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    Peru central bank lowers growth forecasts despite government stimulus

    The central bank now expects 2022 growth of 3.0%, compared with 3.1% previously, and 2023 growth of 3.0%, compared with 3.2% previously. It also predicted that annual inflation would rise to 7.8% this year and 3.0% in 2023.This comes after Finance Minister Kurt Burneo last week launched an economic package aimed at lifting the economy at times of a global slowdown and falling copper prices, which are key to the country’s economy.Burneo had earlier in September said Peru could achieve economic growth of 3.9% in 2022, rising to 4.3% in 2023, thanks to the stimulus package, although many of its measures are still awaiting approval from Congress.”There are no magic wands”, central bank chief Julio Velarde told a press conference, saying the bank was still examining the impacts of the government’s stimulus measures.Velarde said the bank was maintaining its 2022 fiscal deficit projection at 1.9% of gross domestic product (GDP) and at 1.8% of GDP next year. Regarding Peru’s key mining sector, Velarde said investment should decline by 3.7% in 2022 and in 2023 this decline should deepen to 16.2%, following the completion of Anglo American (LON:AAL)’s Quellaveco copper project in the south of the country. Peru is the world’s second largest copper producer and its mining exports total around 60% of the South American country’s overall exports. More

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    China plans sanctions on CEOs of Boeing Defense, Raytheon over Taiwan sales

    The sanctions on Boeing Defense, Space, and Security CEO Ted Colbert and Raytheon Technologies (NYSE:RTX) Corp boss Gregory Hayes are in response to the U.S. State Department approval on Sept. 2 of the sale of military equipment to Taiwan.Those sales include 60 anti-ship missiles and 100 air-to-air missiles, of which the respective principal contractors are Boeing Defense, a division of Boeing Co , and Raytheon. Colbert and Hayes will be sanctioned “in order to protect China’s sovereignty and security interests” said foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning citing “their involvement in these arms sales.”Mao did not elaborate on what the sanctions would entail or on how they would be enforced. Neither company sells defense products to China, but both have robust commercial aviation businesses there.U.S. defense procurement rules generally prohibit Chinese-origin content, so sanctions have had no impact on the U.S. military.”The Chinese side once again urges the U.S. government and relevant entities to… stop selling arms to Taiwan and U.S.-Taiwan military contacts.”The Pentagon announced the package in the wake of China’s aggressive military drills around Taiwan following a visit last month by U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the highest-ranking U.S. official to travel to Taipei in years.China has previously sanctioned Raytheon, Boeing Defense, and unspecified individuals involved in arms sales to Taiwan.A Raytheon spokesman declined to comment. Boeing declined to comment immediately, but on Thursday said it plans to remarket some airplanes that it had earmarked for Chinese airlines as geopolitical tensions have delayed deliveries.In December 2021, China approved the return of Boeing’s 737 MAX to service after it had been grounded following two accidents involving the airliner that killed 346 people.Despite the approval, Chinese airlines have not resumed flying the MAX and have not accepted deliveries of new MAX aircraft. The U.S. government has previously accused the Chinese government of blocking tens of billions of dollars of MAX deliveries to China. Before the MAX was grounded, Boeing was selling a quarter of the planes it built annually to Chinese buyers, its largest customers.Raytheon sells to China through its United Technologies engine business.Friday’s announcement marks the first time Beijing identified and imposed sanctions against individuals from these companies. Beijing considers the self-ruled island of Taiwan a wayward province it has vowed to bring under control, by force if necessary. Taiwan rejects China’s sovereignty claims, saying only its people can decide their future, and vows to defend itself if attacked. More

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    Russia cuts benchmark rate by 50 basis points

