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    Marketmind: The calm – or lull? – after the storm

    (Reuters) – A look at the day ahead in Asian markets from Jamie McGeever.A sense of calm returned to markets on Tuesday as investors rediscovered some of the risk appetite that got mauled the previous day, offering a springboard for a positive open in Asia on Wednesday.It lacked full conviction though – oil prices skidded to the lowest this year, bank stocks and bond yields only partially retraced Monday’s slump, and traders are still betting the Fed will cut interest rates by 50 basis points later this year.Concern surrounding the U.S. banking system and whether regulators’ emergency measures last weekend prevent contagion from spreading after Silicon Valley Bank’s collapse last week will not disappear overnight, especially following the release of sticky core U.S. inflation data.In that light, Fed Governor Michelle Bowman’s speech ‘Modernizing the U.S. Banking System’ late in the U.S. day on Tuesday may garner more attention than usual.Investors in Asia have a fairly packed data calendar themselves to get through on Wednesday, with the latest snapshots of Chinese retail sales, industrial production and fixed business investment the pick of the bunch. China retail sales, https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/lbpggjrlbpq/Chinaretailsales.png China fixed asset investment, https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/lgpdkjmoovo/Chinafixedasset.png Economists expect retail sales and industrial production to recover strongly, pointing to the economic recovery from COVID-19 lockdown gathering momentum.Yet growth in fixed business investment, a key plank of any recovery, is expected to slow from January. So it’s a mixed bag, and the burden of proof on China bulls may be higher given how surprisingly weak February’s inflation figures were last week.Note, however, that the retail sales and industrial production figures are for January and February, so they may be distorted. Analysts at ING expect the numbers overall to point to a “stable recovery”, meaning the central bank should leave interest rates unchanged on Friday.The Indian rupee and Indonesian rupiah may be sensitive to Indian and Indonesian trade figures for February – Reuters polls suggest India’s deficit will widen slightly to $19 billion, and a sharp increase in imports will narrow Indonesia’s surplus to $3.3 billion.Here are three key developments that could provide more direction to markets on Wednesday:- China retail sales, industrial production, fixed investment (February)- India trade (February)- Indonesia trade (February) (By Jamie McGeever; editing by Josie Kao) More

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    FirstFT: Buyout titans circle SVB

    Good morning. The story around Silicon Valley Bank continues to evolve as the world’s largest private investment firms explore buying loans from the remains of the failed bank. Premium subscribers can sign up for our Due Diligence newsletter for a deeper dive on the failed bank and the resulting fallout.Below, we have details on OpenAI’s new model, which has shown “human-level performance” on the US bar exam, advanced placement tests and the SAT school exams.PS For a deeper dive on the SVB and the resulting fallout, premium subscribers can sign up for our Due Diligence newsletter. Here’s what else to keep tabs on today:China economic figures: February industrial output and retail sales figures are set to be released today.UK Budget day: Power, or rather the cost of it, will be a key focus for the UK chancellor Jeremy Hunt’s Budget day speech today. Earnings: Foxconn is set to report fourth-quarter earnings today and expand on its first-quarter outlook after a fall in February sales. (Reuters)Today’s top news1. Five of the world’s largest private investment firms are among the buyout groups examining SVB’s $74bn loan book for pieces that might fit into their credit portfolios, according to people familiar with the matter. The interest from Blackstone Group, Apollo Global Management, KKR, Ares Management and Carlyle Group comes as the firms crowd into lending businesses traditionally dominated by banks.Markets news: US stocks climbed and bonds retreated on Tuesday as regional bank shares rebounded.Race to restore confidence: Regulators worked through the weekend to prevent contagion spreading through the US banking system following SVB’s collapse. Read how agreement was reached.2. US prosecutors are investigating the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank after a dramatic outflow of customer deposits from the Californian tech lender, according to a person familiar with the matter. The Securities and Exchange Commission has also launched an investigation into the lender’s collapse, according to media reports. Here’s what we know about the investigations.3. A Russian aircraft has struck an unmanned US drone over the Black Sea, American officials have claimed, in an incident they described as a “reckless” action by Vladimir Putin’s military. While it is “not uncommon” for foreign actors to fly close to US aircraft over the Black Sea, according to the White House National Security Council spokesperson, the incident was uniquely “unsafe” and “unprofessional”.4. Brussels is exploring new controls to limit China from acquiring high-tech, following similar US moves. The EU trade commissioner told the Financial Times that new restrictions were needed to prevent companies circumventing export bans on sensitive technology by manufacturing it elsewhere. Read the full story.Related read: Siemens is scouting for investments in south-east Asia to diversify away from China.5. OpenAI has released GPT-4, its latest artificial intelligence model that it claims exhibits “human-level performance” on several academic and professional benchmarks such as the US bar exam, advanced placement tests and the SAT school exams. Its new software will be used in a variety of apps ranging from Duolingo to Morgan Stanley Wealth Management.News In-depth

