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    European stocks make moderate gains as investors bet on slowing rates

    European stocks made moderate gains by late morning on Thursday after the Federal Reserve predicted the US economy would go through a “mild recession”.The region-wide Stoxx 600 rose 0.2 per cent but London’s FTSE 100 was flat and Germany’s Dax was down 0.2 per cent. France’s Cac 40 was the standout gainer in Europe, rising 0.8 per cent as strong earnings from LVMH boosted demand for luxury stocks.Traders took heart from minutes from the Federal Open Market Committee March meeting that showed officials predicting a “mild recession” starting later this year, before the economy recovers over the next two years.Futures contracts for the S&P 500 and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite took up the momentum in pre-market trading — up 0.1 and 0.2 per cent respectively. Gains were capped after overnight economic data from the US showed headline inflation was down to 5 per cent, the lowest reading since July. However, core CPI, the measure preferred by the Fed because it strips out volatile food and energy prices, rose to 5.6 per cent. The mixed outlook on inflation curbed gains overnight on US markets, with the S&P down 0.4 per cent and the Nasdaq dropping 0.9 per cent. Investors are weighing the impact of the data and the economy shrinking on the Federal Reserve’s next meeting in May. Investors have grown more confident that falling inflation will persuade the Fed to moderate the pace of interest rate rises to combat consumer price pressures. Swaps markets predict a 70 per cent chance of a 0.25 percentage point increase over no change, according to data from Refinitiv.In Europe investors are pricing in a more hawkish path from the European Central Bank, with nearly a two in three chance of a 0.25 percentage point rise and roughly a one in three chance of a larger half-point increase. On Wednesday, governing council member Robert Holzmann said the ECB should raise rates by 0.5 percentage points as the “danger of currently doing too little and to fan inflation is bigger than the risk of doing too much”.European industrial production data released on Thursday was above forecasts at 1.5 per cent, a half percentage point higher than the previous month. German 10-year Bund yields rose 0.02 percentage points to 2.37 per cent.Later on Thursday the US will publish producer price index data and jobless claims will be released. Ahead of the release, the two-year and 10-year US Treasuries both rose 0.01 percentage points — at 3.98 per cent and 3.43 per cent respectively. “With the US economy cooling and a Fed pivot not imminent, we believe the environment for equities will remain challenging in the coming months,” said Mark Haefele, chief investment officer at UBS Global Wealth Management. In Asia, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index closed up 0.2 per cent and China’s CSI 300 was down 0.7 per cent. More

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    Tesco forecasts flat profits after inflation hits supply chain

    The UK’s largest supermarket chain Tesco said it would struggle to increase profits this year amid “unprecedented levels of inflation” across its supply chain.Chief executive Ken Murphy said the group had been grappling with the rising costs of products from suppliers while also trying to prevent customers being lured away to discount chains. Retail adjusted operating profit, which excludes petrol, will be “broadly flat” this financial year Tesco said on Thursday, as it disclosed that the measure of profits fell 6.3 per cent to £2.4bn in the year to February, in line with expectations. Overall pre-tax profits halved to £1bn.The group has invested in several initiatives such as matching discount chain Aldi on prices to prevent shoppers from defecting to rivals. “We are the most competitive we’ve ever been on price,” Murphy said. Price increases at Tesco were “meaningfully lower” than the headline grocery inflation rate of 17.5 per cent recorded in March by Kantar, he added. Tesco customers have been swapping more expensive red meat for white meat to lower their food bills, as well as cooking more meals at home and increasingly using up leftover ingredients. The chief executive predicted that inflation would come down later this year, led by falling prices in commodities such as oil and grain, but the price of rice and protein would remain higher.The chain, which has more than a quarter of the UK’s grocery market share, said it was aware of the pressures its suppliers were facing from high day-to-day costs, including higher energy bills, but it was not “afraid to have direct conversations when necessary in the interest of our customers”. Murphy argued that Tesco was “very balanced in its approach with suppliers” although it has been able to use its size to secure better terms than competitors on certain items. Last summer, the chain was embroiled in a dispute over pricing with Kraft Heinz that led to temporary gaps on shelves.The group’s full-year sales climbed 5.3 per cent to £57bn. Including fuel, revenue rose 7.2 per cent last year to £65.7bn. Zoe Gillespie, investment manager at RBC Brewin Dolphin, said: “While profits are expected to be flat for the year ahead, the continuation of its share buyback scheme and strong execution of its strategy mean Tesco remains in good shape.”Tesco’s shares, which are up about 19 per cent this year, rose 2 per cent on Thursday morning. Separately, Murphy said that the allegations of workplace misconduct at the CBI were “clearly very serious” but it declined to comment further on whether it would review its membership until “the investigation has run its course”. Tesco chair John Allan was previously president and vice-president of the employers’ organisation. More

