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    Marketmind: Fasten your seatbelts

    (Reuters) – A look at the day ahead in markets from Stephen Culp, New York stock market reporter.Wall Street’s downbeat start to an action-packed week has set a bumpy course for Asian markets on Tuesday.U.S. stocks appeared to take a breather near the end of a month of solid gains, dipping into red as market participants gird their loins for multiple central bank policy decisions and a spate of high profile megacap earnings, with the Labor Department’s hotly anticipated January employment report due on Friday.The Federal Reserve convenes its two-day monetary policy meeting on Tuesday, which is expected to culminate on Wednesday with a bite-sized 25 basis point hike to the Fed funds target rate.The Bank of England and the European Central Bank are poised to follow the Fed by hiking crucial interest rates by a more aggressive 50 basis points.On the earnings front, Caterpillar Inc (NYSE:CAT), General Motors Co (NYSE:GM), Pfizer Inc (NYSE:PFE), United Parcel Service Inc (NYSE:UPS) and McDonald’s Corp (NYSE:MCD) are expected before Tuesday’s opening bell.Meta Platforms Inc (NASDAQ:META) waits in the wings on Wednesday, with Apple Inc (NASDAQ:AAPL), Amazon.com (NASDAQ:AMZN) and Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) Inc on deck for Thursday.Those earnings calls, along with Fed Chairman Jerome Powell’s post-rate-decision remarks, will be parsed and scrutinized by investors for clues regarding the likelihood, severity and timing of a potential recession.Elsewhere, the U.S. dollar gained ground against a basket of world currencies, crude prices plunged as the prospect of rate hikes and robust Russian exports dampened optimism over rebounding Chinese demand. Speaking of which, the world’s second-largest economy’s fiscal revenue growth decelerated sharply in 2022 to 0.6% from 10.7% in 2021, largely due to Beijing’s strict COVID-19 policies.Those policies have since been relaxed, sparking hopes of demand revival in China, which could take some of the sting of restrictive central bank policy. Here are some key developments that could provide more direction to markets on Tuesday:- South Korea and Japan are expected to post December industrial output and retail sales data- China due to release manufacturing and composite PMI reports for January- U.S. will follow Case-Shiller home prices (November), consumer confidence (January) and Chicago PMI (January) More

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    Arizona senator doubles down on crypto amid the winter of discontent: Law Decoded, Jan. 23-30

    Rogers also participated in introducing a bill that seeks to make crypto a tax-exempt property in the state. Alongside Senators Sonny Borrelli and Justine Wadsack, Rogers proposed to let Arizona residents decide on amending the state’s constitution regarding property taxes. Should the measure pass the legislature, voters could choose to make digital currencies — specifically tokens that are not “a representation of the United States dollar or a foreign currency” — tax-exempt.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    FirstFT: US halts licences in latest broadside against Huawei

