More stories

  • in

    Japan Aug manufacturers' mood rises to 7-month high – Reuters Tankan

    TOKYO (Reuters) – Japanese manufacturers’ business confidence improved in August after last month’s stall, while service-sector firms’ mood rose for a second month to the highest point in nearly three years, the Reuters Tankan poll showed.Although commodity inflation continues to squeeze profits, demand is returning, according to the surveyed companies in the world’s third-largest economy, which posted a rebound in April-June gross domestic product on Monday.The prospect for further recovery, however, is subdued on inflationary pressures, a domestic COVID-19 relapse and a murky supply outlook for key components like semiconductors.Manufacturers expected a slight improvement in the next three months, and service companies’ outlook index was flat in the Aug. 2-12 poll, which tracks the Bank of Japan’s (BOJ) closely followed “tankan” quarterly survey.”Economic reopening is under way and consumption appears to be picking up, although we’re not without the risk that more and more price hikes could chill consumers,” said a food manufacturing firm manager in the poll of 495 big and mid-sized companies, of which 256 responded.The Reuters Tankan manufacturers’ sentiment index advanced to 13 in August from 9 in the previous month, marking a seven-month high. The service-sector index rose to 19 from the prior month’s 14 and hit its highest point since October 2019.(For a detailed table of the results, click)Sub-indexes for manufacturers dealing in raw materials such as chemicals and oil refinery/ceramics saw double-digit increases, thanks to robust demand for semiconductor-related goods. Textiles/paper industries’ mood was down by 20 points on prolonged cost increases.The sub-index for transport equipment manufacturers was unchanged at minus 38, with some citing automakers’ production cuts and chip shortages as reasons for the stalling recovery.Among service-sector businesses, transport/utility firms and wholesalers led the improvement, in which multiple respondents said a weak yen is boosting overseas profits.The reading for “other services”, a category that includes restaurants and hotels, fell by 10 points, as face-to-face services took hit from Japan’s rapid COVID-19 resurgence late last month, although the government has not reinstated any restrictions.On the three-month forward outlook, manufacturers expected their mood to rise 2 points to 15 in November, whereas services firms projected that sentiment would remain steady at 19, the poll showed. More

  • in

    Elon Musk says he is buying Manchester United

    Musk, the richest person in the world, has a history of making irreverent tweets, and it was not immediately clear whether he planned to pursue a deal.”I’m buying Manchester United ur welcome,” Musk said in a tweet.Manchester United is one of the world’s best supported football clubs. They have been champions of England a record 20 times and have won the European Cup, the most prestigious club competition in the global game, three times.The team is controlled by the American Glazer family, who did not immediately respond to a request for comment.The football club had a market capitalization of $2.08 billion, as of Tuesday’s stock market close.Manchester United fans have in recent years protested against the Glazers, who bought the club for 790 million pounds ($955.51 million) in 2005, due to the team’s struggles on the pitch.The anti-Glazer movement gained momentum last year after United were involved in a failed attempt to form a breakaway European Super League.Some fans have urged Musk to buy Manchester United instead of buying Twitter (NYSE:TWTR). Musk is trying to exit a $44 billion agreement to buy the social media company, which has taken him to court.($1=0.8268 pounds) More

  • in

    Coin Center may challenge US Treasury’s sanctions on Tornado Cash in court

    In a Monday blog post, Coin Center executive director Jerry Brito and director of research Peter Van Valkenburgh alleged OFAC “overstepped its legal authority” when it named cryptocurrency mixer Tornado Cash and 44 associated wallet addresses to its list of Specially Designated Nationals, or SDNs, on Aug. 8. The directors claimed Treasury’s actions could have potentially violated U.S. residents’ “constitutional rights to due process and free speech” and they were exploring bringing the matter to court.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