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    Chinese exports roar back to life in sign of economic recovery

    The export engine at the heart of the Chinese economy has roared back to life, defying expectations and bolstering hopes that Beijing will achieve its growth target this year.Despite weak global growth, exports from the world’s second-biggest economy surged nearly 15 per cent in March, fuelled by sales of electric vehicles and their components as well as a swell in trade with Russia. The expansion, which surprised economists, came as Beijing hopes to achieve a gross domestic product growth target of 5 per cent this year. The target is its lowest for more than three decades, after its economy expanded just 3 per cent last year under President Xi Jinping’s zero-Covid controls.Customs data released on Thursday showed dollar-denominated exports expanded 14.8 per cent compared with the same period a year earlier, after falling 6.8 per cent in January and February. Analysts polled by Reuters had forecast a contraction of 7 per cent.The trade data represented the first export expansion since September, as demand slowed, weighing on China’s economy and threatening a pillar of growth. Manufacturing output has struggled to emerge from the shadow of the pandemic, while consumption growth has been uneven. A sharp increase in shipments to Russia as well as south-east Asian countries, particularly Vietnam, Singapore and Malaysia, contributed the most to the gains.Hao Zhou, an analyst with Chinese securities group Guotai Junan International, said the unexpected jump in exports last month suggested “upside risk” to China’s first-quarter GDP figures, due next week.

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    But he said the “most important” gains came from a surge in “so-called new exports” including electric vehicles, lithium and solar batteries. Trade growth in steel and clothing was also strong, while exports of personal computers, mobile phones and integrated circuits declined. Shipments to south-east Asia were resilient, and those to the US and Europe, hit by trade tensions, narrowed their decline. The customs office said that while trade data at the start of the year “showed relatively strong resilience”, geopolitical risks, protectionism and inflation remained a concern.Imports also strongly beat forecasts, declining just 1.4 per cent year on year last month, compared with expectations of a 5 per cent contraction following a 10.2 per cent fall at the beginning of the year.

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    Export strength had previously provided an economic lifeline during the coronavirus pandemic when Chinese policymakers were battling a rolling liquidity crisis in the property sector and weak domestic consumption. But exports weakened last year as global inflation rose and outbreaks of the virus spread across the country.Last week, China’s premier Li Qiang chaired a meeting of the state council, the country’s cabinet, focused on promoting stability in foreign trade. Li called on officials to “try every method” to stabilise exports to developed countries, according to state media.Since taking office as China’s number-two figure last month, Li has sought to project a more conciliatory tone to international business to encourage the return of trade and investment following the loosening of the pandemic regime, even as the US has moved to restrict China’s access to components for advanced technology such as semiconductors.Iris Pang, China economist with ING, predicted that Beijing would also roll out new consumer-focused stimulus measures to spur demand and support job growth.

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    Analysts at economic research group Capital Economics wrote that a weaker outlook for global demand meant any export rebound was likely to be shortlived, given a subdued outlook for foreign demand, recent turmoil in the banking sector and the delayed impact of interest rate increases.

    “We expect most developed economies to slip into recession this year and think that the downturn in Chinese exports still has some way to run before it reaches a bottom later this year,” they wrote. Analysts from CICC, a state-run investment bank, also cautioned that despite rapid growth in shipments of electric vehicles and their components, China was still likely to face a 3 per cent year-on-year decline in exports.“Overseas demand remains in a downward trend, while financial risks also bring uncertainties,” they said. More

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    The rent is still too damn high . . .   