    Russia’s central bank cut its benchmark rate by 50 basis points to 7.5 per cent on Friday, but warned that it was running out of room to cut borrowing costs further in the months ahead.Friday’s decision is the sixth consecutive cut since the central bank raised rates to a record 20 per cent following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in late February.Inflationary pressures have weakened since then, offering policymakers the space to cut rates drastically. But central bank head Elvira Nabiullina said the cycle of loosening was coming to an end — and even hinted at the possibility of a rate rise soon, depending on the economic factors domestically and externally.“With this rate level we estimate that we are in a neutral monetary policy. We see that one-off disinflationary forces are gradually losing their effect, while pro-inflationary risks are rising,” Nabiullina said. “The scope for further reduction in the key rate has narrowed.”The latest cut comes at a time of mounting political and economic pressures on Moscow. The country’s budget surplus has narrowed substantially over the course of the summer, as tensions between Russia and Ukraine’s western allies hit revenues from oil and gas.The surplus is likely to turn into a deficit in September, following Moscow’s decision to halt gas flows to Europe through the key Nord Stream 1 pipeline. The Kremlin has said the tap will remain off until the west lifts sanctions that have affected its equipment maintenance.The central bank has warned that the external environment “remains challenging and continues to significantly constrain economic activity”.In its preceding meeting in July, the central bank cut the rate by 150bp to 8 per cent but has now said “business activity dynamics are better” than it had expected in July.While price pressures are not as strong as in the spring, it said “inflationary expectations of the population and price expectations of enterprises remain at an elevated level”.The central bank on Friday forecast inflation at between 11 and 13 per cent this year, below its earlier estimate of 12 to 15 per cent.The forces that had aided the central bank in recent months, such as the stronger rouble, the population’s inclination to save and increased agricultural production in the summer were diminishing, Nabiullina warned.The bank plans to present an updated economic forecast in October.While the bank has improved its inflation forecast, it expects to only reach its goal of 4 per cent in 2024, with inflation for 2023 estimated at between 5 and 7 per cent. Its growth forecast also improved, though the economy is still expected to shrink by between 4 and 6 per cent this year.Natalia Lavrova, senior economist at BCS Global Markets, expected the bank to become more cautious on the back of the first signs of a reversal in the deflationary trend. “Given the increase in inflationary risks, more cautious steps or even a pause in the monetary easing is becoming a base case scenario for the coming months,” Lavrova said, suggesting the current rate is very close to the bottom.Nabiullina said further decisions would be based on economic behaviour, which was showing signs of improvement but was still prone to external threats.“The coal, metals and forestry industries, where restrictions on supplies of the product are significantly obstructing the work of companies, are in the most difficult position,” she said.Those industries have significantly reduced supplies to the west due to sanctions, while reorienting activity eastward requires new infrastructure and time to build it. More

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    How to restructure sovereign debt

    Simon Hinrichsen is a EM debt portfolio manager at Sampension, wrote his PhD thesis on sovereign debt restructuring, and briefly worked on FT Alphaville back in the day. He’s now also lecturing at the University of Copenhagen, so we asked him to write up his how-to restructuring guide for FTAV readers. After almost two decades of relative tranquility, a violent rash of sovereign debt defaults looms on the horizon.Mozambique, Lebanon, Ecuador, Sri Lanka, Suriname, Belize, Russia, Ukraine, and Zambia have all defaulted or restructured their debts in the past few years. Many other countries have already priced in a high risk of restructuring this year and next. It might therefore be a good time for a primer on how countries can restructure their debts.The underlying assumption for almost all sovereign debt these days is that loans will not be repaid fully but rolled over. Nominal debt stocks tend to rise over time and bullet loans — the standard in sovereign borrowing — are replaced by new loans as they mature. A crisis can therefore happen quickly if it is impossible to borrow new money (for whatever reason).

