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    U.S. bond funds saw biggest weekly inflow in 18 months in early Jan

    Refinitiv Lipper data showed U.S. bond funds attracted a net $10.52 billion worth of purchases, the biggest weekly inflow since late June 2021.Data released on Thursday showed U.S. consumer prices unexpectedly fell for the first time in more than 2-1/2 years in December amid declining costs for gasoline and other goods, suggesting that inflation was now on a sustained downward trend.U.S. taxable bond funds received $8.8 billion, the biggest weekly inflow since late June 2021, while municipal bond funds attracted a net $1.74 billion.Investors purchased U.S. short/intermediate investment-grade funds of $3.63 billion in their most extensive weekly net buying since Jan 2022, while high-yield, general domestic taxable fixed income, and government bond funds received $2.35 billion, $1.82 billion and $927 million, respectively.Outflows from equity funds, meanwhile, dropped to an eight-week low of $2.01 billion.U.S. growth and value funds remained out of favour, with net selling worth about $4 billion and $757 million, respectively.However, some sectoral funds observed buying interest, with investors purchasing industrials, financials, and materials sector funds worth net $1.13 billion, $477 million and $435 million, respectively. Meanwhile, money market funds recorded $17.22 billion in outflows after two weeks of inflows. More

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    Germany’s economy grew 1.9% in 2022

    The German economy is likely to have stagnated in the fourth quarter of 2022 having grown by 1.9 per cent over the whole year, according to the federal statistical agency, suggesting it may escape a recession this winter.“The economy performed well in 2022, despite the energy crisis and massive price hikes as a result of the war in Ukraine, material and supply bottlenecks and the continuing coronavirus pandemic,” said Ruth Brand, head of the statistical agency.German gross domestic product exceeded its pre-pandemic level of 2019 for the first time, she added, with growth in the eurozone’s largest economy boosted primarily by private consumption and investments in equipment.Germany had hoped for a big economic recovery in 2022 after two years dominated by the Covid-19 pandemic, but Russia’s invasion of Ukraine nearly 11 months ago plunged the country into an energy crisis. Business confidence slumped in the summer as gas and electricity prices surged and the threat of blackouts, gas rationing and production shutdowns loomed. However, morale has improved considerably in recent weeks as a result of greater fiscal support from the government, lower gas prices and a mild autumn and early winter that kept a lid on energy consumption.Economists still predict a recession in 2023, defined as two successive quarters of negative growth, but think it will now be milder than previously expected. Some are forecasting a contraction of less than 1 per cent in GDP, while others suggest there could even be positive growth this year, largely thanks to the federal government’s energy aid packages.The statistical agency on Friday said it could not provide a definitive readout of economic output in the fourth quarter of 2022, but “based on our current knowledge, GDP stagnated in the fourth quarter . . . after growing in the third quarter”.Michael Kuhn, a senior economist at the agency, said the German economy had “developed really well” in November, “[but] for December we’re seeing some indications that this development has declined”. GDP growth in 2022 was slower than the 2.6 per cent registered a year earlier, and the statistics agency also noted that “almost all other European countries” saw higher growth in 2022 than Germany. But the official statistic was still higher than the mid-range forecast of 1.8 per cent from a Reuters poll of economists. Germany recorded a budget deficit of €101.6bn, which made up 2.6 per cent of GDP. That compares with the big deficits of the pandemic years, amounting to 4.3 per cent of GDP in 2020 and 3.7 per cent in 2021.The number of people in work rose by 1.3 per cent to reach 45.6mn people in 2022, the agency said. Consumer prices rose 7.9 per cent in 2022, largely driven by the inflation in energy and food prices due to the war in Ukraine and supply chain bottlenecks.In a further sign of the eurozone economy’s resilience at the end of last year, industrial production rose by 1 per cent in November, beating the 0.5 per cent rise forecast by economists polled by Reuters.The figures published by Eurostat on Friday showed that the rebound was driven by capital goods, with the easing of supply chain disruptions helping car production.Germany, by far the eurozone’s largest manufacturer, posted a 0.6 per cent expansion in industrial production for November.Additional reporting by Valentina Romei More