    Good morning from New York. I’m Kate Duguid and when I’m not filling in for Rob and Ethan, I write about Treasuries at the Financial Times. We have some meaty topics to get into today, like the latest inflation data and the debate about whether the dollar still has a place at the centre of the global monetary system. Dollar dominance is one of those topics that comes up every few years — people get worked up and then it all dies down and nothing changes. I’ve been a victim myself: when China set up a crude futures exchange denominated in renminbi a few years ago, an analyst fully convinced me that a global petroyuan system was upon us. Now that you know I’m gullible, send me emails at [email protected] costs may finally be coming downUS monthly consumer price data released yesterday showed the first real signs of a slowdown in shelter costs, a promising development for Fed chair Jay Powell and anyone worried about persistent inflation. Shelter costs are part of the services category of CPI and include rent and something called owners’ equivalent rent — a funny metric that estimates how much a property owner would have to pay in rent for it to be equivalent to their cost of ownership. The shelter category has been among the biggest drivers of inflation for months — and it still is. Yesterday’s report cited it specifically as “by far the largest contributor” to the overall figure, more than offsetting the big decline in the energy index.But shelter costs slowed in March. The shelter index rose by 0.6 per cent month over month, down from 0.8 per cent in February and the lowest level since November. It’s not much of an improvement — and the yearly rate of 8.2 per cent is very far from the Fed’s average target of 2 per cent — but it’s notable because shelter costs have remained high even as other costs have moderated. The Fed’s aggressive interest rate increases have helped ease inflationary pressures in lots of areas of the economy, while bugbears like energy and used cars have been helped by unsnarled supply chains and a warm European winter.The neat interactive chart below made by my FT colleague Sam Learner lets you see progress on the various components of CPI at different rates. Of interest to us here is the shelter category versus all items, on a month-over-month basis.

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    But the shelter index has remained stubbornly high because there is a big lag in the data, so improvements in the real economy are slow to feed through to CPI. Idanna Appio, a portfolio manager at First Eagle Investments, said the lag tends to be about 15-18 months. Data from private companies such as Zillow shows that rental cost increases began to slow just over a year ago, putting us on track for some easing in CPI. You can see that peak in the Zillow data in the charts below. None of these developments are necessarily enough to sway the Fed’s hand at its meeting in May. “Shelter is losing momentum. That is definitely welcome news for the Fed and for financial markets,” said Torsten Sløk, the chief economist at Apollo Global Management. But, he said, “There is still a long way for the shelter component to go.” That reflects the current view of the futures market, where investors are pricing in a 0.25 percentage point interest rate increase in May, though they do see cuts coming towards the end of the year. Appio said there are three tests before a pause in rate increases is justified: a drop in core goods, a drop in shelter inflation and a drop in core services excluding shelter. The Fed has done the first and has now made some progress on the second. The third — which reflects prices on everything from medical services to transportation — remains extremely high. It is also tightly linked to wages and the strength of the labour market, so it could be a deterrent to rate cuts if the level does not come down.You’re the yuan that I wantThe dollar’s position at the centre of the global monetary system has been hotly debated — and largely uncontested — for decades. A series of energy deals priced in yuan has raised the issue again. China has clearly been working to increase the use of yuan in energy transactions globally. A deal with Brazil in March means that transactions between the two countries will be priced in yuan and reals, avoiding the dollar; The Wall Street Journal reported that Saudi Arabia is considering pricing some oil sales in yuan; and France just did its first LNG deal in the Chinese currency. And during Xi Jinping’s visit to Moscow last month, Vladimir Putin said he would use yuan for payments between Russia and other countries. Our FT colleague Gillian Tett has written really well on the topic recently here.While the share of dollars held by global central banks has shrunk in recent years as they have diversified their holdings, there’s no evidence broadly that the dollar is being displaced. But David Kelly, the chief global strategist at JPMorgan, earlier this week published a very interesting note arguing that there is a threat to dollar dominance at the moment — but it’s coming from inside the house. From inside the House, more specifically. “Investors should, however, be aware of the risks posed to the dollar by the current stand-off in Washington concerning the debt ceiling.”The US Congress is engaged in its periodic, very American battle over the debt ceiling. The US needs to raise its debt limit to pay its bills, but the procedure by which that is approved has been hijacked, with Democrats and Republicans attempting to use the threat of default as leverage to win political victories. Individual taxes are due on April 18 here in the US, and once those are in, the government will have a better idea of how much longer it can continue functioning before it runs out of money. You’ll remember that in 2011, US debt was actually downgraded, though that ultimately had few repercussions. Another downgrade would be much more consequential. Kelly says: “Any miscalculation in this regard could be catastrophic, undermining faith in the credit of the US federal government that has been accumulated since the days of Alexander Hamilton. If such an event were to occur, it would likely add a permanent risk premium to US government bonds and precipitate a much sharper decline in the dollar. It would also add a powerful argument to the arsenal of those promoting other global currencies who could then point to the US democratic process as a source of economic vulnerability rather than economic strength.”One good readThe latest JPMorgan Epstein revelations. More

