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    Omicron Fears, BBB Derailed, China Rate Cut, Zegna Debut – What's Moving Markets

    Investing.com — Global markets are rattled by Omicron-variant Covid-19, as Europe imposes its first full lockdown in a year. Joe Biden’s signature spending bill is in trouble after a key Senator refuses to back it. Stocks are set to open sharply lower on a combination of those factors. China tells the world it’s still loosening monetary policy even as everyone else (except Turkey) tightens it. And oil tumbles as risk-off sentiment surges. Here’s what you need to know in financial markets on Monday, 20th December.1. Omicron rattles world marketsFears of the Omicron variant of Covid-19 rattled world markets after various countries in Europe adopted restrictive measures to stop its spread.The Euro Stoxx 50 fell 1.5% while national European stock markets fell as much as 4.9% (Copenhagen suffering from a 10% drop in Novo Nordisk (NYSE:NVO) stock due to problems with its anti-obesity drug). The euro ticked up against the dollar but Eurozone peripheral bond spreads widened.Over the weekend, the Netherlands imposed a full lockdown of all non-essential shops until January 14th, while the U.K. hinted at introducing stricter measures this week. Germany effectively barred arrivals from the U.K., following similar measures by France last week. In slightly better news, a study by U.K. scientists added to evidence that the very mutations that make Omicron more transmissible may also reduce its ability to damage the lungs, making it less dangerous than previous variants.2. Manchin derails BBBU.S. President Joe Biden’s $2 trillion Build Back Better bill is in jeopardy after West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin said he wouldn’t support the bill in its current form. That means that the bill can’t pass without Republican support in the Senate, which seems all but ruled out.Failure to pass the bill would risk cementing perceptions of the Democratic caucus on Capitol Hill as too divided to rule effectively, hurting their prospects for the mid-term elections next year. By the same token, Opposition from Manchin – one of the most conservative of Democratic lawmakers – reflects on-the-ground suspicion of the party’s tax-and-spend agenda.Goldman Sachs analysts cut their growth forecast for the U.S. economy next year in response to the news, saying it neutered a considerable fiscal stimulus impulse.3. U.S. Stocks set to open lower as Covid infections hit a 3-month highU.S. stocks are set to open the week sharply lower later on a combination of the Omicron and Manchin news.By 6:20 AM ET (1120 GMT), Dow Jones futures were down 410 points, or 1.2%, while S&P 500 futures were down 1.3% and Nasdaq 100 futures were down 1.5%. All three indices had fallen on Friday, with the cyclical-heavy Dow underperforming.The 7-day average for new Covid-19 infections hit its highest in nearly three months at the weekend, amid signs of Omicron exacerbating a seasonal spread that had already begun. That’s starting to show up in various data points such as restaurant reservations.Stocks likely to be in focus include Moderna (NASDAQ:MRNA), which said trial data show that a booster shot of its Covid-19 vaccine sharply increases its effectiveness against Omicron, as well as Italian fashion group Zegna, which makes its debut on the NYSE.4. China’s central bank sends a signalChina’s central bank cut its key interest rate by a token amount, in an effort to reassure local markets that it’s not going to get sucked into a global race to tighten monetary policy. It also hinted at a further easing next year.The People’s Bank of China cut its prime rate by 5 basis points to 3.80%, the first time it has cut in nearly two years. However, such a small cut – to an instrument which is one of many that it uses to fine-tune monetary policy – is unlikely to have a material impact in its own right.The move will still be welcomed by a real estate sector for which financing conditions have tightened sharply in recent weeks as capital markets have effectively closed to new debt issues from all but the safest developers. Kaisa, one of several developers now in default, earlier appointed Houlihan Lokey (NYSE:HLI) to advise it on a debt restructuring.5, Oil tumbles despite Libya shutdown, CFTC dataCrude oil futures tumbled as Europe’s move to clamp down on mobility sparked fears of wider measures to kill demand from other countries. The chief risk in this regard comes from China’s zero-tolerance policy of Covid-19 and its readiness to swiftly impose lockdowns in response to even small and localized outbreaks.By 6:35 AM ET, U.S. crude futures were down 3.5% at $68.36 a barrel, having earlier hit a two-week low. Brent futures were down 2.8% at $71.43 a barrel.That was all despite news that Libya’s largest oil field has shut down, taking 284,000 barrels a day of output offline, barely a week before national elections due in the country. In addition, CFTC data on Friday showed that the pace of selling by speculative investors slowed substantially last week. More