    The Biden administration has stopped providing US companies with licences to export to Huawei as it moves towards imposing a total ban on the sale of American technology to the Chinese telecom equipment giant. Several people familiar with discussions inside the administration said the commerce department had notified some companies that it would no longer grant licences to export American technology to Huawei. The move marks the latest prong in Washington’s campaign to curb the tech company, which national security officials believe helps China engage in espionage. The Trump administration imposed severe restrictions on exporting technology to Huawei, but the commerce department had granted licences to some companies for products that were not related to high-speed 5G telecom networks. However Alan Estevez, head of the commerce department’s bureau of industry and service, has been leading a review of China-related policy in an effort to determine whether the US would take further steps to restrict such exports. The move comes as Washington steps up efforts to work with allies to slow China’s push to develop cutting-edge technology such semiconductors that are used in artificial intelligence and hypersonic weapons. The US last week reached a trilateral deal with Japan and the Netherlands that would impose restrictions on companies in those countries exporting certain chipmaking equipment to China.Five more stories in the news1. Abu Dhabi’s IHC to invest $400mn in Adani share sale Abu Dhabi’s International Holding Company plans to invest $400mn in a share sale by Indian billionaire Gautam Adani’s flagship group, a boost to a business empire rocked over the past week by allegations of fraud.Go deeper: How did one of world’s richest men become a short seller’s target?2. Central banks set to lift interest rates to 15-year highs The world’s leading central banks are poised to raise interest rates this week to their highest levels since the financial crisis, stoking anxiety among some investors that this month’s record bond market rally underestimates the growing evidence of persistent inflation.3. Nato chief calls on South Korea to provide military aid to Ukraine Jens Stoltenberg has called on South Korea to supply military assistance to Ukraine on a visit to Seoul today. He thanked the conservative government of President Yoon Suk-yeol for providing non-lethal aid to Ukraine but urged it to do more, stressing Kyiv’s “urgent need” for ammunition.4. Twitter pays first $300mn interest payment after Musk buyout The company settled the quarterly interest payment on Friday with a group of seven lenders led by Morgan Stanley, the people said. The looming bill had been closely watched as the first big test of Musk’s financial stewardship of Twitter and as concerns about its financial health have mounted.5. Renault and Nissan salvage alliance Renault and Nissan have hammered out a historic deal to salvage their troubled 24-year-old alliance and convince both sides that the partnership can survive without its former supremo, Carlos Ghosn. Read on for details of the proposed deal.The day ahead World Economic Outlook update The IMF publishes its twice yearly report in Singapore at 9:30am.Adani share sale to close Books are set to close on Adani’s offering today. Adani Enterprise said over the weekend that its follow-on public offering of shares would proceed as planned, despite concerns that it would struggle to attract investors following allegations from US short seller Hindenburg.India Economic Survey Data on how the economy fared in the last year and how it is projected to grow during the next fiscal year is set to be published. Federal Reserve meeting The US Federal Reserve is widely expected to slow its pace of interest rate increases at its meeting on today and tomorrow.Results Earnings are expected from companies including Caterpillar, ExxonMobil, Fujitsu, General Motors, McDonald’s, Mondelez, Pfizer Q4, Samsung Electronics, Snap, Spotify, UBS and UniCredit.To coincide with Martin Wolf’s new book, The Crisis of Democratic Capitalism, join Martin and other thought leaders online for a subscriber-exclusive event today. Register for free here.What else we’re readingChina’s film industry shoots for post-Covid recovery Will the end of Covid restrictions encourage one of the world’s biggest film audiences to return to the cinema? Declining financing, censorship and changing tastes could all scupper the industry’s hopes of a strong recovery after three years of lockdowns shut theatres across the country.Go deeper: Explore what China’s reopening means for markets.

    How the war in Ukraine met the culture wars Vladimir Putin is flirting with an important constituency in the west — cultural conservatives who are so disgusted by the alleged decadence of their own societies that they are attracted to Putin’s Russia, writes Gideon Rachman. ‘Privacy has been extinguished. It is now a zombie’ Shoshana Zuboff took aim at the tech industry in 2019 with her book, The Age of Surveillance Capitalism, about how companies made billions by sucking up private data. In this interview with Henry Mance, Zuoff expresses her frustration with efforts to rein in Big Tech and calls for a right to sanctuary from data “theft”.The grim world of office spyware TimeCamp says it provides time-tracking software but the rest of us call it workplace spyware, bossware or tattleware. The company made headlines around the world this month when it appeared in a Canadian court case. Pilita Clark spoke to the founder of TimeCamp about his company’s new found notoriety. Why I’m only buying five new things in 2023 To combat climate change, experts advise we place strict limits on our spending habits. FT fashion editor Lauren Indvik offers her shopping list.Take a break from the newsWhat is the name of the British sitcom (2007-2016) written by Andy Hamilton and Guy Jenkin? Try your hand at 30-across in one of our latest crossword puzzles. More

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    U.S. says FTX founder Bankman-Fried needs limits on communications, asset access

