More stories

  • in

    U.S. housing cooldown is recession red flag for markets

    Homebuilder stocks, sales and mortgage data show that previously booming housing market is falling back to earth amid a broader economic cooldown.Surging mortgage rates, exacerbated by Fed hikes this year, have begun to reverse a demand/supply imbalance, the result of a suburban stampede prompted by COVID-19 lockdowns. The ensuing drop in inventories, along with a scarcity of lots, materials and construction labor, has launched home prices into orbit. Combine that with the highest home loan rates in a generation, and affordability has evaporated along with demand.On Tuesday, two additional housing indicators are expected. The first is S&P Case-Shiller’s 20-city composite, which is expected to show year-on-year home prices cooled in May to a still-blistering 20.8%. Also on Tuesday’s docket, the Commerce Department’s new home sales number is expected to have fallen by 4.6% last month.Annual home price growth has been in the double-digits since December 2020, just before demand for loans to buy homes started falling. GRAPHIC-U.S. home prices and mortgage demand, https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-STOCKS/mypmnlwzqvr/caseshiller.png Last week, the National Association of Home Builders’ (NAHB) housing market index builder sentiment plunged to its lowest since May 2020.The seasonally adjusted annualized rate (SAAR) of new home sales compared with NAHB’s gauge of prospective homebuyer traffic, shows the market is in its second month of “pessimistic” territory in July. GRAPHIC-New home sales, https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-STOCKS/xmpjodxaevr/nhs.png Among the challenges homebuilders face are production bottlenecks, rising home building costs and high inflation, according to the NAHB.Those sentiments are also echoed in June housing starts data from the Commerce Department, which fell 2% to a nine-month low.The National Association of Realtors showed sales of pre-owned U.S. homes slid 5.4% from May to June and plunged 14.2% from a year ago. Just since January, existing home sales have slid by 21.1%, a downward slope that coincides with the average 30-year fixed contract rate climbing 249 basis points to 5.82%. This is the highest level since December 2008, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association, which also reports overall mortgage demand has touched a 22-year low. With this cooling demand, the number of months supply of pre-owned homes on the market has recovered to 2.9, the most plentiful inventory print since July 2020. GRAPHIC-Existing home sales, https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-STOCKS/zjpqkzgrapx/ehs.png While data looks backward, the stock market looks forward, reflecting where investors believe the sector will be in six months to a year.The Philadelphia SE Housing index is still outperforming the broader S&P 500 since the nadir of the COVID-19 sell-off on March 23, 2020.But that relationship reversed around the time mortgage rates started on an uphill trek. So far this year, the HGX and the S&P 1500 Homebuilding index have consistently underperformed the bellwether index. GRAPHIC-Housing stocks, https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-STOCKS/klpykyoanpg/hgx.png The Federal Reserve’s two-day policy meeting convenes on Tuesday and is expected to culminate in the second straight 75 basis point interest rate hike. The central bank has pledged to rein in inflation while also trying to avoid tipping the economy into recession.But what does that mean for housing stocks going forward?”The housing market and homebuilding are early cyclical movers and we’re in late-cycle pre-recession,” said Ken Leon, director of equity research at CFRA in Washington. “The trends are going to continue to be challenging for the housing market.” More

  • in

    U.S. business borrowing for equipment falls 1% in June – ELFA

    The companies signed up for $10.3 billion in new loans, leases and lines of credit last month, compared with $10.4 billion a year earlier. However, borrowings rose 6% from January.”Inflation continues to provide a headwind in an otherwise benign economy. The Fed has signaled its resolve to meet these inflationary pressures by steadily increasing short-term interest rates, without throwing cold water on our post-pandemic economic recovery,” ELFA Chief Executive Ralph Petta said in a statement.ELFA, which reports economic activity for the nearly $1 trillion equipment finance sector, said credit approvals totaled 78.1%, up from 76.8% in May. The Washington-based body’s leasing and finance index measures the volume of commercial equipment financed in the United States.The index is based on a survey of 25 members, including Bank of America Corp (NYSE:BAC), and financing affiliates or units of Caterpillar Inc (NYSE:CAT), Dell Technologies (NYSE:DELL) Inc, Siemens AG (OTC:SIEGY), Canon Inc and Volvo AB (OTC:VLVLY).The Equipment Leasing & Finance Foundation, ELFA’s non-profit affiliate, said its confidence index in July is 46.1%, a decrease from 50.9% in June. A reading above 50 indicates a positive business outlook. More