    While the Aukus defence pact negotiations centred on how to share some of America’s most guarded military technologies, the political pay-off has come in a deal that will create tens of thousands of jobs over decades of work. The industrial bonanza comes as good news, but the deal is still fraught with potential delays and risk.We’re also reading . . . Fail: The failure of SVB shows there are holes in the US regulatory dike. That is no accident. It is what lobbyists called for, writes Martin Wolf.Peacemaker: Xi Jinping’s ability to convince Tehran and Riyadh to restart diplomatic relations was a shift that caught many by surprise; it bolsters expectations of what Beijing can deliver.Wirecard: A hard-partying Englishman alleged to be central to the Wirecard fraud is about to be forced into the limelight by a criminal case in Singapore.Graphic of the dayAs China seeks to exert more control over the infrastructure transmitting the world’s data, Beijing has imposed strict permit requirements for access to underwater data infrastructure. Several industry sources said China’s policing of its waters — including within maritime areas marked on maps by a disputed “nine-dash line” seen below — is a response to fears that companies could use cables as a front for espionage.

    Take a break from the newsDon’t miss our guide to the best Indian restaurants in Hong Kong. Ravi Mattu highlights the city’s top spots, from south Indian thali to fine Punjabi cuisine via a tandoor-focused menu.

    A selection of dishes at Bombay Dreams . . . the ‘grande dame of fine Indian dining in Hong Kong’ © Michael Perini

    Additional contributions by Gordon Smith and Tee Zhuo More

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    Homebuilder Lennar beats profit estimates on strong property prices

    Shares of the company rose 3.5% to $104.3 after the bell. Home demand shot up across the United States when pandemic-era remote work trends allowed people to look for more affordable properties away from big cities, boosting the margins of homebuilders such as Lennar and D.R. Horton Inc.However, the industry is now staring at a slowdown as high interest rates have made borrowing more difficult for potential buyers. Last month, data showed that the average interest rate on the most popular U.S. home loan rose to its highest since November on concerns that the Federal Reserve might have to continue tightening policy through the summer to subdue inflation. “Our sales volume and pricing have clearly been impacted by rising interest rates, but there remains a significant national shortage of housing, especially workforce housing, and there is still demand,” Lennar Executive Chairman Stuart Miller said in a statement. The company’s new orders fell 10% to 14,194 homes in the first quarter. Lennar reported net earnings per diluted share, excluding items, of $2.12 per share, above analysts’ average estimate of $1.55 per share, according to Refinitiv data.Revenues rose 5% to $6.49 billion, compared with estimates of $5.93 billion. More

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    Argentina’s inflation rate tops 100% for the first time in three decades

    Argentina’s annual inflation rate has hit a three-decade high, surging past 100 per cent for the first time since 1991 in a sign of how the country’s government has failed to tame price pressures that have torn across the economy.Prices rose by 6.6 per cent in February, bringing the 12-month figure to 102.5 per cent, according to Indec, the government statistics agency. That was the quickest pace since Argentina was emerging from a hyperinflation crisis in the early 1990s, and places its inflation rate among the highest in the world.Tuesday’s data comes at a complex moment for the centre-left administration of President Alberto Fernández, which had hoped to ease financial pressure on voters ahead of a tough election challenge in October. Polls have consistently shown that inflation is a primary concern among Argentines, followed by corruption and poverty.Soaring prices have largely been attributed to a bout of central bank money-printing, as well as Russia’s war in Ukraine. The amount of money in public circulation has quadrupled during Fernández’s first three years in office, according to central bank data.Following the latest figures, Argentina now has one of the highest rates of inflation globally. It is behind only Zimbabwe, Lebanon, Venezuela and Syria, all of which reported triple-digit inflation last year.Economists had widely expected inflation to remain stubbornly high throughout 2023 and are sceptical of the effectiveness of government measures to tame it.A state price control scheme known as Precios Justos, or “Fair Prices”, has temporarily frozen the cost of more than 1,700 goods until December. But that has not been enough to cool price rises given the serious imbalances in the Argentine economy. Similar price controls introduced in 2021 were not enough to halt soaring prices, and consumer sentiment has continued to deteriorate.