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    2021 in trade: it could have been worse, frankly

    Hello from Brussels and welcome to the last Trade Secrets of 2021. Over the weekend we got some late-breaking news on the UK’s annual Brexit capitulation tradition, which has run uninterrupted since 2018. Lord David Frost, the UK Brexit minister, had embraced the ultimate capitulation and resigned. That followed the UK’s capitulation on Friday over the European Court of Justice’s role as the ultimate arbiter of the Northern Ireland protocol, which we wrote about on Thursday, and which Downing Street had fiercely denied the week before would happen, despite UK officials having earlier briefed EU media that it would. That makes a capitulation double-bill for 2021, a 100 per cent increase on previous years, and executed in a comedically incompetent fashion. Good work, everyone. Last night it turned out Frost would be replaced by foreign secretary Liz Truss, a free trade ideologue and a former Remainer. Ladies and gentlemen, place your bets! (Ours is on more capitulation.) Trade Secrets will be back on January 10 with a whole new lot of trenchant opinions to share and a fresh format with which to do so. For now, we’ll have a look back at the year that was. Charted waters looks at the impact dealmakers think supply chains will have on mergers and acquisitions in 2022. Businesses bail out the bumbling bureaucratsOn the face of it, this year was not a stellar one for world trade. The US and China continued to club each other with high tariffs and harsh rhetoric, the EU’s flagship deal with China was flung unceremoniously into the deep freeze, supply chains around the world were disrupted as port after port became snarled up, semiconductor stocks were exhausted and Covid-19 forced the postponement of the World Trade Organization ministerial meeting. Not exactly a vintage turn around the sun.And yet, looking back to where we were a year ago, well, frankly, things could have been worse. The good news hasn’t been so much to do with what policymakers have been up to so much as the remarkable resilience of trade itself. (We may have gone on about the relative contributions of business folk versus bureaucrats once or twice this year already.)This time last year, the WTO predicted that goods trade this year would increase 7.2 per cent after a fall of 9.2 per cent in 2020, a forecast it has now upgraded to 10.8 per cent growth in 2021 with a much smaller fall last year. Encouragingly, it seems likely that last year’s crunch was mainly down to a massive drop-off in demand rather than the supply-side shocks from Covid interrupting production and trade. Indeed, the truly heroic policymakers of trade aren’t actually trade ministers but the finance ministries and central banks who kept the stimulus coming. Despite the terrifying infectiousness of the Omicron variant, economists are generally estimating a rather modest hit to global growth and trade compared with the fear of meltdown during previous waves.So, what of said trade policymakers? The known unknown was just how far US president Joe Biden’s administration would break with the destructive modus operandi of Donald Trump — not just the protectionism but the aggression, caprice and spite with which it was implemented. The answer, sadly, is not far enough.To be fair, unlike Trump, the Biden administration hasn’t gone around picking fights for the hell of it. Where it’s been able to settle disputes without compromising its core objectives, it’s done so, particularly with the EU. The Airbus/Boeing litigation, the digital services tax stand-off, the steel and aluminium tariffs dispute: all have been defused with jury-rigged deals that aren’t pretty but have done the job for now.But its core objectives, under the highly misleading rubric of a “worker-centred” trade policy, still rule out a lot and embody a wrong-headed protectionist approach. By all accounts Katherine Tai, the US trade representative, is considerably more constructive to deal with than her abrasive predecessor, Robert Lighthizer. But the US is still trying to make work the “Phase 1” trade deal with China signed by Trump, it’s still failing to engage meaningfully in WTO reform and it’s ruled out joining the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, or CPTPP, much to the disappointment of its trade and foreign policy allies in the region such as Japan and Australia. This newsletter isn’t a set a of predictions for next year, but we very much doubt this is going to change much in 2022, not least because there are midterm elections at the end of it. Maybe we’ll get some movement towards WTO reform, the US at least acknowledging that allowing the dispute settlement system to wither and die is on balance a bad thing, but they’re going to be focused on saying nothing that can be taken down and used in evidence against them in the elections.On the WTO itself, you have to feel sorry for the heroic efforts by its leadership and the chairs of negotiating committees to get something done at the December ministerial. To be honest, a big breakthrough didn’t seem likely, but in any case it might have been a cathartic experience if the meeting had failed to reach agreement. As it is, the postponement because of Covid just pushes that question into next year.From the EU’s point of view, apart from seeing its ill-judged China deal deservedly enter cryogenic suspension, the European Commission was largely concerned with tooling up with a series of legal weapons to implement its favoured policy of strategic autonomy. As for China itself, it has continued its dual-circulation strategy of separating its external from its domestically focused sector.But here’s the thing. China has nonetheless continued to attract a lot of foreign direct investment. As we said before, goods (and services) trade has roared back. There are divergences in the treatment of personal data, sure, but so far just not that much evidence of a bifurcation or trifurcation of the global economy. Reshoring hasn’t happened very much. Supply chain blockages are a serious problem, but for the moment we’re sticking with our default view that they’re mainly about sudden and unsustainable surges in demand. Globalisation hasn’t ended, still less gone into reverse. The world trading system has performed a lot better than perhaps its policymakers deserve. And in this Covid-ridden festive season we can at least be grateful for that.Charted watersIt’s fair to say that we’re not surprised by the poll below, from M&A data specialists Datasite, which shows that supply chain snags are one of the top reasons listed by executives for why deals in 2022 could go awry. Still, in some of the worst affected sectors — such as the auto industry — the snags are so bad that more deals are now taking place. “While [supply chain problems are] putting pressure [on the auto industry] to make some tough choices, including potentially how it partners with semiconductor providers on supply and research, it may also mean more investing to acquire technology for both processes and products to stem nearer-term liquidity challenges,” Merlin Piscitelli, Datasite chief revenue officer for Europe and the Middle East, said. “In fact, we’re seeing some of this activity in real time on our platform, where new global industrial, transportation and defence projects, which are deals at their inception rather than announced, are up 54 per cent year over year January 1 through mid-December.” Claire JonesTrade linksThe Peterson Institute’s Chad Bown on the false allure of managed trade.A Republican senator said he would hold up the confirmation of the US’s nominee for ambassador to the WTO, Maria Pagan, because of the administration’s support for an intellectual property waiver for Covid medical treatments that many consider in any case to be merely a political stunt.The development economist Branko Milanovic argues we’re not seeing a crisis of capitalism so much as the unequal distribution of its benefits.Amazon is competing hard with the UK Royal Mail delivery service as couriers in Britain prepare for a tough Christmas. Uniqlo parent Fast Retailing is one of the Japanese apparel makers scrambling (Nikkei, $) to rework their supply chains before Joe Biden signs into law a US ban on imports from Xinjiang. The Aukus security alliance is an ideal vehicle for Australia, the US and UK to forge a vertically integrated rare earths supply chain, analyst Liam Gibson says ($) in Nikkei Asia. Alan Beattie and Francesca Regalado More