  • in

    Russia cynically threatens the Black Sea grain export deal

    If further proof were needed of the Kremlin’s cynicism, it came this weekend. Barely had the ink dried on a deal a day earlier to allow grain exports to resume from blockaded Ukrainian ports, when Russia hit the port of Odesa with two cruise missiles; two more were shot down. The grain agreement, brokered by the UN and Turkey, aimed to avert a global food crisis that the World Food Programme has warned could push an additional 47mn people into acute hunger. If the hard-won deal now fails, the responsibility will be Moscow’s.Russia’s Black Sea blockade has taken a dangerous toll on a global food supply chain already strained by coronavirus disruptions and poor harvests. Before Moscow’s invasion in February, Ukraine was the world’s fifth-largest exporter of wheat, a vital supplier to countries in the Middle East and Africa. Curbs on Ukrainian exports have left 22mn tonnes of wheat, corn and other grains stuck in silos. Food shortages and price rises are already hitting economies across the developing world.The missile strike is especially damaging since Friday’s agreement relied largely on faith that Russia would stick to commitments not to attack commercial ships carrying grain from Ukrainian ports. Officials warned it was unclear how it would be enforced in case of violations. Trust between Kyiv and Moscow is so lacking that the two signed no agreement between each other, but parallel accords with the UN and Ankara. Ukraine will not undertake large-scale demining of its ports — which could leave them vulnerable to Russian assault — but its pilots will guide merchant grain ships through safe channels. In return for pledges to allow that to happen, Russia won UN and EU assurances to shipowners and insurance companies that they could export Russian grain and fertilisers without falling foul of western sanctions.Russia, in truth, gave no assurances that it would not attack areas of Ukrainian ports not directly involved in grain exports, so Saturday’s strike on what Moscow claims were military targets did not technically break the agreement. Yet traders were already sceptical about how many shipowners would be prepared to risk sailing into Ukrainian ports or pay the hefty risk premiums insurers will demand. Though Kyiv has rightly committed to continue preparing to export grain, even while condemning Moscow’s attack, and called for commercial ships to join “caravans”, there are questions over how significant quantities of grains can safely be loaded if Russian bombardment continues nearby.Moscow may be quietly satisfied. It has complicated life for Kyiv in restarting exports. It has also pushed up wheat futures prices that fell after Friday’s deal, so it will earn more from exports of its own grain that may be made easier by that agreement — or of produce being smuggled out of Ukraine and rebadged as “Russian”. Russia’s foreign minister Sergei Lavrov has meanwhile been dispatched to several African capitals to insist that Ukraine and western sanctions on Russia, not Moscow’s invasion, are the cause of the food crisis.Western countries need to continue to do all they can to facilitate alternative export routes, including by truck and train, for Ukrainian grain and be ready to provide large-scale assistance to countries hit by shortages. They should also engage in more vigorous diplomacy with developing countries that have been notably more sympathetic to the Kremlin’s version of what is happening in Ukraine. President Vladimir Putin’s unprovoked conflict continues to threaten starvation for millions. If that fate comes to pass, Moscow should not be allowed to wriggle out of the consequences. More