    Earlier this week the IMF called on Argentina to make stronger efforts to address inflation in order to keep its $44bn programme with the Washington-based lender on track.The IMF warned of “policy setbacks” in the South American country amid a severe drought that has destroyed crops and hurt agricultural exports — an important source of government revenue. Net foreign currency reserves hovered at about $4.2bn in February, according to private analysts.Buenos Aires has been lobbying to lower the bar on several targets agreed with the IMF last year, asking for the executive board to be more lenient given the war in Ukraine and extreme weather conditions.Argentina is due to receive about $5.3bn from the IMF this month, pending approval by the lender’s executive board. More

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    China plays peacemaker in the Gulf

    For two years, Saudi Arabia and Iran engaged in on-off talks to ease their bitter rivalry. Such was the mistrust that little progress was made — until China stepped in. Last week, the arch foes announced that, with Beijing’s mediation, they had agreed to normalise relations and reopen embassies, seven years after severing ties. Any deal that helps to de-escalate tensions in the Middle East is to be welcomed. The rivalry between the Sunni and Shia heavyweights has stoked conflict and instability across the region — most notably in Yemen, where Saudi Arabia launched a catastrophic war against Iranian-backed Houthi rebels eight years ago. But the accord marked the emergence of China as a diplomatic powerbroker, and a challenge by Beijing to the US-centric global system.The breakthrough surprised many. Just five months ago, US officials warned of the imminent threat of an Iranian attack against Saudi Arabia as Tehran blamed its enemies for stoking protests in the Islamic republic. Peace between the two appeared distant. China’s diplomatic coup underscores Beijing’s growing influence in the oil-rich region.Some view it as another sign of Washington’s waning standing in the Gulf, where Arab states traditionally considered the US the prime security, diplomatic and economic partner. They are right — up to a point.The agreement comes after a period of fraught relations between Riyadh and Washington, partly fuelled by perceptions that the US has been disengaging from the region and is no longer a reliable partner. Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has pursued a more independent foreign policy as Riyadh seeks to balance its ties with the US with those with China and others.While the US reliance on Gulf oil has diminished over the past decade, China has become the kingdom’s biggest trade partner and its main buyer of crude. And, crucially for the Saudi crown prince, the relationship comes with no pressure to improve the kingdom’s dismal human rights record. Yet even if relations between Washington and Riyadh were at their warmest, it is hard to see how the US could have brokered such a deal. Washington has had no formal diplomatic ties with Iran since 1980; its relationship has been characterised by deep hostility.In contrast, China is happy to engage with Iran and is assumed to be the main buyer of crude shipped out of the Islamic republic under the radar of US sanctions. Beijing last month hosted Iran’s president Ebrahim Raisi. Saudi officials are betting that China will hold Iran to account.All this points to China’s rising geopolitical ambitions. For years, its focus in the region was economic and trade, not political or security. But Beijing’s decision to broker the rapprochement fits with the Global Security Initiative it launched in February, setting out its aim to be a global actor and spread its vision of security and development.The question is whether China’s diplomacy delivers durable results. The key test will be in Yemen, where a truce has held since April. Riyadh is keen to exit the conflict and end Houthi drone and missile attacks which disrupt development and deter foreign investment. It will not be easy, though, to reach a sustainable settlement to a proxy conflict that is, at root, a civil war.It would also be naive to expect anything more than a cold peace between Riyadh and Tehran. For now, an agreement serves Iran and Saudi Arabia’s interests and allows Beijing to act as peacemaker. That produces a less volatile Middle East. There are reasons to cheer but also to jeer as China flexes its diplomatic clout. More

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    Banks are designed to fail — and they do