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    Polish central bankers see hikes ahead, but split on scale

    WARSAW (Reuters) – Poland will likely see a 50-basis-point rate hike in January and that will not be the end of policy tightening, central banker Lukasz Hardt said on Monday, though a dovish Monetary Policy Council (MPC) colleague said hiking too much could hurt growth.With inflation hitting 7.8% in November, the highest in over two decades, markets expect the Polish central bank to continue raising rates but members of its MPC are split over the pace and extent of tightening needed.”We raised rates by 50 basis points in December. In my opinion a repeat of this is highly likely, meaning a hike of 50 basis points in January,” Hardt, one of the most hawkish MPC members, told online broadcaster Telewizja wPolsce.plFellow hawk Kamil Zubelewicz said in comments published by website Interia.pl on Monday that the main rate of 1.75% “is currently far too low”.He added: “If the Council wanted to accept inflation at a high level of 3.5% annually, the rates would have to be raised to 4.5%. But even this does not guarantee quick results.”He said that in his opinion a 50-basis-point hike would not be a big move. “I believe that it is better to carry out a series of increases in a few decisive steps and close the whole process by February. But I have not seen these decisive steps yet.”However, in an article for the wGospodarce.pl website, dovish rate-setter Eryk Lon said a “drastic” hike would hurt the economy, though it was possible he could support a small increase in the cost of credit.”I take into account various types of scenarios, including those in which circumstances arise that justify my support for a relatively small rate hike,” Lon wrote.A big increase in COVID-19 infections would be an argument for keeping rates stable in January, he added.Zubelewicz said double-digit inflation could not be ruled out. “I do not want to scare anyone, of course, but we could have inflation of over 10%,” he was quoted as saying by Interia.pl. More

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    New German govt picks Joachim Nagel as next Bundesbank chief