    Let’s skip the niceties and assume that a country is out of money but wants to remain a part of the global financial system (so no total repudiations of debt à la Russia 1918). The country needs to restructure its liabilities, and it might even already have defaulted by not paying a coupon (a contractual failure to pay). Even if it doesn’t default contractually, it will do so substantially by forcing a distressed debt exchange. The outcome will be classified as a sovereign debt default regardless of the type of default or severity of outcome.The problemA debt restructuring is fundamentally about allocating economic costs to someone. Countries want the burden of adjustment to fall on external creditors. Creditors want the burden to fall on taxpayers. The problem is one of resource allocation and identification of why the debt is unsustainable, and to what degree. The first step in a debt workout is to figure out what the problem is: chronic low growth, falling commodity prices, no export sector, a bankrupt financial sector, the maturity structure of your debt, too large a debt stock, or hidden debt that wasn’t disclosed? Perhaps the debt was manageable at low interest rates, but now interest rates are high and servicing the loans is a budgetary problem? Citizens don’t like that, which makes it a political problem. Sovereign defaults have occurred for all of the above reasons (some more often than others). Normally it’s a mix of factors, but understanding the root cause is a first step in a successful restructuring. If it is a liquidity problem caused by a pandemic, maybe the country just needs temporary help? Perhaps the problem is that the country has a debt stock that is several times its annual export earnings, in which case the problem is fundamental. The restructuring must address the problem.The second step is to find out what type of debt the country has. Is the debt external? If yes, what kind of external debt — governed by foreign law, issued in foreign currency, or held by foreigners? What share of the debt is domestic? If the debt is governed by domestic law, it is easier to restructure legally, but if all the sovereign debt is owned by your financial system, maybe a restructuring will cause a domestic financial crisis that just makes everything worse.Maybe most of the liabilities are not even directly on the government books but rather guaranteed state-owned enterprises that need to be part of a restructuring? Any initial analysis should answer these questions.The restructuring processThe first issue is whether to go to the IMF or not. The IMF can come in and do a debt sustainability analysis (DSA) and lend credibility to the macroeconomic numbers. A DSA is a prerequisite for a restructuring at the Paris Club, but, more importantly, it sets out how much debt a country is likely to be able to pay “sustainably”. The Fund does an analysis of the balance of payments and the debt stock among other things (see for example Zambia’s DSA from last week here), and the IMF can provide stop-gap financing if there is a credible way to make debt sustainable. The downside is that IMF programs often come with strings attached, such as “reforms” that a country might not find very appealing. The reality is that any IMF programme is a political art, not science. The benefit is that the IMF has done many restructurings before, as have most of the lawyers and bankers involved on either side. A sovereign debt restructuring has no set process — but the players and the tools involved are usually the same.

    The tools used to restructure debt are always the same, however. It involves an exchange of old claims for news claims, where the new claims have different characteristics: lower principal value, lower coupons, or longer maturity. It’s usually a mix, but the composition depends on what the problem is — and what you can get creditors to agree to. If the debt stock is manageable, but all the debt is due in the next two months, maybe a “reprofiling” of the maturities is all that is needed. If the debt stock is too high, maybe principal haircuts are required, or maybe a lowering of the coupon until after any reforms are enacted and growth hopefully picks up. Once this analysis is done — usually behind closed doors together with the advisers and the IMF — the doors are opened and some sort of negotiation starts.The DSA probably suggest what debt to restructure and what debt to exclude (and what debt to pay!) Generally, you’ll want to exclude some types of claims needed to keep the economy going, such as trade credits (to maintain and facility international trade) and Treasury bills (for short-term financing). But it depends on the problem and the debt stock. Trade credits and T-bills are usually excluded from restructurings, but not always — if 80 per cent of a country’s debt is T-bills then you can’t really exclude them.

    The process from here depends on what type of debt the country has and on its creditors. It’s a good idea to start where you can get the best deal and have the most friends. Negotiations with bilateral creditors can happen between politicians or at a bureaucratic levels. Normally it’s done at the French finance ministry (the Paris Club), where most developed countries are members (but importantly not China). There are generally two ways to go about dealing with commercial creditors: either a creditor consultation via an adviser, which will report back to the country/IMF, or a negotiation with creditor committees made up (usually) of the biggest lenders. Committees can verify a deal and might make others creditors comfortable that it’s the best deal on the table (after all, no creditor wants to give debt relief only to see someone else repaid in full).The playersFirst the borrower. A sovereign county is a unique debtor. It is very difficult to force a country to do anything. There’s no sovereign bankruptcy code, no way to work out defaulted debt, and seizing state assets is very difficult. Do you want to try to seize Russian assets?What a state has is its reputation and a wish to be part of global society. Countries are supposed to pay their debts under the doctrine of state succession (one of the international laws that are generally adhered to), but states are political entities. The debtor responds to domestic political incentives. A judge in New York might tell a country to do one thing but getting a country to respond is a different thing. Countries are often not in a rush.Then there are the creditors. Creditors are important because they lend money, but on the other hand they don’t vote. Because most sovereign debt restructurings start out with an IMF DSA, the creditors are already pitted against each other if one or more classes of debt are excluded from a potential restructuring. So it’s a zero-sum game. Oftentimes a creditor’s main opponent is not so much the debtor but rather other creditors.

