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    Head of UK employer group CBI steps aside over allegations

    The CBI said it had already conducted an internal investigation into Danker’s workplace behaviour after receiving a complaint in January, which it judged did not require escalation to a disciplinary process. However, the CBI said fresh concerns about Danker’s behaviour were brought to its attention on March 2. “We have now taken steps to initiate an independent investigation into these new matters. Tony Danker asked to step aside from his role as Director-General of the CBI while the independent investigation into these matters takes place,” the CBI said.Britain’s Guardian newspaper, which first reported that Danker had stepped aside, said the January complaint was submitted by a female CBI employee, and that the more recent allegations had been brought by other members of staff.The new investigation would be led by an external law firm, the newspaper added.”It is important to stress that until this investigation is complete, any new allegations remain unproven,” the CBI said.Danker, who worked at McKinsey & Company between 1998 and 2008 and for The Guardian and a business lobby group before joining the CBI in 2020, expressed regret in a statement on social media.”It’s been mortifying to hear that I have caused offence or anxiety to any colleague. It was completely unintentional, and I apologise profusely,” he said.”I therefore support the decision we’ve taken to review any new allegations independently. And I have decided to step aside while the review takes place and will cooperate fully with it.” More

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    UK construction hits highest growth rate in 9 months

    UK construction activity beat investor expectations in February to register its highest growth rate in nine months as an improving global outlook boosted commercial projects.The S&P Global/Cips UK construction purchasing managers’ index, which measures monthly changes in total industry activity, registered 54.6 in February, up from 48.4 in January.The reading published on Monday was stronger than the 49.1 forecast by analysts in a Reuters poll and above the 50 mark that indicates a majority of businesses reporting an expansion. It was also the highest since May 2022. The data “paints a bright picture of progress in the construction sector with a robust jump in output last month”, said John Glen, Cips chief economist. The figures follow similar positive surprises from the PMI services and manufacturing indices published last month. Martin Beck, chief economic adviser to the EY Item Club, a forecasting house, said that combined with upbeat official data on tax receipts, the latest “PMIs suggest the risk of recession is easing”. The PMI all-sectors index — which combines manufacturing, services and construction — rose to 53.2 in February, up from 48.5 in the previous month and the highest since June 2022. Construction order books expanded for the first time since November 2022 and input price increases were the slowest since November 2020. Builders also continued to hire workers.In February, about 46 per cent of respondents anticipated a rise in construction activity in the next 12 months, compared with 13 per cent predicting a decline. Business expectations for the year ahead improved sharply from the previous month and from the 31-month low in DecemberTim Moore, economics director at S&P Global Market Intelligence, said softer inflationary pressures and shorter delays in delivery times meant “construction companies appear increasingly confident about the year ahead business outlook”.Commercial construction was the best-performing area registering a reading of 55.3, which indicated the fastest pace of expansion in nine months. Moore notes that builders attributed that success to renewed confidence in the sector thanks to “fading recession fears and an improving global economic outlook”.Civil engineering activity also returned to growth in February, with a reading of 52.3, supported by work on key infrastructure projects such as the HS2 rail line.However, builders noted a fall in residential building work for the third consecutive month in February to 47.4. Builders linked the contraction to higher interest rates as well as cutbacks to new housebuilding projects in anticipation of weaker demand.Samuel Tombs, chief UK economist at the consultancy Pantheon Macroeconomics, said he expected “housing construction to fall over the next six months, as the recent weakness in mortgage approvals ripples back up the supply chain”. More

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    Local borrowing that’s not enough to stop a global debt crisis

    Hello and welcome to Trade Secrets. So, a cracking start to India’s chairing of the G20 leading economies this year, with a fractious meeting of foreign ministers last week that failed even to agree a joint statement. As usual, I’m not expecting a great deal of actual progress out of the economics and trade bits of the G20 either. It might be interesting to see where discussions come out on the rise of industrial policy, a measure of the shifting intellectual centre of gravity if nothing else. That’s the subject of the second item in today’s newsletter, the first being some slightly good news among the bad about the global sovereign debt issue.The persistence of original sinBad luck if you thought the emerging market sovereign debt stresses were easing. Unhelpfully for governments with dollar-denominated debt, the US currency has just strengthened again after weakening in January. The latest numbers from the Institute of International Finance’s debt monitor show an overall sharp fall in debt-to-GDP numbers in 2022, but they’re still rising for emerging markets.