    NEW YORK (Reuters) – The U.S. government on Monday urged a judge to reject Sam Bankman-Fried’s claim it went too far by insisting that the indicted founder of the now-bankrupt FTX cryptocurrency exchange be banned from contacting his former colleagues.In a letter to U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan in Manhattan, prosecutors also asked that a bail condition that prevents Bankman-Fried from accessing or transferring assets at FTX and his Alameda Research hedge fund be left in place. They argued those assets were “vulnerable to exploitation and in need of protection from the defendant.”The requests came two days after Bankman-Fried’s lawyers proposed letting their client access crypto assets and continue communicating with most of FTX’s and Alameda’s estimated 350 employees, some of whom they said could help his defense.Mark Cohen and Christian Everdell, who represent Bankman-Fried, did not immediately respond to requests for comment. They have until Feb. 1 to address prosecutors’ view on accessing assets.Bankman-Fried, 30, has been free on $250 million bond and confined at his parents’ home in California, after pleading not guilty to fraud for allegedly looting billions of customer dollars from FTX.Prosecutors previously raised concerns about witness tampering after Bankman-Fried on Jan. 15 sent an encrypted message over the Signal app to an FTX affiliate’s general counsel, who could testify against him at a trial set to begin in October.”I would really love to reconnect and see if there’s a way for us to have a constructive relationship, use each other as resources when possible, or at least vet things with each other,” Bankman-Fried had written. In Monday’s letter, prosecutors called the message an effort to “improperly influence” the general counsel, no matter how benign it might seem.”The defendant’s position of authority with respect to his former employees, combined with his recent outreach to a former employee about the case, raises a sufficient specter of witness tampering,” prosecutors said.Prosecutors also want to ban Bankman-Fried from using apps such as Signal that let users auto-delete messages, and instead have him communicate in text messages, emails and phone calls.Bankman-Fried’s lawyers have said their client was trying simply to provide assistance to the general counsel, and has not been not using the auto-delete feature.They also proposed that Bankman-Fried not be allowed to talk with select colleagues, including former Alameda chief Caroline Ellison, former FTX technology chief Zixiao “Gary” Wang and former FTX engineering chief Nishad Singh.Ellison and Wang have pleaded guilty and are cooperating with prosecutors. More

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    Yellen Sees Low Inflation as More Likely Long-Term Challenge

    “We’re just coming through an unusual and difficult period, but I do not think we’re in any way back to the ’80s and ’70s,” she said in an interview, referring to an era of rising prices and wages.  While central banks still have a long way to go to smother the worst bout of inflation in decades, with prices on the downtrend the debate is now shifting to what happens after this fight is over. The risks of getting it wrong are high, economically and politically. Yellen, along with Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell and many in the US economic establishment, incorrectly predicted in 2021 that the burst of inflation would be “transitory.”She has since admitted getting that call wrong and supported the Fed’s efforts to rein in prices with aggressive interest rate hikes, which risk pushing the US into a recession. Unlike in the 1970s and early 1980s, Yellen said the current episode of high inflation hasn’t triggered a wage-price spiral, a dynamic in which workers demand raises in anticipation of higher prices, prompting firms to increase prices. Economists look for signs of such a spiral in inflation expectations.“Expectations have been well-anchored, and I believe they’re still pretty well anchored,” she said in the interview on Friday in Johannesburg, on the final leg of a three-nation visit to Africa. “So we’re not seeing a wage-price spiral. That’s not happening.”The annual increase in the consumer price index topped out at 9.1% in June, but has slowed to 6.5% as of last month in response to the Fed’s rate hikes, as well as easing supply chain stresses and sliding oil prices. Former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers and Kenneth Rogoff, an ex-chief economist for the International Monetary Fund, are among those who have warned the world’s economy is entering a period of geopolitical tensions and debt crises that risk making episodes of high inflation and high interest rates more common. Another former IMF chief economist, Olivier Blanchard, is more aligned with Yellen, arguing today’s inflation will not last and that central banks, including the Federal Reserve, will face a return to an environment where interest rates are uncomfortably close to zero. He’s proposed that central banks lift their inflation targets from 2% to 3% to counter that.Yellen spent a quarter century at the Fed, including four years as chair from 2014 to 2018. During almost that entire tenure, inflation was historically low thanks to demographics, technology and globalization. The Fed’s preferred gauge of inflation, the personal consumption expenditures index, rose by an annual average of 1.9% — below the Fed’s current target — from 1992 to 2019. Many policymakers have worried that was actually too low, forcing interest rates close to zero and robbing the central bank of the ability to fight recessions with deep rate cuts.That streak was shattered by Covid-19, marked by supply-chain disruptions and government aid in the US that jacked up demand, and then Russia’s invasion of Ukraine early last year triggered a spike in energy and food prices. Such jumps since the mid-1980s have tended not to last, she said.“The pandemic created such unusual disruptions in the economy,” she said. “There were just a lot of supply-chain problems. We really hit the wall in a bunch of different sectors and prices really skyrocketed.”Yellen didn’t say how long she thought it would take for inflation to return to target, nor did she comment on how the Fed should react if it did. More