  • in

    Planes, trains and automobiles

    Good eveningNowhere is the term “disruption” more apt than when discussing the UK and European travel industry as it struggles to cope with the surge in demand in the first restriction-free summer of the pandemic era.UK motorists have had a torrid time struggling to board trains or ferries to France as a combination of post-Brexit border checks and staff shortages led to a “critical incident” being declared at Dover on Friday as traffic backed up on the M20 motorway. The port blamed inadequate staffing on the French side, while the French pointed out that delays were inevitable given the UK’s choice of a hard Brexit. It has led to processing time at the border rising from 58 seconds per car pre-Brexit to 90 seconds today. And as problems at Dover eased, focus has switched to the port of Folkestone, the new “hotspot of holiday hell”.Flying has become equally burdensome. Although there have also been problems in the US, it is Europe that has become the epicentre of disruption this summer as staff shortages hit airlines, airports and ground services such as baggage handling. Today Lufthansa ground staff announced a 26-hour “warning strike” over wages this week after pay talks broke down. There are some signs that the disruption is hitting people’s appetite for travel, with demand for flying falling among some of Europe’s largest carriers, according to data published last week. UK regulators meanwhile have warned about “harmful practices” in how they treat passengers, threatening action if they did not handle flight disruption more effectively.The lingering threat of Covid remains, as do the uncertainties from the war in Ukraine. Ryanair warned today that the recovery was “strong but still fragile,” even as it reported a return to profits.Europe’s biggest budget airline also warned that “the days of €9.99 fares are probably coming to an end” after fuel prices rocketed from $40 to over $100 a barrel.Train passengers in the UK have also suffered from a combination of strikes — the next action is scheduled for Wednesday — and railways unable to cope with extreme heat.But for those venturing abroad and who manage to reach their holiday destination intact, and with all their luggage in tow, the services they are normally accustomed to may well be in short supply. The surge in demand from holidaymakers has left much of the European tourist industry struggling to cope, especially in the southern eurozone, where hotels, restaurants and tour operators have more than 40,000 unfilled vacancies. The downbeat mood was captured by the Portuguese Hoteliers Association as it echoed the sentiments of Ryanair: “The era of fast, frequent and cheap holidays is over.” Latest newsRussian Gazprom to cut gas deliveries to Europe via Nord Stream 1Ukraine hopes to resume Black Sea grain shipping this weekJoe Biden’s Covid symptoms ‘now almost completely resolved’ (Washington Post)For up-to-the-minute news updates, visit our live blogNeed to know: the economyFears of a German recession increased as the Ifo Institute’s closely watched indicator of business confidence fell to its lowest in more than two years. Gross domestic product figures for the second quarter are out on Friday and are expected to show growth of just 0.1 per cent, following 0.2 per cent in the first three months of the year. Latest for the UK and EuropeJim O’Neill, former chief economist at Goldman Sachs and UK Treasury minister, wrote in the FT of the need for a coherent economic strategy from the two contenders to be the country’s next prime minister, especially on improving productivity.The UK’s financial regulator warned of the dangers of consumers cutting back on insurance as the cost of living squeeze intensified, calling for firms to provide more support so customers are not left without a safety net. The author of a review into reform of capital markets warned London could lose ground to rival cities in the EU and US.Brussels’ attempts to cut gas demand across the EU continue to be watered down, with the “mother of all opt-outs” for southern and eastern member states. The plan is being discussed by EU ambassadors today ahead of an emergency meeting of energy ministers tomorrow. European gas prices are expected to remain high for years to come even after flows from Russia resumed last week.Global latestOn Wednesday, the US Federal Reserve is set to raise its benchmark interest rate by 0.75 percentage points for the second consecutive month. The strategy beyond that is less certain, writes US economics editor Colby Smith.Confidence in the Argentine economy is vanishing as the government struggles with political infighting, increasing domestic debt and inflation surging towards 90 per cent. Argentines are rushing to the black market to ditch their rapidly devaluing pesos for US dollars. In Brazil, the presidential election battle kicked up a gear with the launch of incumbent Jair Bolsonaro’s campaign.Lower interest rates on long-term deposits at some of China’s biggest banks are pointing to a sustained slowdown in growth. Beijing’s zero-Covid policy and housing market turmoil were undermining the post-lockdown economy, according to one economist.Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov is touring Africa to fend off accusations that Russia is “exporting hunger” by its actions in Ukraine.Need to know: businessBillions of dollars have been lost from second-quarter sales of US companies because of the strength of the dollar. The currency shock is particularly bad for groups with a substantial portion of their business outside the US. US corporate finance and deals editor James Fontanella-Khan says Wall Street bankers need to prepare for some cost-cutting as new economic realities take hold.Swiss wealth manager Julius Baer reported a 26 per drop in first-half profits to Sfr450mn ($468mn) amid “one of the worst six-month periods for capital markets in decades”. Shares in Philips tumbled today after the Dutch health tech company cut its profits and sales forecasts, blaming supply chain problems, pandemic lockdowns, surging inflation and the war in Ukraine. The return of European travel, alongside increasing customer numbers and price rises helped boost growth at Vodafone. The telecoms company said it was on track to hit its full-year earnings target of between €15bn and €15.5bn.The London office market is undergoing the biggest “reset” since the financial crisis, according to BNP Paribas. After a jump in the first quarter, buyers have retreated or are pushing for bigger discounts as the economic outlook darkens. Consumer goods groups are suffering from shoppers trading down to supermarket own-brands as the cost of living crisis bites. Although commodity prices have fallen from this year’s highs, the big consumer groups such as Pepsi are still passing on extra costs in the form of higher prices.The World of WorkThe UK is unique in developed countries in the number of working age people neither employed nor seeking work rising in almost every quarter since the pandemic began. The main reason for this stalled labour recovery, writes John Burn-Murdoch, is chronic illness.Two years of pandemic have severely limited our ability to network, writes entrepreneur Shola Asante, but the skill is absolutely essential for those aiming for the top. Women often label natural, reasonable self-doubt as “imposter syndrome” when it’s just part of regular professional life, writes Viv Groskop. “We are decades into universal suffrage, education and literacy and yet so much data illustrates our desperation to cling on to weird medieval gender attitudes that are reflected across society and, most markedly, wherever there is power, status and money,” she says. The three stages of criticism generally consist of 1) cursing your critic 2) lamenting your situation 3) resolving to make things better. But it is possible to skip straight to stage three by getting better at giving — and receiving — constructive criticism, writes Esther Bintliff.The pandemic-induced “great resignation”, where employees previously stuck in their offices were spurred to reconsider their career plans, is finally catching on in Japan with an explosion of social enterprises — for-profit organisations created to benefit the community. Get the latest worldwide picture with our vaccine trackerAnd finally…Fancy a weekend in a flying saucer? How about a week in a yellow submarine? Or inside a six tonne potato? Airbnb’s new OMG! feature showcases the weirdest places to stay on its network and is a celebration of that oft-dismissed architectural device: the folly.‘UFO’ sleeping four in south Pembrokeshire, Wales, for rent on Airbnb More