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    SEC Charges Genesis and Gemini, Alleges Genesis Loaned Customer Assets to DCG

    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has charged crypto exchange Gemini and crypto lender Genesis for unlawfully selling unregistered securities.The SEC alleged that Genesis and Gemini offered unregistered securities to hundreds of thousands of investors, including Americans, through Gemini’s Earn program and made billions in profit. Gemini made massive profits by deducting a service fee, sometimes as high as 4.29%, from the returns paid to its investors. Gemini’s yield program offered an up to 8% yield on customer deposits.Genesis, in turn, would lend customer assets to institutional borrowers or use them as collateral for borrowing. According to the SEC, Genesis lent $575 million at one point, which included Gemini customers’ assets, to its parent company Digital Currency Group (DCG). DCG used the money to fund investment opportunities and repurchase DCG stock from non-employee shareholders in secondary transactions.According to SEC Chairman Gary Gensler, this could’ve been prevented if Gemini had registered its product with the agency.“We allege that Genesis and Gemini offered unregistered securities to the public, bypassing disclosure requirements designed to protect investors. Today’s charges build on previous actions to make clear to the marketplace and the investing public that crypto lending platforms and other intermediaries need to comply with our time-tested securities laws. Doing so best protects investors. It promotes trust in markets. It’s not optional. It’s the law,” said Gensler.
    Gurbir S. Grewal, Director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement, added that the agency is actively investigating crypto companies.“Our investigations in this space are very much active and ongoing and we encourage anyone with information about this matter or other possible securities law violations to come forward, including under our Whistleblower Program if applicable,” he said.The SEC charges against Genesis and Gemini come amid the public drama surrounding the two companies.Genesis and Gemini’s relationship started to break down in late November of last year when Genesis decided to halt withdrawals after the fallout of FTX. Since then, more than 340,000 Gemini Earn investors haven’t been able to retrieve more than $900 million stuck with Genesis.Then, after a couple of months of silence, Gemini co-founder Cameron Winklevoss published an open letter to DCG CEO Barry Silbert, accusing him of consciously stalling retrieving customer assets from Genesis. He asked Silbert to commit publicly to solving the liquidity issues by January 8.However, Silbert denied Winklevoss’ allegations and didn’t respond to its deadline ultimatum. A few days later, Winklevoss published another open letter to the board of DCG. He accused Silbert of accounting fraud and asked the board to “immediately” remove him from the company.DCG responded by saying that Winklevoss’ accusations are “fake.” A day later, Gemini terminated the loan agreement with Genesis and ended its Earn program.It seems that Genesis’ financial problems are much deeper than previously thought. On the same day the SEC charged the crypto lender, Forbes reported that Genesis owes over $3 billion to its creditors.That’s a figure much larger than previously reported. Forbes also said that DCG is considering partially liquidating its venture capital portfolio to bail out Genesis. DCG’s portfolio comprises over 200 crypto-related companies, including exchanges, lenders, banks, custodians, and other projects.DCG’s portfolio is worth at least $500 million. While this comes short of the owed $3 billion, liquidating part of it might help Genesis repay some of its customers and buy more time to raise more liquidity.Gemini and Genesis are two big players in the crypto industry. If the SEC can bring securities violation charges against them, they may go after the biggest ones as well. Investors should consider following this story and keep an eye on the exchanges or other service providers they use.You Might Also Like:DCG’s Genesis Reportedly Owes Over $3 Billion to Its CreditorsSee original on DailyCoin More

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    BONK is a Token of Community, Says Solana’s Head of Strategy

    Solana’s head of strategy and communication, Austin Federa, recently sat down with Bloomberg to talk about Bonk and all its recent hype. Federa outlined the second half of 2022 and spoke about how difficult it was for the crypto community and Solana.Speaking about Bonk, Federa reiterated that people are witnessing the community having fun with blockchain. He stressed the fact that Bonk was a meme coin that was airdropped to the com …The post BONK is a Token of Community, Says Solana’s Head of Strategy appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    UK economy grows 0.1% as services activity strengthens