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    Brazil’s new monetary policy director could be from the private sector, says Haddad

    Speaking to journalists after attending an event hosted by Fiesp industry association, Brazil’s biggest industry association, Haddad said the issue was discussed with central bank governor Roberto Campos Neto in a morning meeting.”If you want good technical names, you have few places to look, so it can be from the private sector, it can be from the public sector,” said Haddad.Bruno Serra’s mandate as head of monetary policy expires as soon as next month. His area is considered one of the most critical as it provides essential inputs for monetary policy decisions and is responsible for the foreign exchange and interest rate desks.Under a formal autonomy Congress approved in 2021, Campos Neto will remain in office until December 2024. His current directors’ mandates will expire in different timeframes up to 2025, and it will be up to leftist President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva to appoint all members of the bank’s nine-member board. Haddad said he had committed with Campos Neto to unloading all paralyzed central bank credit initiatives, without giving further details. He also cited eight proposed bills already in Congress that are “ready to be forwarded,” including one that modernizes guarantees for bank credit and should be voted on shortly in the Senate. The minister, who insisted on the importance of consumer credit as an economic activity booster, predicted the popular Pix instant payment system would become a credit instrument this year. He also said he favored a differentiated treatment to encourage companies and guarantee new players’ entry into the credit market. Still, he mentioned the high level of Brazil’s benchmark Selic interest rate – currently at 13.75% – as an “obstacle.” The central bank meets this week to make its policy decision. “Obviously, we have the Selic issue, which is an obstacle for all of us. You can reduce the lending spreads, improve the guarantee system, but the Selic will always be an obstacle to a consistent reduction in interest rates and the democratization of credit,” he said.Haddad stated that he will work toward a “virtuous balance” of the exchange rate and interest rates in the short term.He defended a national reindustrialization that takes climate change into account, stressing that gas could play a role in accelerating the energy transition process that is being planned, as the government has “a lot of interest” in pre-salt gas. By calibrating state-ruin oil company Petrobras’s pricing policy, ethanol would have a “natural development,” he added. More

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    China’s return to work raises hopes for global growth