  • in

    China’s Reliance on Taiwan Would Make Trade Retaliation Costly

    The value of trade targeted by China’s sanctions contributes a tiny amount of less than 1% to Taiwan’s gross domestic product, according to economists, taking the sting out of China’s announcements. Beijing could ramp up actions by targeting more food products, wood or minerals. But levies on any big-ticket items that would cause real damage to Taipei — such as semiconductors — are near-unthinkable, given China’s reliance on the island for cutting-edge technology.“The chance remains relatively low” for China to target Taiwanese tech, said Ma Tieying, an economist at DBS Group Holdings Ltd. “If you look at Taiwan’s role in global semiconductor supply, it’s very much dominant. It would be very difficult for China to find the alternative supply if it bans the Taiwan-made semiconductors.”Beijing still has a few tools it could deploy to pressure Taipei. China and Hong Kong account for around 40% of Taiwan’s total exports, though Taipei has made efforts to reduce its economic dependence on China in recent years. More restrictions would be an economic headache for Taiwan, which is already grappling with slowing global demand for electronics and high inflation, cooling its growth outlook.Here’s a look at what China has already targeted and how likely more measures against Taiwan are:Trade SanctionsThe trade sanctions Beijing has already inflicted this month are expected to have a marginal impact on Taipei. Food accounts for just 0.4% of cross-strait trade, Goldman Sachs. economists wrote in a research note last week. In all, bilateral trade between the two economies reached $328.3 billion last year.The recent restrictions impacting citrus fruits and some fish exports might have an impact of less than 0.1% on Taiwan’s GDP, the Goldman economists said.There’s also evidence of other tension, including Chinese customs data that show Beijing has blocked other food imports, though it’s not clear when those suspensions happened.If China wants to mitigate the fallout of sanctions on its own economy, it could target Taiwanese wood, minerals, shoes or hats. Taiwan’s trade relies significantly more on delivering those items to China than China does on receiving them from the island, according to a DBS report. China would also have an easier time finding alternative sources for those products, according to DBS. For instance, one-fifth of Taiwanese wood is exported to China, but these comprise only some 0.1% of China’s total wood imports. Other countries where China imports wood from include Russia, the US and Australia.China could also restrict more of its own exports to Taiwan, as it did with natural sand. There’s some historical precedent for doing so, as Beijing previously halted sand exports in 2007 for about a year, citing environmental concerns. Taiwan, though, has reduced its reliance on China in that area since that ban more than a decade ago, according to economists at  JPMorgan, who called the most recent restrictions “mainly symbolic.”Technological PowerIt’s unsurprising that technology is at the heart of trade across the Taiwan Strait, comprising nearly 70% of Taiwan’s total exports to China.Taiwan is known as the world’s leading supplier of semiconductors, thanks to the outsized dominance of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., which on its own accounts for around half of the global foundry market. It would be very difficult for China to find an alternative supplier if it bars chips imports from Taiwan, particularly for the most advanced 5-nanometer and 7-nanometer chips.China and other major countries, including the US and Japan, have sought to boost domestic investments in semiconductors and to entice companies like TSMC to build plants in their countries, in part to ease the geopolitical risks of potential disruptions to Taiwan’s supply of chips.Chinese chip-makers such as Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. have also had to contend with US sanctions and tightening export restrictions as Washington tries to curb Beijing’s chip ambitions. While homegrown firms in China have made strides in producing advanced chips, industry experts say they remain several years behind TSMC’s standards, meaning the Taiwanese firm remains a key resource for China.Investment TiesThere are other ways in which the two economies are intertwined aside from trade across the Taiwan Strait. Many of Taiwan’s major electronic firms have production bases inside of China, including Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., which is the main iPhone assembler for Apple Inc (NASDAQ:AAPL). The company, also called Foxconn, was at one point known as the largest private employer in China, with ambitions to expand to more than a million workers. The company’s plant in Zhengzhou alone employs some 200,000 workers, according to a report earlier this year in the local Henan Daily newspaper. That could make moves by Beijing to crack down on Taiwanese firms like Foxconn difficult to pull off without impacting those companies’ contributions to the local economy. Tourism is another avenue that China could target. The effects might be limited, though, as China had restricted visas for its citizens to travel to Taiwan before the Covid shutdown. Tsai’s government, meanwhile, has policies encouraging tourism and travel from other regions, including Southeast Asia.Taiwan has been looking to diminish its dependence on China in recent years, with Tsai exploring ways to bolster trade and investment with Southeast Asia, India, Australia and New Zealand. Taipei last year asked to join Asia-Pacific’s biggest working trade deal, though its application is still pending. Supply ChainsActions against Taiwan by China — such as more military drills — could also impact supply routes in the Taiwan Strait, which is one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes. Almost half of the global container fleet and 88% of the world’s largest ships by tonnage passed through the waterway this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.More aggressive actions in the strait, though, could have more of an impact on trade routes involving Chinese ports than Taiwanese ones. The recent Chinese military exercises have had limited impact on container shipping in the Taiwan Strait, beyond some divergence of vessels away from specified military exclusion zones, said Tan Hua Joo, a consultant at the container analysis firm Linerlytica. While access to Taiwanese ports is not dependent on passage through the strait, he added, entry to ports in Hong Kong and northern China often are. “If there’s full-blown military action, that would be a completely different story,” he said. “But given the experience in the last two weeks, I think its quite clear that China has no intention of blocking the trade routes because its own trade volumes would also be affected if there was any vessel transit restrictions.”Economists also suspect Beijing could take steps to restrict more trade in the second half of 2022, given that President Xi Jinping may want to bolster his power ahead of a Communist Party Congress later this year, when he is expected to secure a historic third term in office. Beijing claims the self-governed island as its own territory, and has made unification a top strategic priority.“China may broaden the trade restriction measures in the coming months or quarters,” Ma from DBS said. “Given the very busy political calendar going forward, I think it’s possible that the tensions between Beijing and Taipei may escalate gradually going forward.”©2022 Bloomberg L.P. More