    Banks fail. When they do, those who stand to lose scream for a state rescue. If the threatened costs are big enough, they will succeed. This is how, crisis by crisis, we have created a banking sector that is in theory private, but in practice a ward of the state. The latter in turn attempts to curb the desire of shareholders and management to exploit the safety nets they enjoy. The result is a system that is essential to the functioning of the market economy but does not operate in accordance with its rules. This is a mess.Money is the stuff one must have if one is to buy the things one needs. This is true for households and businesses, which need to pay suppliers and workers. That is why bank failures are calamities. But banks are not designed to be secure. While their deposit liabilities are supposed to be perfectly safe and liquid, their assets are subject to maturity, credit, interest rate and liquidity risks. They are fair weather institutions. In bad times, they fail, as depositors run for the door.Over time, state institutions have responded to the inability of banks to provide the safe money their depositors expect. In the 19th century central banks became lenders of last resort, though supposedly at a penalty rate. In the early 20th, governments guaranteed smaller deposits. Then, in the financial crisis of 2007-09, they in effect put their entire balance sheets behind the banks. The banking system as a whole became, unambiguously, a part of the state. In return, capital requirements were raised, liquidity rules were tightened and stress tests were introduced. All then would be well. Or not. The failure of Silicon Valley Bank shows there are holes in the US regulatory dike. That is no accident. It is what lobbyists called for: get rid of onerous regulations, they cried, and we will deliver miracles of growth. In the case of this bank, what stands out is its reliance on uninsured deposits and its bet on supposedly safe long-duration bonds. At the end of 2022, it had $151.6bn in uninsured domestic deposits against about $20bn in insured deposits. It also had substantial unrealised losses on its bond portfolio, as interest rates rose. Put these two things together and a run became likely: rats will always abandon sinking financial ships.Those who fail to escape in time will scream for a bailout. It may be amusing that those shrieking for a rescue this time have been the libertarians of Silicon Valley. But few people are capitalists when threatened by losing money they regarded as safe and nobody is better than a capitalist at explaining how essential their wealth is to the health of the economy. Uninsured depositors have duly been rescued at SVB and elsewhere. This removes yet another source of private sector discipline on banks.Yet SVB was only the 16th-largest bank in the US. This is, after all, why it had been left out of the regulatory net applied to the most systemically significant banks. It was conveniently non-significant in life, but became systemically significant in death. The Federal Reserve has also offered to lend at par value to banks that need liquidity. These are negative “haircuts” — call them “hair-grafts” — to banks who need emergency loans. Beyond this, President Joe Biden has asserted that “we’ll do whatever is needed”. True, this time shareholders and bondholders are not being bailed out. Moreover, losses will supposedly be borne by the banking industry as a whole. Yet the losses are again partially socialised. Does anybody doubt that socialisation will become deeper if the crisis also does?Naturally, people wonder what this new shock means. Some analysts believe that the Fed will no longer tighten monetary policy this month. What is clear is that there is much uncertainty, which can justify delay of further tightening. But lowering inflation remains essential: the US consumer price index rose 6 per cent year on year in February.At present, however, the big issue is not what is going to happen to the economy, but what is going to happen to finance. One point is that it is a good thing if fear has reignited in the financial system. The anxiety created by small shocks makes big crises somewhat less likely. There are additional lessons: banks remain as vulnerable to runs as ever and, like it or not, uninsured depositors will not be wiped out in a failure. Confidence that deposits are safe is just too important, economically and politically. So, how is this new evidence of the extent to which the state backs the banks, even in relatively normal times, to be reflected in policy? One simple answer is that regulation of systemically significant banks must be extended throughout the system. Another is that deposits must be put above all other debt in an insolvency, to reflect their social and economic importance. Yet another is that balance sheets should always reflect market realities. Finally, capital requirements should be adjusted accordingly. If banks’ capital falls too low, at market valuations, it needs to be increased, promptly.The fundamental lesson we have to relearn is that even in a modest crisis deposits cannot be sacrificed, and rules on haircuts for provision of liquidity will go out of the window. Banks are wards of the state partly because they are at the heart of the credit system, but even more because their deposit liabilities are so politically important. The marriage of risky and often illiquid assets with liabilities that have to be safe and liquid within undercapitalised, profit-seeking and bonus-paying institutions regulated by politically subservient and often incompetent public sectors is a calamity waiting to happen.Banking needs radical change. Next week I will discuss how to deliver [email protected] Martin Wolf with myFT and on Twitter More