    The senior creditors are normally multilateral institutions (IMF, the World Bank, some development banks) which often have “preferred creditor status”. The IMF is paid before everyone else. Sometimes preferred creditor status is also given to some wannabe-multilaterals (EIB, ECB, KDB, etc), but if too many get it that’s not great for junior creditors. Creditors can be bilateral lenders (other countries, which negotiate at the Paris Club or individually), banks or bondholders (which usually form committees), trade creditors (often on their own but with political backing), households, or state entities. Each will argue their case. Some creditors can be more of a pain than others, as some are litigious or prone not to accept a deal. Each creditor tries to talk their way up the capital structure. If you cannot talk your way up the capital structure, you want to make sure that everyone else shares in the pain. If you’re a local bondholder, you say the financial system will go belly-up if you are restructured. If you’re an international bondholder, you mutter that the country will never be able to borrow in global markets again if you’re restructured. In extremis you say that you will go bankrupt if there is a restructuring and lobby your own government to help you negotiate — as banks in Europe did with Greek sovereign debt. You argue it’s cheaper to extend credit to Greece so they can roll over their debt rather than having to recapitalise some French or German bank. The legal aspectsA legal analysis is needed to figure out the tactical approach. International law is difficult to enforce, but legal analysis still plays a very important role in today’s sovereign debt world — mainly because most debt contracts are governed by New York or English law. The first step is to figure out how much of your debt is domestic law, which is easier to deal with, and how much is foreign law. Then you figure out how many of your bonds have old pari passu clauses, what type of collective action clauses govern the bonds, if some loans have weird clauses, and if the overall debt stock invites litigation. Some countries, like Ukraine, have relatively recently-issued debt that is easier to aggregate and thus restructure, while others, such as Zambia, have older contracts which might provide creditors or debtors some legal upper hand.As a creditor, you try to figure out if your bond can be aggregated. Should you accelerate if there is a default? Get a judgment? Can you hold out for a better deal while other creditors restructure? Maybe you have an old, non-performing loan. If you have written it down already, it’s surely better to be able to collect on a smaller loan. Of course, if you want to sue, it’s important to get your strategy right, but also to remember that lawyers are expensive.We’ll see a lot of variations of sovereign debt restructurings in the coming years. Some restructurings will be smooth, others . . . not so much. Consider this a bit of free advice for debtors and creditors alike.Further reading:The Restructuring Process — Buchheit et al. (2019)Government bonds since Waterloo — Meyer et al. (2021)The aftermath of sovereign debt crises: a narrative approach — Esteves et al. (2021)The seniority structure of sovereign debt — Schlegl (2019). More

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    Blankos Block Party Goes Live On The Epic Store – Season 1 Is On The Way

    Earlier, Gala Games’ GRIT announced a partnership with Epic, and was expected to be made the first NFT game on the store. However, GRIT is still listed as “coming soon” on the marketplace. In any case, Blankos Block Party has launched on Epic Games Store, and is gearing up for the opening of the game’s first season. Epic Store Gets Its First Blockchain GameThe Epic Games Store has welcomed its first blockchain-based game—Blankos Block Party. “We have some exciting news today! Blankos Block Party is now live at the Epic Games Store! With this huge step, we’re growing our reach to more and more players every day! Thank you for your continued support of Blankos Block Party in Early Access,” Mythical Games announced in their post.At the time of writing, Blankos Block Party (via Epic) is available in select regions: To celebrate this milestone, Mythical Games released a special trailer. But that’s not all, the new trailer contains a small teaser that hints toward some upcoming Blankos. Blankos Block Party Inches Towards Its First SeasonFollowing its launch on the Epic Games Store, Mythical Games is now looking forward to releasing the first season of Blankos Block Party.In its latest blog post, Mythical Games revealed that season 1 is just two weeks away, and the week looks set to be packed with celebrations and giveaways. “Get ready, party-goers – only 2 weeks left until Season 1! It’s never too late to join the party – round up your crew and log in now, because we’ve got more exciting news and giveaways this week to celebrate our worldwide launch!” The post read.Atari Mystery Boxes and Blankos Giveaway‘Atari Mystery boxes’ are now live. Players can buy the boxes for 1000 ‘Blanko Bucks’, or $9.99. Boxes may contain any one of the ‘Atari Blankos‘ – Pong, Tempest, Centipede, or Joystick. The Blankos will be available until October 13th. Mythical Games also announced two giveaways – the Atari Joystick Blanko Giveaway, and the Community Incentive Challenge.Here’s a quick rundown on both of the giveaways:Players can get the chance of winning a free Atari Joystick Blanko by participating in a small contest. All they have to do is take a picture in front of the Atari sign in ‘The Junction’, and share it on Twitter (NYSE:TWTR) as per the guidelines. 10 players will then be randomly selected and rewarded the Atari Blanko. Players have until September 19, 18:59 UTC to submit their entries.The Community Incentive Challenge will kick off in the first week after the launch of season 1. By participating in the event, players will be rewarded with XP (NASDAQ:XP) Chips, Blankos, and more when the Discord and Twitter community reaches new milestones.Here’s what the milestones look like:Rewards: 2 Gumballs and 2000 moolaRewards: Terry Blanko to one winner, 5000XP Chips, 2 Gumballs, 2000 moolaRewards: Unlock Blanko Community Giveaway, Terry Blanko to one winner, 5000XP Chips, 2 Gumballs, 2000 moolaTo claim these rewards, players simply have to log into the game. More details about the Blanko Community Giveaway will be shared as season 1 nears. On the FlipsideWhy You Should CareMore and more video game companies are looking into blockchain and experimenting with NFTs. While it’s debatable whether blockchain games will become mainstream attractions, Epic Games is certainly paving the way for the transformation.You may also like: Blankos Block Party Announces Retro-Themed Atari Build CompetitionContinue reading on DailyCoin More