  • in

    2017 ICOs aren't over yet: SEC files suit against Dragonchain and its founder

    In a Tuesday notice, the SEC said it had charged Dragonchain, the Dragonchain Foundation, the Dragon Company, and their founder John Joseph Roets for raising $16.5 million in a presale and initial coin offering from 2017. According to the financial regulator, Roets, Dragonchain, and the Dragonchain Foundation allegedly conducted an unregistered offering of the blockchain’s DRGN tokens in an August 2017 presale and an October and November 2017 ICO, raising $14 million. All three entities and their founder also allegedly sold $2.5 million worth of DRGNs “to cover business expenditures to further develop and market Dragonchain technology” from 2019 to 2022.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

  • in

    Beijing is tanking the domestic economy — and helping the world

    The writer is the founder of The Overshoot and the co-author of Trade Wars Are Class Wars.China’s crackdown on property developers and its draconian “Covid Zero” policies are bad news for most of its people, as well as businesses abroad hoping to make money from Chinese customers. But China’s internal troubles have an upside: lower demand for imported metals, energy, food and capital goods is alleviating inflationary pressures in the rest of the world. For the first time in decades, the country’s enormous trade surplus is a boon for workers elsewhere.The downturn in the housing market began last summer in response to government restrictions on mortgage borrowing and developer leverage. Homebuilders sold an average of 156mn sq m a month of residential floor space from April to June 2021. This year in the same period, Chinese developers have sold just 106mn sq m a month.The plunge in demand has flowed through to new building, with the amount of “residential floor space started” in April-June 2022 down by nearly half compared to last year. The pace of homebuilding has not been this slow since 2009.The result is extra supply for the rest of the world. Iron ore, metallurgical coal and copper are essential materials for making construction steel, household appliances and electrical wiring. Before the recent downturn, China consumed about two-thirds of the world’s iron ore and metallurgical coal and about 40 per cent of the copper. Lower demand means lower prices. Compared with the recent peak in July 2021, iron ore futures are down by half, while Chinese metallurgical coal prices are down by about a third. Global copper prices have dropped by a quarter despite the expected tailwind of additional climate-related green investments in the US and Europe.