    Today’s top storiesThe EU is to make it easier for member states to give tax credits to companies for green investment, according to plans seen by the FT, as it seeks to compete with US subsidies. The German economy shrank unexpectedly in the fourth quarter, dragged down by the effect of soaring gas prices on its large manufacturing sector. The news put a dampener on new European Commission survey data showing EU business and consumer confidence surging in January. The UK is bracing for huge public sector disruption on Wednesday, with strikes set to close schools, cancel university classes and cripple rail services while unions hold rallies to protest against anti-strike legislation and refusal to fund higher pay awards.For up-to-the-minute news updates, visit our live blogGood evening.China’s stock markets reopened today after a week-long break for the lunar new year amid investor hopes that the end of “zero-Covid” will unleash a wave of pent-up consumer spending and spur global economic growth.Oil prices rose, reflecting the new optimism. The International Energy Agency, which advises governments on energy policy, said last week that China’s reopening could drive global demand to a record high this year of 101.7mn barrels a day.Traders are also betting on surges in demand for other commodities, with the price of base metals such as tin, zinc and copper jumping more than 20 per cent in the past three months. The impact on world trade in general will be substantial.Asian currencies such as South Korea’s won should also benefit as exports to China pick up, as should Thailand’s baht as Chinese tourists begin to travel again. The Australian dollar is expected to climb 3 per cent on increased demand from China for commodities.Hopes are also high for Chinese stocks. Goldman Sachs has raised its forecasts for earnings growth and boosted its outlook for Chinese listings in Hong Kong. Markets in Malaysia, Thailand and Singapore should also benefit.Some investors are turning optimistic on tech stocks in particular as Beijing eases its long-running sector crackdown. Others however are still wary, noting that state control over private companies has been stepped up, with big names such as Alibaba and Tencent having to cede “golden shares” to state bodies, allowing officials to take board seats and veto certain decisions.Beijing is also switching its focus to make consumption the “main driving force” of the economy, which grew by just 3 per cent last year under the weight of zero-Covid restrictions and the collapse of the property market, which has been responsible for around a quarter of GDP over the past decade.China’s renewed embrace of the private sector and positive noises on foreign investment were also on display at the recent World Economic Forum in Davos. The FT editorial board welcomed the change in tone but argued Beijing still had more to do to rebuild the trust of investors and business.“China should recognise that giving better treatment to the private sector and multinationals cannot be a matter of expediency,” it said. “Such policies must be long-term and sustainable if Beijing wishes to build trust. If officials travel to Davos to express fealty to a creed of open markets only to reverse course once back home, it will inflict lasting damage to China’s reputation.”Need to know: UK and Europe economyOur latest Big Read examines the difficulties of spinning out companies from British universities, with some founders and investors arguing the institutions are benefiting unfairly from the work of the entrepreneurs. Many UK tech start-ups are accelerating plans to expand abroad as the government cuts research and development tax credits.The “Qatargate” graft scandal rocking the EU also gets the Big Read treatment. The affair has highlighted some uncomfortable truths about lobbying by foreign powers.Hungary recorded the highest inflation in the EU in December at 24.5 per cent, which analysts pin on a weak forint, the phaseout of price caps and a retail tax. The country’s economic woes and the resulting public anger have been a blow to rightwing prime minister Viktor Orbán as his Fidesz party prepares for municipal and European elections in 2024.Need to know: Global economyIt’s a big week in central bank land with interest rate decisions from the US Federal Reserve on Wednesday and the European Central Bank and the Bank of England on Thursday. The Fed is expected to raise rates by 0.25 percentage points, and the ECB and BoE by half a point.Rising interest rates, volatile prices and the war in Ukraine have made it much more expensive to ship raw materials such as oil, gas, sugar and gold around the world. McKinsey predicts shipping times will increase 8 per cent, energy prices three-fold, and interest costs seven-fold, between the end of 2020 and 2024, with working capital requirements for commodity trading to increase up to $500bn as a result.Global food supplies could still be at risk despite sharp falls in fertiliser and crop prices from the highs of last year. Some experts warn the grain deal between Moscow and Kyiv could yet unravel while volatile energy prices and bad weather could hit crop production. Our Europe Express newsletter (for premium subscribers) talks to EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell about the food propaganda war with RussiaThe prime minister of Mongolia told the FT how his landlocked country, sandwiched between Russia and China, had been battered by the effect of sanctions on Moscow. The collateral damage ranges from complications in paying Russian companies on which it is “wholly dependent” for fuel, to the loss of revenues from airlines that once flew over the country.Need to know: businessRetailer JD Sports became the latest high-profile UK company to be targeted by hackers as it warned that the data of 10mn customers could be at risk.Ryanair returned to profit and said the rush of US and Asian tourists would boost demand for travel in Europe. The surge in passenger numbers will come too late for Flybe. The budget carrier has gone into administration for the second time in less than a year after starting to fly again after the pandemic.Profit warnings from UK-listed companies rose 50 per cent last year as rising costs and falling consumer confidence hit British business. UK shareholders meanwhile are set for a fall in dividends this year as the global economy shrinks and a period of large one-off payments comes to an end. US investors are increasingly targeting European football by snapping up stakes in clubs — and angering fans and regulators in the process. Clubs have been turning to investors for capital since the pandemic battered their balance sheets: governing body Fifa estimates top-division teams lost €7bn over the 2019-20 and 2020-21 seasons. Will the end of Covid restrictions encourage the Chinese — one of the world’s biggest film audiences — to return to the cinema? Challenges include declining financing, censorship and changing tastes.The World of WorkManagement editor Anjli Raval says brutal mass lay-offs have serious long-term effects for companies as well as the individuals involved and those left behind. They need to plan for future workforce changes on an ongoing basis and ride out difficult periods, she argues.A tougher minded approach to meetings may become a lasting benefit of the pandemic, which has forced managers to think about how and where people work best, writes Stefan Stern.Thanks to Covid, many of us are working from home, but that doesn’t mean your boss can’t keep tabs on you. Columnist Pilita Clark looks at the world of time-tracking software — aka spyware, bossware or tattleware. Feel like you’re being discriminated against at work on the basis of your age? Law courts correspondent Jane Croft explains the difficulties inherent in bringing your claim to an employment tribunal. Some good newsA rare tree kangaroo has been born at Chester Zoo in the north of England for the first time. The animal is native to the rainforests of Papua New Guinea where they are under threat from hunting and habitat destruction.