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    Italian bonds shrug off higher rates to eclipse other big debt markets

    Italy’s sovereign debt has handed investors the best returns among big global government bond markets so far this year, confounding expectations that a rapid rise in eurozone interest rates would reawaken investor fears over the highly indebted country’s finances.Italian bonds, which trade at yields far above those of Germany — the eurozone’s de facto haven benchmark — have long been viewed as a barometer of political and financial risks in the currency bloc. But their relative stability this year, even as the European Central Bank ends large-scale bond purchases and ratchets up borrowing costs, has surprised some investors who worried the central bank’s monetary tightening could widen the cracks in the region’s debt market.“Italy has held up a lot better than we thought it was going to,” said Iain Stealey, international chief investment officer for fixed income at JPMorgan Asset Management. Stealey had expected an underperformance in Italian debt as the ECB cut its bond buying and raised its deposit rate from minus 0.5 per cent in July to 3 per cent at its most recent meeting last month. An ICE Bank of America index of Italian government debt has gained 3.5 per cent so far in 2023, eclipsing peers in the euro area and other big sovereign bond markets around the world. French bonds have gained 2.6 per cent, while US and German bonds are both up by 2.2 per cent.As a result, the gap or “spread” between Italy and Germany’s 10-year debt — a key gauge of risk — has remained much narrower than the majority of last year. It has traded in the range of 1.7 to 2 percentage points this year, down from a peak of over 2.5 percentage points last autumn. The ECB has been slowly reducing its bond purchases as it withdraws monetary stimulus in response to high inflation. In March, it started to shrink its almost €5tn bond portfolio by not replacing €15bn of securities that mature each month.Some of the more hawkish members of the ECB governing council have called for it to accelerate the pace of shrinking its bond portfolio to €25bn a month when this so-called quantitative tightening is reviewed in July. However, the ECB has said its €1.7tn Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme will continue reinvestments until at least the end of next year. It has the flexibility to direct Pepp reinvestments more towards the bonds of countries with disproportionately higher borrowing costs — such as Italy — as it did during a bond market sell-off last summer.The central bank has also created a new tool called the transmission protection instrument (TPI). This is so far untested, but would allow the ECB to buy unlimited amounts of bonds of any country judged to be suffering from an unjustified rise in its borrowing costs. It is widely seen as an extra protection against the risk of rising interest rates triggering a debt crisis in Italy.Lorenzo Codogno, a former director-general at the Italian treasury, said ECB bond purchases have been “essential” to prevent Italy’s borrowing costs from surging higher. Antoine Bouvet, head of European rates strategy at ING, said he was surprised that the mere threat of bond purchases under the TPI had been sufficient to steady the market. “I thought there was a risk the market would challenge the ECB’s credibility but it hasn’t,” he said.Italian bond markets have also been helped by a period of relative political calm. Giorgia Meloni, the rightwing prime minister who was elected in October, has avoided confrontation with Brussels, unlike the populist coalition that unnerved markets in 2018.“The current right-leaning government has behaved responsibly, at least on economic matters,” Codogno said. A sharp drop in natural gas prices has given an extra boost to the Italian economy, which is expected to grow 1.2 per cent this year, outpacing the ECB’s 1 per cent growth forecast for the wider eurozone, he said.Markets are currently pricing in a peak in the ECB’s deposit rate at around 3.75 per cent later this year — matching its previous peak in 2001. But if eurozone inflation proves tricky to curb, and the central bank needs to lift borrowing costs even further — in turn pushing up government borrowing costs across the bloc — then some investors are concerned about the implications for the stability of Rome’s large debt pile of more than 140 per cent of gross domestic product. “If inflation doesn’t come down, then central banks need to deliver more than what’s priced in currently and there are financial stability challenges ahead,” said James Athey, a bond portfolio manager at Abrdn.  More