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    Ripple (XRP) Shows More Chance to Plummet With 2.49% Decrease

    Positioned in the top 7 in market share according to CoinMarketCap, XRP now has a previous day trading volume of $1,521,572,443.58 and a decrease in price by 4.6%.
    XRP/USDT 1-Hour Chart (Source : TradingView)By trading below the 200 MA, the hourly chart of XRP/USDT reveals a very bearish market sentiment. A bearish order block was formed at $0.3410 when market makers began selling XRP and have not entirely filled their positions ever since.RSI can be used as an additional tool for measuring market volatility: the current RSI value for XRP/USDT stands at 40.63 RSI. A value below 50 means that the market is favoring the sellers at the moment. Moreover, the Average Directional Index (ADX) indicates that XRP price action is highly volatile.
    XRP/USDT 1-Hour Chart (Source : TradingView)Looking at the 1-hour chart of XRP/USDT, Ripple is forming a bull flag inside the sideway market. As a continuation pattern, we can expect that the bull flag will assist the buyers to push the price movement upward. But we have to consider the fact that XRP is now below 200 MA.Breakouts, significant market movement, and support and resistance areas are optimal trading environments for the bull flag pattern. A greater risk-to-reward ratio can be achieved by waiting for a few market confirmations before entering the trade.If XRP breaks the bull flag’s upper trendline and rises higher, it can reach around the resistance area of $0.3600. If, on the other hand, the price breaches the lower trendline, the price can plummet to the support area of $0.3000.According to CoinMarketCap, XRP’s trading volume jumped down as much as 2.49% in just 24 hours, suggesting that the cryptocurrency has lost a few of its supporters during the bear market. XRP’s current price of $0.3287 represents a fall of 2.49% over the last 24 hours.Disclaimer: The views and opinions, as well as all the 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 held liable for any direct or indirect damage or loss.The post Ripple (XRP) Shows More Chance to Plummet With 2.49% Decrease appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    SNB to join 75 basis point hike club on Sept 22, inflation yet to peak – Reuters Poll

