge fund Bridgewater Associates, said any investor thinking the Fed would cut interest rates this year after implementing a final 25 basis point increase this week are “primed for disappointment”. Meanwhile, Kristalina Georgieva, head of the IMF, blamed “complacency” for the recent bank failures.“We know there was unnecessary deregulation . . . and now we saw the price to pay. We saw supervision has not been up to par.”But some argued that the weekend deal brokered by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and California regulators illustrated the resilience of the US banking system. “When you take a step back and look at the structure of the US financial system, it’s incredibly sound,” said Citigroup chief executive Jane Fraser.We have written a number of stories on the collapse of First Republic and what it means for the US banking system and the economy in the past 24 hours. Here are my recommendations:Timeline: Here’s how JPMorgan’s Jamie Dimon turned from adviser to depositor to buyer of First Republic.Analysis: US regulators took a markedly different approach to cleaning up the mess this time compared with other recent collapses.Deposit insurance: The agency that manages US banking collapses has suggested raising the deposit insurance for business accounts to reduce the risk of bank runs.Interest rates: Discussions from the Fed’s recent policy meeting suggest that the banking turmoil has injected uncertainty into its fight against inflation.And here is what else I am keeping tabs on today:Federal Reserve: The US central bank starts its two-day policy meeting that is expected to result in a 0.25 percentage point rate increase tomorrow.Economic data: Job openings and factory orders for March are both expected today. Results: Pfizer, Starbucks, Ford, Uber, Molson Coors and Restaurant Brands all report earnings. Hollywood strikes: Screenwriters are expected to go on strike today for the first time in 15 years after talks with movie studios collapsed. Read the latest here.Looking ahead to the FT Weekend Festival on May 20 and Edward Luce will be speaking to Hillary Rodham Clinton. Sign up to hear the former secretary of state in conversation with the FT’s US national editor. As a newsletter subscriber you can save $20 by using the promo code NewslettersxFestival at: ft.com/festival-us.Five more top stories

    Morgan Stanley’s chief executive previously warned that investment banking activity remained ‘subdued’ © Lucas Jackson/Reuters

    1. Morgan Stanley is making plans to axe another 3,000 jobs or roughly 5 per cent of staff by the end of June, said people familiar with the discussions, who added the cuts would exclude customer-facing financial advisers in the bank’s prized wealth management unit. Here are the divisions expected to be hit.In other banking news: HSBC is to buy back $2bn of its own shares to shore up support against its biggest shareholder Ping An after reporting a jump in profits.2. The US government could run out of money as soon as June 1 if Congress does not raise or suspend the debt limit before then, Treasury secretary Janet Yellen warned yesterday. Read more from her letter to congressional leaders.3. Exclusive: Jeb Bush’s private equity firm held talks with the owners of Israeli spyware company NSO Group over a deal that would have seen the former Florida governor sell its products, including Pegasus spyware, which infiltrates phones surreptitiously, in the US. Read the full story.4. Deloitte and PwC are giving extra coaching to young UK staff whose education was disrupted by Covid-19 lockdowns after noticing they had weaker teamwork and communication skills. Partners said the recruits had less confidence doing basic tasks such as making presentations and speaking up in meetings.5. More than 20,000 Russian forces have been killed since December in the fight for Bakhmut, the White House said. National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby said Russia’s losses fighting for the Ukrainian town exceeded US fatalities at the Battle of the Bulge in the second world war.Opinion: China could play a crucial role in ending the conflict, writes Gideon Rachman, as a prolonged war has become a liability for Beijing.The Big Read

    © FT Montage/AFP/Getty Images

    The German-Polish relationship is particularly crucial as western powers try to display unity against Vladimir Putin. But in Berlin, there is deep disillusionment with the Polish government led by the conservative Law and Justice party and what is seen as its attempt to use Germany as a political punch bag ahead of Polish parliamentary elections in the autumn. We’re also reading . . . Interview: Noubar Afeyan, co-founder of vaccine maker Moderna, has called on US politicians to embrace science and stop questioning experts. Read the full interview.Social media: A lookalike alternative to Twitter, backed by Jack Dorsey, has gained rapid traction among journalists and celebrities in search of an alternative platform.Big numbers: People are numb to millions, billions and trillions, but that is perhaps exactly what politicians want, writes Sarah O’Connor.Chart of the dayChinese initial public offerings have raised more than five times as much money as those in the US this year as a crop of new listings in the world’s biggest economy failed to appear after a dire 2022.Take a break from the newsUnhedged author Robert Armstrong shares his six favourite venues in midtown Manhattan to have a classic martini. Be sure to share your tips in the comments below this story.

    Half of the Bemelmans Bar martini is served in a glass; the rest — the ‘dividend’ awaits you in carafe to savour later

    Additional contributions by Tee Zhuo and Emily Goldberg More