    Nor are governments creating a coherent way of restructuring defaulted bonds, which I wrote about last summer, especially given the problems with China having emerged as a major creditor. After three years of talks, poor old Zambia has yet to get a clean exit from its default, as its finance minister protested about last month in an FT interview. The great brains of the sovereign debt markets are seeking creative solutions: my colleagues at Alphaville discuss one intriguing suggestion here.But hold on, wasn’t there a solution to being exposed to dollar movements? Weren’t emerging markets supposed to eschew the “original sin” of borrowing in dollars and issue debt in domestic currencies instead? Well, yes, and it has happened somewhat. The Bank for International Settlements has just published a paper showing progress: local-currency bonds have taken a markedly bigger share of overall and foreign holdings.

    This is definitely a positive move, but there are two caveats. One, the move to local currency issuance is much stronger in some of the bigger leading middle-income countries such as Brazil, Mexico and Chile (India and China now borrow almost exclusively in their own currencies), while the smaller and poorer nations have been much slower to shift. Second, there’s volatility involved in local currency issuance too. Even if there’s no automatic rise in the debt burden in response to the exchange rate, the BIS says it turns out that investors targeting returns in dollars are less willing to buy debt denominated in local currency if it weakens against the dollar. Having your original sin absolved doesn’t automatically get you into paradise.So: have EMs made progress in insulating themselves against a strong dollar? Somewhat, yes. Is that enough to stop the wave of defaults? Sadly, no.Subsidies, maybe — tariffs, noIndustrial policy is the big issue of the moment, and I’ll have plenty to say about it — as indeed I already have, see here, here and here — as the big trading powers shell out their subsidies and write their regulations. There has been some really good writing on this recently, especially the tendency for such policy to try to hit too many goals at once. See the Wall Street Journal’s Greg Ip on the history of US industrial policy here and two contributions from the FT — a Swamp Notes newsletter on the subject and a wise opinion from our editorial board.Here I want to focus on a particular issue, the use of trade instruments in industrial policy. There was a surge of interest in this around the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic and it’s got bigger since. I wrote a Trade Secrets column last week about India’s attempts to boost manufacturing: while New Delhi’s production subsidies are probably wasteful, its tariffs designed to protect an in-country supply chain are actively pernicious.If subsidies go too far they end in overproduction, which is trade-distorting and inefficient but not intrinsically restrictive, and the cost becomes obvious to taxpayers. By contrast, tariffs and other trade restrictions are deliberately restrictive of competition and often function without direct fiscal outlay, so don’t similarly alert the public that they’re being ripped off. The really bad examples of US industrial policy down the decades (textiles, steel, the Jones Act for shipping) have used trade restrictions and created fiercely well-organised lobbies.By contrast, successful recent examples of industrial policy in emerging markets often include voluntary trade liberalisation. Perhaps the most striking episode was the great wave of unilateral tariff-cutting by developing countries in the late 1980s/early 1990s, as they grasped the opportunities available from joining the international supply chains juiced by the information technology revolution. See this chart from Richard Baldwin’s writing on the subject here.

    I’m no unabashed fan of President Joe Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act, but it should be noted that at least most of it is less restrictive than the infamous electric vehicle tax credits with their domestic production requirements. The impact of industrial policy is all in the design, and trade instruments are very frequently a bad way to do it.As well as this newsletter, I write a Trade Secrets column for FT.com every Thursday. Click here to read the latest, and visit ft.com/trade-secrets to see all my columns and previous newsletters too.Trade linksThe European Commission’s plan (in my view absolutely indefensible) to link trade preferences for developing countries with the return of asylum seekers is deservedly attracting more criticism.Remember last year’s crisis in the US baby formula market that trade restrictions were making worse? Well, the folks at the Cato Institute say the problem’s still there.The Peterson Institute argues that India’s discovery of a huge deposit of lithium (Iran also reckons it’s found one) could ease the global scramble for the metal, which is becoming a big supply chain issue. But the fact that the deposit is in the contested region of Kashmir on the border with Pakistan complicates matters somewhat.Michael Froman, former US trade representative under Barack Obama during the long-ago era when the US actually tried to sign trade deals, has been given the very nice job of president of the US Council on Foreign Relations think-tank.Trade Secrets is edited by Jonathan Moules More

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    MATIC Market Sentiment Turns Bearish, Bullish Reversal Potential Looms