    Nagel, a former Bundesbank board member, will take over on Jan. 1 from Jens Weidmann, who quit five years early after a decade of fruitless opposition to the European Central Bank’s aggressive stimulus policy of sub-zero interest rates and massive purchases of government bonds.The 55-year old economist will take charge of the euro zone’s biggest national central bank at a tense moment. Inflation is more than twice the ECB 2% target, and opposing camps within the ECB’s Governing Council have distinctly different views on its likely evolution.”In view of inflation risks, the importance of a stability-oriented monetary policy is growing,” Lindner said on Twitter (NYSE:TWTR). “Nagel is an experienced person, who ensures continuity at the Bundesbank.” Weidmann unsuccessfully opposed the ECB’s decision in his last meeting on Thursday to extend stimulus and warned that inflation could exceed the ECB’s benign projections. A former board member of the state-owned development bank KfW Bank, Nagel currently works for the Bank for International Settlements, which is often considered the central bank of central banks.Early in his career, he was also a consultant for the SPD, the party that took over government earlier this month and will make the Bundesbank appointment one of its first decisions. Although he has not publicly expressed views on monetary policy for years, speeches he gave as a Bundesbank board member show he adhered to the German central bank’s tough stance on inflation and emphasis on market discipline for banks and governments. “Nagel can be trusted to continue the German Bundesbank tradition in the debates in the ECB,” Friedrich Heinemann, an expert at the ZEW economic research institute, said. “He has extensive monetary policy and financial expertise, which is essential for today’s complex monetary policy decisions.” Heading the Bundesbank, Nagel would join Isabel Schnabel on the ECB’s Governing Council as one of two Germans.”Congratulations to Joachim #Nagel for being nominated as new President @bundesbank!” Schnabel wrote on Twitter. “There are many important tasks ahead of us.”Germany has often been at odds with the ECB and the bank has repeatedly come under fire from government officials, the media and academics for policies they claimed helped weaker economies at the expense of ordinary Germans.Their criticism, however, has often fallen on deaf ears at the ECB so Germans have responded by quitting, both from the Bundesbank and the ECB board, with nearly half a dozen top officials leaving in just over a decade after unsuccessfully opposing ultra-easy ECB policy.”Nagel is a great and smart economist who will represent Germany well,” Marcel Fratzscher, the head of economic research institute DIW Berlin, said. “Above all, his work on the role of financial markets and financial stability will continue to gain importance in the future.” More

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    China cuts lending rate as economic momentum falters

    The People’s Bank of China has cut one of the country’s most important lending rates in a sign that the government is pushing ahead with policy easing measures to counter a loss of economic momentum.The central bank cut the one-year loan prime rate, which is widely used as a benchmark for the loans banks make to their customers, from 3.85 per cent to 3.8 per cent. Monday’s rate cut was the first since April 2020, when the country was grappling with the initial outbreak of coronavirus.China’s economy, which last year bounced back from the fallout of the coronavirus pandemic far quicker than other big economies, has recently come under pressure from a property slowdown, energy shortages and lingering weakness in consumer activity.In the third quarter, gross domestic product grew 4.9 per cent year-on-year, its slowest pace in a year. Challenges across the country’s real estate industry have intensified since then, with new home prices falling for several consecutive months and heavily-indebted developer Evergrande defaulting along with several of its peers. The People’s Bank of China this month cut the reserve requirement ratio, a rate for banks, in effect pumping close to $200bn into the financial system. Last week, however, it kept the medium-term lending rate — the rate at which the central bank lends to banks — at 2.95 per cent.Economists and analysts said that China had entered an easing cycle, and pointed to the prospect of more cuts in the first half of next year.Ken Cheung, chief Asian FX strategist at Mizuho, said the LPR cut “indicated the increasing downward pressures for China’s economy and PBoC’s intention to support growth”.Economists at Société Générale said the “seemingly small reduction [to the one-year LPR] reflected an increasingly dovish policy stance”. It added: “Each step so far seems marginal and constrained, which only means that more will be needed.”

    Fears of asset bubbles spurred Beijing to introduce measures last year designed to constrain leverage at its biggest developers, and early this year brought in limits on mortgage lending from banks as a portion of their balance sheets.Despite the slowdown and its responses, the government has shown commitment to its deleveraging initiative. The five-year loan prime rate, which is used to price mortgages, was on Monday kept unchanged by the PBoC at 4.65 per cent.Economic data for November published last week highlighted a fall in property investment. Retail sales rose just 3.9 per cent compared with a year earlier, below expectations, while industrial production added 3.8 per cent.