  • in

    Philips blames China and supply logjams for latest guidance cut

    Shares in Royal Philips fell more than 10 per cent after the health technology company cut its guidance for the second time this year, pinning the blame on coronavirus pandemic lockdowns in China.The medical equipment maker on Monday lowered its estimate for full-year sales growth to between 1 and 3 per cent, down from a previous forecast of between 3 and 5 per cent.“Production in several of our factories, as well as those of our suppliers in China, was suspended for two months, which exacerbated the global supply chain and cost challenges,” said Frans van Houten, chief executive of Philips.“The impact of the Covid lockdowns significantly affected our business in China, where comparable sales and order intake declined almost 30 per cent in the quarter,” he added.The profit downgrade marks the latest setback in a bruising period for Philips that has seen its share price fall 60 per cent from its peak, after announcing a costly recall of respiratory devices.For the three months to June 30, the company reported a 7 per cent year-on-year decline in sales to €4.18bn, which Philips attributed to supply chain bottlenecks, lockdowns in China, inflationary pressures and fallout from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.The group reported earnings before interest, tax and amortisation of €216mn for the quarter, missing analysts’ expectations of €324mn.Shares in Amsterdam-listed Philips on Monday fell 10.6 per cent to €19.42, a nine-year low.Van Houten insisted the picture would improve later in the year, saying that Philips had stepped up “actions on productivity, pricing and strengthening supply chain resilience to mitigate the ongoing headwinds and associated risks”.A stronger order book and improved supply chains “give me confidence that we will resume growth from the third quarter onwards”, he added, as well as expected better profitability “in the second half of the year”.Monday’s guidance cuts follow a profit warning by Philips in January. The company was forced to recall of millions of medical devices containing a faulty component on concerns that patients may have been harmed by inhaling particles of toxic chemicals.The group on Monday said its subsidiary Philips Respironics was making “solid progress” with its programme to repair or replace the devices, which are primarily used to assist the breathing of patients suffering from sleep apnoea. More

  • in

    Investment Firm Files Lawsuit Against Terra on Behalf of Holders

    Terraforms Lab is once again in the news, this time for being slapped with a class action lawsuit in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California. The global investor rights firm Bragar Eagel & Squire, P.C. announced the filing of this lawsuit on behalf of Terra token holders.The names mentioned in the lawsuit are: Jump Crypto, Jump Trading LLC, Republic Capital, Republic Maximal LLC, Tribe Capital, DFinance Capital, DFinance Technologies, GSR/GSR Markets Limited, Three Arrows Capital Ptd. Ltd., Do Kwon, and Nicholas Platias.In detail, this new case that Terra will have to fight in court has been filed on behalf of the people and organizations that bought Terra’s ill-fated token, LUNA. Interestingly, the lawsuit mentions a whole list of other coins as well.Within the filed lawsuit, Terra is accused of misleading investors and getting them to buy more tokens at artificially inflated prices. Also, they allege that Terraform labs and other defendants violated provisions of the Securities Act by not registering Terra’s token. Additionally, Terra is accused of violating the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO).Encouraging more investors to contact the firm, Bragar Eagel & Squire P.C., says:This is the second lawsuit filed in the US against Terra. Earlier last month, a lawsuit was filed alleging Terraform Labs, and founder Do Kwon of violating federal securities laws with the sale and promotion of UST and LUNA.Continue reading on CoinQuora More