    While the Polygon (MATIC) market opened with a bearish sentiment, the bulls quickly regained control and pushed prices to an intraday high of $1.15 before retreating. As bulls failed to break through the barrier level, MATIC’s price plummeted to an intraday low of $1.12 due to bear recapture.The negative trend in MATIC was still apparent as of press time, with the price falling by 0.73% to $1.13. This drop made traders anxious about whether the price would fall further, causing market capitalization and 24-hour trading volume to fall by 0.74% and 18.78%, respectively, to $9,841,370,084 and $305,111,341.MATIC/USD 24-hour price chart (source: CoinMarketCap)to move south. As a result of this shift, investors may want to think about shorting the MATIC token now before the trend strengthens.If the price of MATIC continues to trend downwards, as shown by the formation of a red candlestick as it approaches the lower band, this may indicate a potential market bottom. A negative signal, and more selling pressure, might be signaled if price movement drops below the lower range.At a value of 55.35, the stochastic RSI has formed a bearish crossing by falling below its signal line, indicating a reversal in upward momentum. This decline lends credence to the gloomy view and increases the likelihood of further price reduction.MATIC/USD chart by TradingViewThe Chaikin Money Flow (CMF) is going north, albeit in the negative range, with a value of -0.02, indicating that although the MATIC market is bearish, purchasing pressure remains.This level might be a favorable entry opportunity for investors hoping to capitalize on the possible reversal. This movement shows that money returns to the market and that investor mood shifts.When the Ultimate Oscillator reads 50.79 and points north, it signals a likely trend reversal and a bullish market. This assumption comes because the UO at this level shows that the momentum is transitioning from oversold to bullish territory and that buying pressure may strengthen in the short future.With a Relative Strength Index (RSI) of 36.34 and above its signal line, MATIC markets may witness a price gain due to the momentum change. The transition from oversold to bullish territory is a bullish omen for MATIC investors, suggesting that purchasing pressure is expected to strengthen shortly, signaling potential price gain.MATIC/USD chart by TradingViewMATIC faces bearish momentum, but signs of buying pressure and potential trend reversal offer hope for investors.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 Market Sentiment Turns Bearish, Bullish Reversal Potential Looms appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    SAND Trades in Bearish Triangle Pattern as Bulls Hold Above $0.60 Level

    The Sandbox token price analysis for today shows SAND is trading in a bearish triangle pattern; this suggests further losses in the near future if bulls fail to defend the $0.60 level. The overall market sentiment has been bearish, with investors fleeing most altcoins over the past 24 hours.Short-term technical analysis of SAND reveals further losses are likely if prices fail to hold above $0.60 and break below the triangle formation. If this occurs, SAND could test lows of $0.58 and potentially slip below $0.50 in the days ahead.SAND/USD price chart (Source: TradingView)On the upside, bulls need to defend the $0.60 support level and push prices back above $0.63 for a chance at recovery over the coming weeks. Further gains are likely if SAND manages to break above the triangle formation and climb back above $0.70 in the days ahead.Looking at the Fib retracement tool, SAND needs to break above the 50% mark at $0.70 for a chance at further gains in the near future. The key support that needs to be defended is the $0.60 level, with any break below this setting up further losses in the near future.SAND/USD 4-hour chart: (Source: TradingView)The technical indicators on the daily timeframe are displaying bearish signals, with the MACD trending lower and the RSI slipping below 50. This suggests SAND is likely to remain volatile over the coming week and could slip further if bulls fail to defend the $0.60 level.On the 4-hour chart, a bearish continuation pattern is forming, with the 50-MA trending lower and the MACD confirming further losses. This suggests SAND could slip further in the days ahead if bulls fail to push prices back above $0.63.Overall, SAND continues to trade at lows of $0.6084 following bearish sentiment across the entire crypto market. The immediate key support of $0.60 remains crucial for the SAND token, with a failure to hold this level likely to see further price declines. Bulls need to defend this level and push prices back above $0.63 for a chance at recovery over the coming weeks.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 indirect damage or loss.The post SAND Trades in Bearish Triangle Pattern as Bulls Hold Above $0.60 Level appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    What Will Ethereum Be Like in 10 Years? Vitalik Buterin Explains

    Altcoin Daily, a popular crypto influencer account on Twitter, recently shared snippets of an interview with Vitalik Buterin, one of the founders of the Ethereum blockchain, regarding the outlook of the network, starting this year up to the next ten years.According to Buterin, 2023 is the year when Rollups would come to maturity, given EIP-4848 is designed to give the Rollups more space. Notably, Rollups are layer-2 scaling solutions that compile a bunch of transactions, turn them into one single data, and submit it to the Ethereum mainnet.Buterin added that Ethereum scaling becoming fully trustless alongside full dank sharding was the target but may take more years to attain. In the Ethereum founder’s view, the blockchain can be called ‘done’ by the end of 2023 after implementing proof-of-stake withdrawals and other basic scaling improvements.Furthermore, Buterin noted that the team could halt further developments after the migration to proof-of-stake, implementing withdrawals, and adding enough cryptography to Ethereum. However, the ultimate goal was to ensure that the Ethereum ecosystem could support 500 million users before the bull came knocking.In Buterin’s words:Ultimately, the Ethereum founder stressed they would make some critical changes to the blockchain, making it more friendly to support developers building layer two scaling solutions.The post What Will Ethereum Be Like in 10 Years? Vitalik Buterin Explains appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More