    The UK economy grew in November, helped by stronger services activity during the World Cup, in a shift that defied expectations and is likely to increase pressure on the Bank of England to raise interest rates. Gross domestic product increased 0.1 per cent between October and November 2022, the Office for National Statistics said on Friday. A Reuters poll of economists had forecast a 0.2 per cent contraction.“The economy grew a little in November with increases in telecommunications and computer programming helping to push the economy forward,” said Darren Morgan, ONS director of economic statistics. “Pubs and bars also did well as people went out to watch World Cup games.”November’s output expansion was “undeniably encouraging,” said Ruth Gregory, economist at Capital Economics, who added that the UK government’s cost of living payments meant that households had more cash in November.November’s GDP growth could signify that the UK economy avoided a technical recession, defined as two consecutive quarterly contractions, at the end of 2022. Output fell for the third quarter of last year.This “will only add to the pressure for the Bank of England to raise interest rates further from 3.5 per cent, perhaps to 4.5 per cent in the coming months”, Gregory said of Friday’s figures.Markets have priced in a 57 per cent probability that the Bank of England will raise its rate by 50 basis points from the current 3.5 per cent at its next meeting on February 2. Interest rates have risen sharply from 0.1 per cent in November 2021 as the BoE battles with very high inflation.

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    Despite its resilience in November, the UK economy has been struggling under the weight of high inflation and rising borrowing costs. In the three months to November, the economy fell by 0.3 per cent compared with the previous three months.In November, output was still smaller than in its recent peak of May 2022 and remained 0.3 per cent below its level in February 2020, before the pandemic. Output from consumer-facing services, such as shops and restaurants, was 8.5 per cent below pre-coronavirus levels. This is in contrast with all other G7 economies where by the third quarter GDP had already recovered from the impact of the health crisis. Thomas Pugh, economist at consulting firm RSM UK said a recession in the UK was “delayed, not cancelled”, since consumer spending was likely to falter as the squeeze on household real incomes intensified.“We continue to think that GDP will drop substantially in Q1 and Q2,” added Samuel Tombs, economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, who emphasised that the UK government will reduce energy price support substantially in the second quarter. Leading economists surveyed by Consensus Economics forecast UK GDP would shrink by 1 per cent in 2023, a much larger drop than the 0.1 per cent fall forecast for the eurozone and in contrast with the 0.25 per cent increase expected in the US.Separate ONS data, also published on Friday, showed that a recent fall in gas prices helped to narrow the UK’s large trade deficit by £6.5bn to £20.2bn in the three months to November compared with the previous three months. The fall in gas prices is also expected to reduce pressure on household finances as well as providing some savings for the government.Chancellor Jeremy Hunt said: “The most important help we can give is to stick to the plan to halve inflation this year so we get the economy growing again.” More

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    Chinese exports suffer sharpest fall in 3 years as Covid pain spreads

    China’s exports suffered the sharpest decline in almost three years in December, piling on further economic pressure as policymakers in Beijing grapple with sluggish economic growth and a nationwide outbreak of Covid-19.Exports declined 9.9 per cent year on year in dollar terms in December, according to official data released on Friday by China’s general administration of customs, worse than November’s 8.7 per cent fall but slightly outperforming expectations of an even greater contraction. Imports slid 7.5 per cent last month, up from a 10.6 drop the month before.For the full year, China’s trade surplus hit a record of $878bn on the back of a pandemic-era boom that boosted its exports. But exports have now declined year on year in each of the past three months as global demand slowed and Covid outbreaks swept through the country.Exports to the US and EU slumped 18 and 20 per cent respectively, as rising interest rates damped appetite for Chinese goods, Goldman Sachs analysts noted, at the same time that Beijing began to dismantle its costly zero-Covid policy of lockdowns, mass testing and mandatory quarantines.“The bottom line is that after serving as China’s growth driver in the past three years, this year external demand will be a major drag to the Chinese economy,” said Larry Hu, chief China economist at Macquarie.China will publish its gross domestic product growth figures for the full year on Tuesday and is widely expected to miss a 5.5 per cent target that was already the lowest such figure in decades.Although its zero-Covid strategy imposed severe economic costs, the country’s sudden reopening has led to hundreds of millions of infections in a matter of weeks, according to internal government estimates, ushering in a period of severe disruption.Economists are closely watching the impact of the reopening on domestic economic activity, which is expected to eventually rebound. Factory activity in December fell by the most since the start of the pandemic, according to official purchasing managers’ index data, though a private survey showed a less severe impact.Hu forecast an acceleration in growth this year to 5.5 per cent, with a simultaneous drop in exports and strengthening of domestic demand.