    You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.

    This has broader ramifications. Residential real estate is also the only asset class broadly available to Chinese savers outside of bank deposits, dwarfing the value of Chinese stocks and bonds. Until recently, Chinese consumers borrowed from banks to buy new homes — which had yet to be built — as investment properties. Now, developers are failing to finish their projects for lack of cash, some would-be homebuyers are refusing to pay their mortgages, and some local banks are stiffing depositors.On top of that, China’s provincial and local governments had relied on revenues from land sales to cover about a third of their spending. That money is no longer coming in. According to China’s ministry of finance, local government revenues from land sales so far this year were 31 per cent lower than in the first six months of 2021. While local government bond issuance is soaring — the amount raised in May and June 2022 was the largest two-month sum ever — this mostly reflects cash flow shortfalls rather than new investment spending. Desperation is leading some local governments to raise money at around 9 per cent yields from household savers even though the central government issues 10-year bonds at yields under 3 per cent.The impact of China’s housing crash is being compounded by the government’s Covid-related restrictions. Chinese consumer spending in the first half of 2022 was barely higher than in the first half of 2021 after accounting for inflation, and is now running more than 10 per cent below the pre-pandemic trend. Chinese oil refiners have been processing 10 per cent less crude oil since April compared with last spring thanks to the plunge in petrol demand. Electricity consumption, which had been expanding by about 7 per cent a year before the pandemic, is now growing just 2 per cent. China’s weakness has been a potent counterweight to the strain on global energy supplies caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.

    China’s domestic weakness is crushing demand for goods from the rest of the world. In dollar terms, spending on imports has been flat since the end of last year. Factor in rising prices, and China’s real import demand is down about 8 per cent since the lockdowns began, according to estimates from the Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis. China’s exports continue to rise, however, providing foreign consumers and businesses with the goods they need.In the past, the massive imbalance between China’s healthy exports and weak imports was a drag on the global economy, depriving workers elsewhere of the incomes they would have earned selling goods and services to Chinese customers. But now that inflation and commodity shortages are bigger concerns than underemployment, China’s troubles may be just what the rest of the world needs. More

  • in

    Britain launches dispute resolution with EU over post-Brexit research

    Under a trade agreement signed at the end of 2020, Britain negotiated access to a range of science and innovation programmes, including Horizon, a 95.5 billion euro ($97 billion) programme that offers grants and projects to researchers.But Britain says, 18 months on, the EU has yet to finalise access to Horizon, Copernicus, the earth observation programme on climate change, Euratom, the nuclear research programme, and to services such as Space Surveillance and Tracking.Both sides have said cooperation in research would be mutually beneficial but relations have soured over part of the Brexit divorce deal governing trade with the British province of Northern Ireland, prompting the EU to launch legal proceedings.”The EU is in clear breach of our agreement, repeatedly seeking to politicise vital scientific cooperation by refusing to finalise access to these important programmes,” foreign minister Liz Truss said in a statement.”We cannot allow this to continue. That is why the UK has now launched formal consultations and will do everything necessary to protect the scientific community,” said Truss, also the frontrunner to replace Boris Johnson as prime minister.Daniel Ferrie, a spokesman for the European Commission, said earlier on Tuesday he had seen reports of the action but had yet to receive formal notification, repeating that Brussels recognised the “mutual benefits in cooperation and science research and innovation, nuclear research and space”.”However, it’s important to recall the political context of this: there are serious difficulties in the implementation of the withdrawal agreement and parts of the Trade and Cooperation agreement,” he said.”The TCA, the trade and cooperation agreement, provides neither for a specific obligation for the EU to associate the UK to union programmes at this point in time, nor for a precise deadline to do so.”The EU launched legal proceedings against Britain in June after London published new legislation to override some post-Brexit rules for Northern Ireland, and Brussels has thrown doubt on its role within the Horizon Europe programme.Britain said it had set aside around 15 billion pounds for Horizon Europe.($1 = 0.9851 euros) More