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    How China changed the game for countries in default

    In October 2020, Zambia, struggling from an economic and financial crisis compounded by the Covid-19 pandemic, first missed an interest payment on its international bonds. Two and a half years later it remains in limbo, unable to resolve the default on most of its $31.6bn debts.That an impoverished and vulnerable country has for so long unsuccessfully laboured to reach a deal with creditors and move on from the crisis is an illustration of the messy process to deal with government bankruptcies, which some experts fear has now broken down completely.The consequences could be severe for the spate of countries that have recently defaulted on their debts, and the topic has been high on the agenda of this week’s spring meetings of the IMF and World Bank in Washington.In her opening remarks at those meetings, the IMF’s managing director Kristalina Georgieva noted that about 15 per cent of low-income countries were already in “debt distress” and almost half were in danger of falling into it. “This has raised concerns over a potential wave of debt restructuring requests—and how to handle them at a time when current restructuring cases are facing costly delays, Zambia being the most recent example,” she told attendees. While domestic laws and judges govern the bankruptcies of companies and individuals, there is no international law for insolvent countries — only a chaotic, ad hoc process that involves working through a hodgepodge of contractual clauses and tacit conventions, enduring tortuous negotiations and navigating geopolitical expediency. A decade ago, US-based hedge fund Elliott Management exploited that landscape to notch up several lucrative victories by suing defaulters for full repayment of their debts. But this fragile patchwork is now under threat of unravelling completely due to the emergence of a new, disruptive, opaque and powerful force in sovereign debt: China.

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    Some experts say Beijing’s lending spree to developing countries and refusal to play by western-established rules represents the single greatest impediment to government debt workouts and threatens to leave some countries in debt limbo for years. But Yu Jie, a senior research fellow on China at think-tank Chatham House, believes Beijing’s stance “is less about economic rationalities and more about geopolitical competition”.“The multilateral financial institutions are run largely by Americans and Europeans. China had hoped to be able to shape the agenda of debt relief, not to have it dictated by the west,” she says.Jay Newman, the former Elliott fund manager who successfully sued Argentina for $2.4bn after its 2001 debt restructuring, says the emergence of China as a significant player has left the entire system in uncharted waters. “You now have one big state creditor with the power to dictate terms and the patience not to make a deal if it doesn’t suit them. It has completely changed the game.”The new landscapeIn a grim sign of the times, Alvarez & Marsal — one of the world’s biggest corporate bankruptcy advisers — this year set up a sovereign practice for the first time. Underscoring its expectations for the business, it hired Reza Baqir, a former senior IMF official and governor of Pakistan’s central bank, to lead the new unit.The potential is clear. The latest IMF data from the end of February indicates that nine poorer countries — such as Mozambique, Zambia and Grenada — are already in what it terms “debt distress”, while another 27 countries are at “high risk” of falling into it. A further 26 more are on the watchlist. Baqir points out that there are also a lot of struggling state-controlled companies in these countries that will need help as a result.“The timing was right” for A&M to set up a sovereign advisory unit, he says. “Given that there are more than 50 countries in various stages of debt distress there is an opportunity for a more holistic approach.”Baqir is among those that say the debt restructuring process is broken, largely because it was primarily designed for a bygone era, when creditors were overwhelmingly western countries and western banks.