  • in

    Wall St set to open higher at start of big week for earnings, Fed meet

    (Reuters) -U.S. stock indexes were set to open higher on Monday as investors braced for a Federal Reserve policy meeting during the week and results from some of the biggest companies to gauge the impact of a strong dollar and soaring inflation on demand.Apple Inc (NASDAQ:AAPL), Amazon.com Inc (NASDAQ:AMZN), Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) Inc, Microsoft Corp (NASDAQ:MSFT) and Meta Platforms Inc, which together account for $8.9 trillion in market capitalization, or a quarter of the benchmark index’s weightage, are scheduled to post earnings this week.”The really big part of earnings season is here. So with confidence coming back right now, it can also quickly dissipate if we have disappointments from companies like Google and Microsoft on Tuesday,” said Dennis Dick, retail trader at Triple D Trading. Shares of the high-growth companies rose between 0.5% and 1.2% in premarket trading.The dollar, hovering near 20-year highs following an aggressive tightening cycle by the Fed, is expected be a headwind for U.S. companies, especially those with a big global presence.Financial stocks including American Express Co (NYSE:AXP) and Citigroup Inc (NYSE:C) advanced more than 1% each. Industrial shares such as Boeing (NYSE:BA) Co and 3M Co, also set to report this week, gained 0.8% each. All of the three major indexes closed higher last week. The tech heavy Nasdaq added 3.3%, the S&P 500 2.4% and the Dow gained 2%.The Fed is widely expected to deliver another super-sized 75 basis-point rate hike at the end of its two-day monetary policy meeting on Wednesday, effectively ending pandemic-era support for the U.S. economy. Focus will also be on the press conference by Chair Jerome Powell for clues on policymakers’ thinking on future rate hikes amid concerns over an aggressive tightening tipping the economy into a recession.”We expect Powell to remind that 75bps hikes are unusually large and that the funds rate is close to the FOMC’s estimate of its longer-run level,” said Paolo Zanghieri, senior economist at Generali (BIT:GASI) Investments. “This, and the signs of a material slowdown of the economy should tilt the balance for a 50 bps hike (in September), followed by another one in November and December.”Futures contracts tied to the U.S. Federal Reserve’s policy rate suggested on Monday that benchmark interest rates will peak in January 2023 compared to February last week. Meanwhile, advance second-quarter GDP data on Thursday is likely to be negative. At 8:35 a.m. ET, Dow e-minis were up 148 points, or 0.46%, S&P 500 e-minis were up 15.75 points, or 0.4%, and Nasdaq 100 e-minis were up 36.25 points, or 0.29%.Shares of Newmont Corp fell 3.3% after the miner raised its annual cost forecast and missed its second-quarter profit, hurt by lower gold prices and inflationary pressures. More

  • in

    Institutional Investors Have Sold 236K BTC Worth $5.3 Billion Since Terra’s Collapse in May

    Selling by Institutional Investors Intensified Following Terra’s ImplosionWhile there are a great many factors that have contributed to the longevity of the 2022 crypto winter, One defining moment in the market crash, which has so far seen more than 70% of the industry’s valuation wiped out, was the utter collapse of the Terra ecosystem.Since May 10th, shortly after Terra’s implosion, on-chain data shows that institutional investors have sold up to 236,237 Bitcoin (BTC), valued at $5.3 billion at bitcoin’s current price at the time of writing.
    Terra’s Role in the Institutional Dump of BitcoinAccording to Vetle Lunde, an analyst at Arcane Research, “it all started with Do Kwon.” He tweeted:Lunde explained that, as part of Terra’s unsuccessful attempt to help its algorithmic stablecoin, UST, regain its dollar peg, the Luna Foundation Guard (LFG) dumped 80,081 BTC from its holdings.The Terra ecosystem’s desctruction, along with the sudden bitcoin dump, forced the price of bitcoin from $32,600 on May 10th, to as low as $19,000 on June 19th. The subsequent steep decline in profits further prompted miners to sell, as the amount of BTC offloaded by miners skyrocketed, seeing them sell 14,600 in June alone.The latest institution to have dumped its bitcoin holdings is Elon Musk’s Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA). Musk announced that the electric car manufacturer had sold 29,060 BTC ( approximately 75% of its holdings) for $936 million at the end of the second quarter.On the FlipsideWhy You Should CareStarting the year in a downward spiral due to macroeconomic influences, the implosion of Terra, and more recent BTC dumps, have all contributed to significant losses for Bitcoin and the broader crypto market.Read about Tesla’s Bitcoin sale below:Elon Musk’s Tesla Sells 75% of Its Bitcoin in Q2, Records 32% Profit Drop from Q1Find out the latest in the Three Arrows Capital saga:The Race: Three Arrows Capital (3AC) Founders Detained in Dubai AirportContinue reading on DailyCoin More