    BENGALURU (Reuters) – The Swiss National Bank will join the 75 basis point rate hike club on Thursday to choke off nearly three-decade-high inflation, according to economists polled by Reuters, who also said price rises were yet to peak despite a strong currency.Last week, SNB Chairman Thomas Jordan shared similar concerns and stated the inflation outlook was more uncertain than normal, suggesting more aggressive rate hikes were needed. That expectation for a jumbo rate increase boosted the Swiss franc to its strongest level against the euro since January 2015 on Sept. 15, despite a similar 75 basis point hike from the European Central Bank earlier in the month.The strong franc, which will “help rather than hurt,” according to the SNB, is likely to hold those gains over the coming months as several more rate rises are likely in store.Fifteen of 23 economists forecast the SNB – currently the only central bank in the world with a negative policy rate, at -0.25% – to hike by 75 basis points on Sept. 22 to 0.50%, in line with market pricing.One predicted a 100 basis point hike. The rest expected a 50 basis point rise.”The SNB is benefiting from the room for maneuver created by the ECB’s 75 bps increase at its September meeting. High inflation and a barely over-valued Swiss franc are likely to prompt the SNB to use this leeway,” said Alessandro Bee, economist at UBS.”The strong mark-ups in the gas and electricity market in the short term suggest that inflation could be higher than expected. We believe the SNB may follow the ECB’s September monetary policy assessment and raise its interest rates from -0.25% to 0.50%.”A strong majority of economists, 14 of 17, who replied to a separate question said the chances were low the SNB would go for a 100 basis point rise like the Bank of Canada recently did. Markets are pricing around a 47% probability of such a hike.”Investors expect the SNB to tighten substantially at its upcoming meetings, but we think that they have got ahead of themselves,” said Jack Allen-Reynolds, senior Europe economist at Capital Economics.”After all, while headline inflation is historically high, it is low by international standards…The Bank seems comfortable with the strength of the franc, which is stemming imported inflation.”The SNB has recently departed from a campaign it waged for years to rein in the safe-haven currency, whose strength has restrained its export-reliant economy.Still, 10 of 15 economists said inflation, which has remained above the SNB’s target range of 0-2% for seven straight months, had not peaked yet. Most economists said it would peak at some point next quarter.Price pressures will remain elevated beyond Q4 and is not expected to decline below 2% until 2024.A majority of economists expected the Bank to hike by 25 basis points in Q4 2022, Q1 2023 and Q2 2023, taking the rate to a peak of 1.25%. However, all but one economist said the risks were skewed toward a higher terminal rate than they expected.The ECB, for its part, is due to take its key interest rates significantly higher.”Rate hikes are not the only tool the SNB uses for policy tightening. CHF appreciation…didn’t fully prevent a surge in Swiss inflation, but contained it to 3.5% year over year at peak compared with over 9% in the euro area,” noted analysts at Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) Securities.”That policy mix…is why we eventually expect a lower terminal rate from the SNB than the 2.50% deposit rate we think the ECB will reach at the same time.”(For other stories from the Reuters global economic poll) More

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    Who escapes the great mortgage reset?

    US mortgage rates hit 6 per cent this week, the highest level in 14 years, adding to fears about the housing market. But Americans live in a socialist paradise. Homeowners are shielded from rising interest rates by 30-year government-backed fixed deals. When rates fall, the mortgage can be refinanced, locking in cheaper payments. When rates rise, no pain is passed on.Most of the world lacks this insulation. Refinancing at a higher rate is an increasingly grim prospect for individuals and companies alike. Fitch has warned that borrowers in the UK, Spain and Australia are especially exposed, with between 42 per cent and 93 per cent of mortgages tracking central bank rates or with short-term fixed deals set to expire.This sounds like bad news for the banks. But the consensus is the opposite: margins will improve as lenders jack up rates for borrowers while passing on crumbs to depositors. And this happy situation is supposedly durable because the system has been made safer since the financial crisis.Alastair Ryan, analyst at Bank of America, noted that at the UK’s last serious housing downturn way back in 1989, some 58 per cent of first-time buyers borrowed at a loan-to-value ratio of 95 per cent or more. Last year only 0.2 per cent were permitted to borrow at that level. Despite soaring prices in the interim, houses in Britain are selling at lower multiples of income than 33 years ago. Back then, homeowners were using their houses as cash machines, with mortgage equity withdrawal equivalent to 6 per cent of post-tax household income. This phenomenon has vanished; people make early repayments instead. This conservatism on lending, much of it forced by regulators, may be dire for the prospects of young people hoping to buy a home, but it certainly buttresses banks’ balance sheets. Providing further comfort, regulators put banks through annual stress tests to gauge their ability to endure an economic shock, which they generally pass. But the real world never matches the forecasts. The last UK stress test in 2021 envisaged an unemployment rate of 12 per cent with low inflation. The reverse has happened. Markets have consistently underestimated the level and persistence of inflation and the strength of central bank medicine required to cure it. At the same time as energy and grocery bills surge, mortgage costs will also be rising for more and more homeowners and landlords. This may not cause a financial crisis, but it is not hard to see it causing a housing slump.On the corporate front, many of the largest borrowers have exploited the era of cheap money to extend maturity dates on their debt. High inflation shrinks the value of that debt over time.But this ignores large swaths of the corporate world that are too small or too weak to tap markets for this cheap long-term financing.

    The Financial Times this week profiled some of the companies with bond yields trading at more than 10 percentage points above government debt. They include household names such as Bed Bath & Beyond and WeWork. Some of this debt is maturing in the next 12 months. A great deal more comes due in 2024 and 2025.It is a worrying time for anyone without the luxury of a US mortgage. More