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    Decades ago, the Paris Club was formed to co-ordinate between government creditors, while bankers formed the London Club to restructure their debts. Broadly speaking, western governments drove the process, and occasionally leaned on banks to accept painful settlements. It was largely improvised and often slow, but it mostly worked.But the decline of bank lending and the growth of the bond market shook things up in the spate of sovereign defaults that started in the early 1990s. Creditor co-ordination became trickier with myriad bondholders trading claims around the world, rather than just a handful of banks. Argentina’s default on $80bn of bonds in 2001 led to years of fights between Buenos Aires and investors such as Elliott, which refused to accept the terms agreed by other creditors. At one point the hedge fund famously seized an Argentine naval vessel when it docked in Ghana. Its reputation became such that bondholders would sometimes invoke the mere spectre of Elliott to scare countries contemplating a default, while policymakers used it as prima facie evidence of the sovereign debt restructuring system’s weaknesses.In the wake of the Argentine debacle the IMF responded by attempting to set up a kind of bankruptcy court for countries with itself as judge. But the sovereign debt restructuring mechanism foundered after attracting little support from the IMF’s biggest shareholders. Instead, the US championed the insertion of “collective action clauses” into bonds, which compel recalcitrant creditors to accept a restructuring agreement made by a majority. After Greece’s debt restructuring in 2012 these CACs were beefed up further.However, many bonds still lack these clauses. Moreover, they can only help ease a restructuring agreement once it is struck. Many experts point out that they do nothing to solve the biggest fundamental problem: countries are far too slow to seek a debt restructuring as they are wary of a messy process with the potential of worsening an economic crisis and the inevitable political humiliation of defaulting. “If I was a finance minister, I’d find it hard to tell my prime minister that we have a clean framework to work with,” says Baqir.Reza Baqir, former governor of Pakistan’s central bank, says debt restructure processes were designed for a bygone era, when creditors were mostly western countries and western banks © Asim Hafeez/BloombergWhen they are finally forced into a debt restructuring, the financial relief that countries secure is often too little to ensure a durable upswing. In the few cases where it does clean up their balance sheet, it sometimes only leads to another debt binge.This flawed process has now been further complicated — some say wrecked — by China’s vast lending programme across the developing world over the past decade. Many of these loans are opaque in size, terms, nature and sometimes even existence.The overall size of the lending programmes is hard to judge, given that China does not report most of it to the likes of the IMF, OECD or Bank for International Settlements. But AidData, a development think-tank based at William & Mary’s Global Research Institute, estimates that the loans amount to about $843bn. China is not a member of the Paris Club, and in most cases the loans are made by its myriad state-owned or merely state-controlled banks, muddling things further.It’s like the international financial policy community spent the past decade trying to clean up around the street light, oblivious to the mounds of rubbish piling up unseen around the rest of the darkened street, says Anna Gelpern, a professor of law and international finance at Georgetown University.“We spent 20 years focusing on contractual tweaks, assuming that bonds were the problem,” she says. “The problem is the state of global politics, and the fate of low-income countries just isn’t a big priority anywhere.”Life in defaultZambia is a prime example. Of the roughly $20bn of external debt that the IMF tallied when forming its programme in 2022, $2.7bn was lent by international development banks, $1.3bn comes from various western governments, bank loans come to $1.6bn, local kwacha-denominated bonds held by non-residents are $3.3bn and international dollar-denominated bonds account for $3.3bn. But the biggest chunk is nearly $6bn owed to China.The IMF has reached a support agreement with Zambia that is conditional on its debt burden becoming sustainable. But other bondholders do not want any relief they offer to simply go towards paying off China. Beijing has in principle agreed to accept a “haircut” on its debts, but experts say it appears to not want anything it offers to go towards