    Is it safe to come out yet? © Chester zoo/AFP via Getty Images More

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    Countries urged to help children catch up on education lost during pandemic

    Children lost more than a third of a year’s worth of learning during the Covid-19 pandemic, according to a worldwide study that shows gaps in skills and knowledge have persisted long after schools reopened. Bastian Betthäuser, author of the report in science journal Nature Human Behaviour, warned that education authorities’ focus was “shifting away” from helping school-aged children recover lost knowledge and skills during the pandemic, highlighting a need for continued support for catch-up learning. Academic subjects that depended most on teacher-led learning, such as mathematics, suffered the most when classes moved online, researchers said, with damaging consequences for individual career prospects, labour markets and overall inequality. The paper, which focused on 15 high- and middle-income countries and was published on Monday, added that the educational impact was more pronounced for children from disadvantaged backgrounds. “It’s not clear whether, or to what extent, learning deficits have been recovered. There’s a gap between what needs to happen and what is happening,” said Betthäuser. Attention was moving away from helping children catch up on lost learning, as governments moved their focus to other issues such as the cost of living crisis caused by soaring food and energy costs, he added. “My worry is that government programmes that have been set up — with very generous funding in some countries — will phase out soon, or have already [been phased out].”The paper collated 42 studies and reported that 95 per cent of the world’s school-age pupils were affected by school closures during the pandemic. Countries analysed included Brazil, Colombia, Germany, South Africa, Spain, the US and UK, with the report noting that some pupils had been affected by irregular teaching for more than two-and-a-half years.It found learning “slowed substantially” during the pandemic, with schoolchildren losing the equivalent of 35 per cent of a year’s worth of learning. “Learning deficits opened up early in the pandemic and have neither closed nor substantially widened since then,” the report added. Learning deficits were higher in maths, potentially because the subject depended more on teacher-led formal instruction than other subjects such as literacy, the researchers concluded. Governments have spent billions on funding schemes to support children to catch up on lessons missed during the pandemic, such as after-school programmes and additional lessons during holiday periods.However, the World Bank warned last year that less than half of countries were operating learning recovery programmes at the scale needed to help children catch up. Betthäuser said missed learning had affected the development of skills that were crucial to the needs of the labour force. “Learning deficits are likely to have knock-on effects on students’ future trajectories,” he said.The report backs up evidence from researchers that educational inequality has widened since the outbreak of the pandemic. Last month, the Education Policy Institute think-tank found that in England the gap between disadvantaged pupils and their peers increased at the fastest rate on record in 2021, after a year of periodic closures. Children living in persistent poverty were two years behind their wealthier peers, it added. “There is much more the government needs to do to support schools in reducing learning losses — particularly schools in poorer areas,” said David Laws, executive chair of EPI. More