    Zhiwei Zhang, chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management, said the weak export growth “highlights the importance of boosting domestic demand as the key driver for the economy in 2023”, adding that the market “anticipates more policies to boost domestic consumption”.In contrast to exports, which surged during the pandemic, consumption in China was stifled by frequent lockdowns. Retail sales, a gauge of consumer demand, which will also be released on Tuesday, turned negative in October and fell 5.9 per cent in November as authorities struggled to contain multiple Covid outbreaks.The government has in recent months unveiled measures to support its ailing property sector in a sign of growing urgency over the economy’s weakness. More

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    What we know about inflation

    Good morning. It was a bad week for Joe Biden who, according to the Wall Street Journal editorial board, wants to take Americans’ gas stoves away, and who appears to have left classified documents in his Corvette. Markets, oddly, don’t care about either story. Email us your conspiracy theories: [email protected] & [email protected]. An inflation cheat sheetIt was a nice change of pace yesterday: a consumer price index report that was mostly unsurprising and, judging by markets’ reaction, already priced in. That is not to say December’s CPI reading was insignificant. Its significance was that it confirmed trends we already suspected. So today we step back and ask what we know, and don’t know, about inflation. We’ve divided things up into three buckets, based on how strong the available evidence is. High confidenceInflation has peaked. Each of the last three cooler CPI reports has made a false dawn look less and less likely and now, barring external shocks, the pattern is definitive. The chart below shows several indices that measure the core trend of price pressures. The trimmed mean index, for example, excludes extreme price movements in both directions, while the underlying inflation gauge stirs together granular price data to find a common trend. They are all singing the same tune: Shelter, the most influential inflation category, will cool later this year. To recap, official inflation indices capture new and existing leases, meaning they are more representative of real living expenses but slower to capture market turning points. But private indices of new leases, which reliably lead CPI by about nine months, show rent growth having peaked in the first half of 2022. Soon enough, CPI will follow.Inflation expectations are under control. Whether you look at survey data, inflation break-evens or something else, the gist is the same. The New York Fed’s household survey illustrates the point. Though households still expect inflation to stay high for another year or so, three-year ahead expected inflation is in line with history: Modest confidenceCore goods inflation is over. Goods have flipped to an inflation drag, thanks in no small part to falling car prices (mostly used cars so far, but CPI new car prices fell for the first time in December’s report). Overstocked retailer inventories and back-to-normal supply chains have helped too. Prices will probably keep falling for a while. For instance, Ian Shepherdson of Pantheon Macro notes new car prices are 20 per cent higher than their pre-pandemic trend would suggest. Still, with deglobalisation fears rampant, it’s an open question whether we’ll see a full snapback to the old-world trend.Core services inflation is still too high. Just how high is sensitive to which bit of the data you focus on, though. The plainest comparison, using 3-month annualised rates, suggests core services inflation is at 6.1 per cent, versus an average of 2.5 per cent between the 2008 financial crisis and Covid-19. But because housing inflation will fall soon, this arguably overstates the problem. One could also gripe about including volatile airfares, deflationary health insurance prices or some other misbehaved component. This chart from Aneta Markowska of Jefferies shows a few choice cuts:

    In all three cases, too high, but to different degrees. MysteriesDo wages need to sharply fall first for services inflation to unstick? Fed chair Jay Powell has made clear his answer is yes, because wages are a major cost that service businesses must pass on. Not everyone agrees. His detractors argue that what is keeping inflation sticky is not high wage growth itself, but high nominal consumption. Wage growth helps sustain high consumption, but so does job growth. And with payroll numbers and consumption now falling, perhaps wages are the wrong focus. Or maybe not! We’ve written about this debate a few times, but the main point is that smart people disagree about how wages feed into prices, and what the Fed’s order of operations should be.How far and how fast will rent inflation decline? The shelter component is a formidable 42 per cent of core inflation, so the pace of rent deceleration matters, as does its steady-state inflation rate. If you need reason to worry, some have suggested that a catch-up effect in rent levels could spell higher-for-longer shelter inflation. Similarly, Omair Sharif of Inflation Insights flags a concerning re-acceleration in rents in New York and San Francisco. Mostly, though, we just don’t know. (Ethan Wu)Are we heading for a corporate debt crisis? (Part 2)Yesterday’s letter asked whether the rapid growth of low-quality corporate debt is a crisis waiting to happen. Much of this debt — a new paper from American for Financial Reform argues — is hard to track, poorly regulated and supervised, mislabelled, or owned by the wrong people. We ended on the point that traditional measures of corporate indebtedness, which measure debt as a multiple of profits, look benign. But then the question “is there too much leverage?” is replaced by the equally unnerving “are very high corporate profits sustainable”? What looks like a manageable amount of debt looks very different when profits drop by, say, a third.And boy oh boy do profits look high. We’ve written that public company margins are historically high, but the data from the national accounts shows that non-bank corporate profits have grown at twice the rate of GDP over the past five years.The risk that high leverage might be obscured by abnormally high profits does not appear to be on the radar of the Fed, which has an implicit financial stability mandate. This is from the central bank’s latest Financial Stability Report:Business debt-to-GDP ratio and gross leverage stood at high levels (although significantly lower than the record highs reached at the onset of the pandemic). In contrast, median interest coverage ratios continued to improve, bolstered by strong earnings, and have reached record highs. Taken together, vulnerabilities from business leverage appeared moderate.Here is the coverage ratio chart from the report. It does seem pretty reassuring, so long as profits hang in there. I assume the ratio is calculated as operations earnings/interest expense:

    The Fed is also not too worried about the effect of rising rates on corporate leverage:The effect of rising interest rates was muted, as corporate bonds — which account for the majority of the debt of public firms — generally have fixed interest rates and longer-term maturitiesThis is true. But it does not mean that there is not a significant amount of variable rate debt running around the financial system. The Fed reckons there is $1.4tn in leveraged loans out there. That is a lot less than the $8.7tn in corporate bonds outstanding, but is still enough to make some trouble. On top of that there is, according to Preqin, about $1.4tn in privately issued debt globally — credit issued by private equity funds, hedge funds, and other non-banks. Most of this private debt is held in the US. Crucially, both leveraged loans and private debt tend to be floating rate. Does the nearly $3tn in leveraged loans and private credit represent an impending crisis? No, but it is a pressure point. If rates rise and profits fall, this is the area that will feel the heat. The pressure could become acute if heavily indebted companies need to refinance while the economy is struggling. Fans of high-yielding debt argue that most companies have wisely pushed their maturities several years into the future, beyond the likely duration of any Fed-induced recession. Here for example is a chart from an upcoming report from Goldman Sachs wealth management — leveraged loans are the green columns:

    This should help avert trouble. But the core worry — that profits will mean-revert, making high leverage hard to bear — remains. Hope for a soft landing.One good readWhy Disney gave Dan Loeb got the VIP treatment but Nelson Peltz got the cold shoulder. More

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    Are we finally entering the Northern Ireland protocol endgame?