improving the recovery of private creditors, leading to the impasse. In the meantime, Zambia says it has accumulated about $1.2bn in arrears since its default. Including missed payments to various government contractors, the IMF has estimated that the arrears are actually nearly $3bn.Highlighting how China also appears to be leveraging these situations to undermine the western-designed global financial architecture, in January it called for international organisations such as the IMF and World Bank to participate in the debt restructuring. This would overturn half a century of convention that these organisations are “super-senior” creditors exempt from debt restructurings, as participating would imperil their ability to lend to other countries.One senior adviser to the Chinese government says that “there is no law that requires World Bank loans to be prioritised” and that the country was “not happy” with a practice that originated in an era when western countries were generally the only creditors. “If we allow the World Bank to take precedence over us, we need to have bigger voting rights and take larger stakes at the bank. China’s duty doesn’t match its rights in development finance.” Janet Yellen, the US Treasury secretary, is welcomed by President Hakainde Hichilema, right, in Zambia this year. Resolving the African country’s default is a thorny issue in Washington © Salim Dawood/AFP/Getty ImagesAnother increasingly common wrinkle in debt restructuring is what to do with domestic bonds, which local banks and financial companies have often gorged upon. Here too, Zambia is a good example.The $3.3bn of local currency bonds held by non-residents have also been cordoned off from the debt restructuring. Lusaka fears that reducing the value of kwacha bonds could wreck its banking industry and do more damage than they are worth. But some holders of other international bonds argue that they should also be included in the restructuring.“In the sovereign debt restructuring business we didn’t really think much about local debts,” says Lee Buchheit, a leading lawyer in the field. “There often wasn’t much of it, and we always assumed that the sovereign has a much broader palate of mechanisms it can use to deal with domestic debt.”But what to do about Zambia’s Chinese loans remains the thorniest issue and has risen to the highest levels in Washington and Beijing. US Treasury secretary Janet Yellen this year raised the stand-off with Chinese president Xi Jinping’s economic adviser Liu He, and said that it had “taken far too long already to resolve this matter” when she visited Lusaka in January.China’s exceptionalism?For the most part, experts say China seems mostly content with rolling its debts rather than restructuring them, handing out new loans to ensure that its domestic banks can be repaid in full. But it prefers to act alone, at its own pace, and feels no need for transparency.A recent paper by several economists, including Harvard University’s Carmen Reinhart, estimated that China has made 128 bailout loans worth $240bn to 20 distressed countries between 2000 and 2021. About $185bn was extended over the last five years of the study, and more than $100bn in 2019-21.Reinhart says that China’s lending stands out for its “extreme” opacity but stresses that its overall behaviour is not as unusual as some people say. “China is really playing hardball because it is a major creditor. US commercial banks also played hardball back in the 1980s,” she says. Baqir agrees, saying: “Whatever the colour or creed of a creditor, creditors think like creditors.”The Chinese government adviser also points to factors such as the country’s relative inexperience with debt workouts. “China is still at an early stage in coming up with its debt relief programme,” he says.Carmen Reinhart, a Harvard economist, says China’s hardline stance is to be expected of a large creditor and it is comparable to that of US commercial banks in the 1980s © Samuel de Roman/Getty ImagesIncomplete domestic financial reforms have also made it harder to offer debt relief to overseas creditors, while some Chinese banks are also struggling with big hits from the country’s wilting real estate sector. “We need co-ordination from the top level, which now has other priorities,” the adviser says. He also points out that the pressure on developing countries has intensified following a series of US interest rate rises, and that as a result Washington “should be responsible for the debt trap”.But whatever the root cause, most agree on the end result. “All of this [creditor] fragmentation is leading to paralysis,” says Sean Hagan, a former general counsel at the IMF who now teaches international law at Georgetown.

    There are few solutions being floated around. The IMF in February announced a new Global Sovereign Debt Roundtable to bring together the full gamut of creditors and debtors, and hopefully thrash out ways to “facilitate the debt resolution process”. It is an initiative that few experts harbour much hope for.Buchheit likens the impact of an assertive new player on an already fault-riddled debt restructuring system to someone having a bad cold that a doctor struggles to treat, who is then impaled by a spear. “The cold hasn’t gone away, but the doctor is likely to focus more on the spear,” he says.Ironically, both Buchheit and Newman — who clashed many times over the years as the leading lawyer for and suer of bankrupt countries — advocate for the same basic approach: countries should restructure the debts they can, remain in default to China, and the IMF should drop its “kumbaya” approach and accept semi-permanent arrears to its biggest shareholders.But most expect Zambia-like debt limbo to be the likeliest outcome for a lot of countries. “I suspect this is going to be a recurring problem,” says Reinhart. “And the longer these countries are in the [debt] netherworld . . . the [more the] fabric of the country is affected.”Additional reporting by Jonathan Wheatley in LondonData visualisation by Keith Fray and Liz Faunce More

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    UK’s goods exports lowest in G7 following Brexit, study finds

    Britain’s goods exports are lagging all other G7 economies, according to an analysis by the Financial Times, which trade experts said provided more evidence of the impact of Brexit.Quarterly figures published by the Office for National Statistics in March showed that in the last three months of 2022, UK export volumes, excluding precious metals, were more than 9 per cent below the 2019 pre-pandemic average. Analyses by the Bank of England and the Office for Budget Responsibility, the UK fiscal watchdog, show that the country’s exports may be even weaker, with the OBR predicting that the underperformance will continue for the next two years. Sophie Hale, trade economist at the Resolution Foundation think-tank, described the UK’s performance as “a disaster”. The drop in goods export volumes marked “a quite substantial fall and it really leaves the UK at the bottom of the G7 pack”, she added. The ONS data shows the UK had the weakest export performance in the G7, and compares with double-digit rises in Italian and Japanese exports, 4 per cent growth for the US and 2 per cent for Germany.The findings come as the IMF predicted that the UK economy would be the worst performing in the G7 in 2023, contracting by 0.3 per cent.

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    Business leaders have complained that red tape and other post-Brexit obstacles to trading with the EU have left UK companies at a disadvantage and not enough has been done to address the problems.Emma Rowland, trade policy adviser at the Institute of Directors, a leading business group, said that following the reopening of the economy after the coronavirus lockdowns, UK exports had been “sluggish” in comparison with other top economies.“It is clear that Brexit has had the largest influence over businesses’ exporting strategies, having created barriers to trade and also increased competition from EU-based firms,” she added. Using recent trade figures to assess the impact of Brexit has been made more difficult by several factors. Last year’s UK export data was inflated by the strong growth in precious metals trading, which Hale said offers “little economic benefit”. In line with the ONS’s practice, the FT analysis excluded precious metal trading, which is highly volatile. Other G7 countries are not large traders of precious metals.The figures were also complicated by discontinuities in collecting trade data with the EU since 2021 and double counting of imports in the first half of 2022.Yet Hale said the figures were “not so murky” as to be inconclusive, and that it was “still possible to see that there is a clear Brexit impact in the trade data”. She added that supply chain disruptions, low business sentiment and the stagnation of business investment since the Brexit referendum might also be affecting the country’s trade performance.

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    Earlier this year, the BoE adjusted the official data by allowing for the double counting and the discontinuities. It concluded that trade volumes had been “weaker than implied by the official data since January 2021”. “These adjusted trade figures are also weaker than previously expected, suggesting that the impact on trade [from Brexit] has occurred somewhat more quickly than previously estimated,” the central bank said. In a similar exercise last month, the OBR found that overall trade volumes were 3.4 per cent lower than the ONS figures.The OBR report found that overall UK trade was below that of the other big industrialised countries despite services, which account for about half the country’s overall exports, performing better than goods. In the last three months of 2022 UK services export volumes were 2.4 per cent above their 2019 level.The OBR expects the weakness in the UK overall trade to continue for the next two years, with export volumes forecast to fall by 6.6 per cent in 2023 and by 0.3 per cent in 2024.“Weak growth in imports and exports over the medium term partly reflects the continuing impact of Brexit, which we expect to reduce the overall trade intensity of the UK economy by 15 per cent in the long term,” it stated. More