    Good morning. Famous last words, but . . . are we reaching the end of the beginning in the Northern Ireland Protocol stand-off? Our correspondent in Belfast parses this week’s flurry of diplomacy. And I bring you up to speed with the adventures of Andrej Babiš, the former Czech premier who began the week awaiting a fraud verdict, and ends it as favourite to become president.The P wordIs the Northern Ireland protocol endgame finally edging into sight? UK and Irish political leaders converged on Belfast this week to rally local parties as London and Brussels intensify their push for a deal on post-Brexit trading arrangements for the region, writes Jude Webber.Context: the ongoing argument between London, Dublin, Belfast and Brussels over the future of the protocol is the biggest irritant to normalising post-Brexit relations between the UK and EU countries, and for almost three years has restricted beneficial co-operation in a host of other areas.No one is holding their breath but this week’s progress on data-sharing — the first tangible breakthrough in months of bitter acrimony — has raised spirits to the extent that even UK opposition leader Keir Starmer flew to Belfast to offer the government “political cover” to deliver a deal soon. How soon is soon remains to be seen. Leo Varadkar, Ireland’s taoiseach, said negotiators were not yet “in the proverbial tunnel” — the jargon for the intense nose-to-the-grindstone period of final talks on substantive issues.Next week will only intensify the pressure: Officials from London and Brussels meet on Monday and three days later British-Irish talks will be held in Dublin.James Cleverly, UK foreign minister, still sees big gaps; although the understatement of the week goes to his Irish counterpart Micheál Martin, who said “it’s very challenging, particularly as you get into the weeds”.No one will bet on a deal by April 10 — the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement that ended Northern Ireland’s three decades-long conflict, the Troubles. And securing any agreement that the Democratic Unionist party, the region’s biggest pro-UK force, can swallow may prove harder.DUP leader Sir Jeffrey Donaldson, who has vetoed the region’s political institutions since May to demand sweeping changes to the protocol, says he does not want to swap one “flawed agreement” for another. But things have not felt this hopeful in ages. After being snubbed by Cleverly this week, Mary Lou McDonald, leader of pro-Irish unity party Sinn Féin, said a deal was “not rocket science”. It finally feels like the countdown may be about to begin.Chart du jour: Opportunity rocksSweden has discovered Europe’s largest deposit of rare earth metals – a 1mn tonne hoard in the Arctic — in a boost to Europe’s hopes of reducing reliance on China for the magic minerals that power green technologies. Babiš 2.0?At times it seemed like Czech billionaire politician Andrej Babiš spent more time in court than on the election trail these past few months, but he may somehow still engineer a return to power in the presidential poll that opens today.Context: The food-to-media tycoon (net worth $4bn) was prime minister for four years before being turfed out of office in December 2021. He was put on trial this autumn on charges he allegedly defrauded the EU.Babiš was acquitted of those charges earlier this week, turning an event that could have derailed his campaign into a potential vote booster. He is the bookmakers’ favourite in an eight-person race that will almost certainly go to a run-off later this month.(When I interviewed Babiš in 2016 he ranted for most of the lunch about immigration and claimed people were out to assassinate him. For what it’s worth, he also said he would never want to be president.)But his potential victory is unlikely to be cheered by the majority of his old colleagues on the European Council, given his populist outbursts and the awkwardness of sharing a summit table with an EU leader who was improperly pocketing EU funds.Many will also recall summit debates on energy in late 2021 dragging on long past the point of usefulness as Babiš raged against vague, shady forces destabilising the gas market. However, he has at least public support from his Renew party colleague Emmanuel Macron, who hosted Babiš in the Élysée on Tuesday in an unashamedly well-timed visit that was met by howls of complaint from the Czech’s political opponents.“I am glad that the most important European politician found time for me and we have such friendly relations,” Babiš wrote on Twitter, adding a photo of the two men embracing (though Macron looks more like a tailor sizing up a client than someone who fancies a hug.)What to watch today Voting begins in the Czech Republic’s presidential election.German chancellor Olaf Scholz hosts Iraqi prime minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani in Berlin.Now read theseTax war: Madrid region’s conservative administration is reducing taxes for foreign investors, in a swipe at the socialist federal government ahead of elections this year.Greenwashing: Half of the environmental claims used to advertise products in the EU are “vague, misleading or unfounded.”Balkan crisis: Washington is increasing diplomatic pressure on both Serbia and Kosovo to avoid “metastasising violence”, a senior US official told the FT. More