    Video: Is China’s economic model broken? More

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    The dangers of politicising ‘independent’ central banks

    It is a year since Andy Haldane, then the Bank of England’s chief economist, delivered a lecture to the UCL Economist’s Society, extolling the virtues of independent central banks. But his words are sounding more resonant than ever.“Governments had a natural tendency to overinflate their economies, especially around election time,” he said, explaining that the “inflation bias” that helped cause runaway prices in the 1970s then spurred a fashion for central bank independence.Today, close to 90 per cent of the world’s central banks are classed as independent. But, as finance ministers wrestle with record debt burdens, the Covid-19 crisis and fast-rising inflation, worries are growing that central banks will become increasingly instrumentalised by governments.A decade-plus of ultra-low interest rates has suited governments nicely, allowing debts to remain manageable even as they have spiralled. Some governments have explicitly pressured central bankers towards even looser policies: when he was US president, Donald Trump infamously called on Federal Reserve “boneheads” to cut rates to zero and talked of potential negative rates as a “gift”.And the inflation taking hold in much of the world now, after rapid economic bouncebacks from coronavirus lockdowns, may worry some but it is also politically popular in some quarters — and not only because it whittles away at the debt pile, or facilitates ideological imperatives such as home ownership via cheap mortgages. In a populist speech at the Conservative party conference in October, UK prime minister Boris Johnson exhorted businesses to pay staff higher wages.The rhetoric of Trump and Johnson has prompted suggestions that monetary policy decisions by the Fed and the BoE have been more dovish and less “independent” than the economic data merited.Last week’s rate rise from the BoE may have undermined that narrative somewhat. But with a 2 per cent inflation target, and price rises running at more than 5 per cent, the oddity was that it had taken this long to hike.“The idea of independent central banks these days is a fiction,” says one former central banker, now in asset management. Structurally more dangerous than the vast asset bubbles created in everything from equities to property, the asset manager says, is that central bankers have aligned themselves with the interests of political leaders, evoking the bad old days of non-independent central banks.It goes beyond monetary policy. One recent UK initiative, seemingly minor but with potentially major ramifications, was the plan to ensure regulators at the BoE (and at the Financial Conduct Authority) considered UK competitiveness when rule-setting. This was a disaster, with global repercussions, when it ushered in “light touch” regulation pre-2008. Reinstating it is a recipe for further trouble.Another less noticed proposal is similarly ominous. In September, the UK Treasury put out a consultation paper, the “Review of the Cash Ratio Deposit Scheme”, proposing to reform a long-running scheme that obliges commercial banks to fund the BoE. The consultation not only proposes moving to a different system, but points out in passing that the new levy would be set “as part of annual budget-setting processes and discussed with HM Treasury”. This is a significant departure: the current CRD operates without government interference for five years at a time.Critics of the government-BoE relationship argue that subtle politicisation of governance has helped such reforms to go unchallenged. Tory peer Dido Harding has been a member of the supervisory “court”, or board, since 2014; she was joined in 2019 by financier Ron Kalifa, author of a Treasury-commissioned fintech review. BoE governor Andrew Bailey, selected by Number 10 in preference to a recommendation by Treasury officials, is seen as more politically aware than many of his predecessors.The UK is not alone. In the US, Fed chair Jay Powell has been criticised in some quarters first for bending to the will of the dovish Trump White House, and latterly for hawkishness inspired by President Joe Biden and Treasury secretary Janet Yellen. Haruhiko Kuroda, governor of the Bank of Japan, and the world’s most enthusiastic proponent of government-friendly quantitative easing, is also regarded as having blurred the lines between politics and monetary policy.“So what has central bank independence ever done for us?” Haldane asked at the end of his UCL lecture. It has helped to control inflation, and for the past decade at least has helped maintain financial stability, he concluded. “Safeguarding [it] and the institutional regime in which [it is] embedded is more important now than ever.” Quite [email protected] More

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    Supply chains: companies shift from ‘just in time’ to ‘just in case’

    Heineken sells 300 brands to customers in 190 countries. But part of the brewer’s strategy has been to produce regional brands locally and then export them to bigger markets. When it bought majority control of Red Stripe in 2015, it repatriated production to Jamaica. Similarly, the Dos Equis brand was brewed exclusively in Mexico, though much of its sales were in the US and elsewhere.That single sourcing came back to bite last year when the Mexican government declared beer non-essential, and temporarily closed the country’s breweries during the first wave of the pandemic. Rather than just give up on Dos Equis, Heineken regrouped, sent the labels and bottles to the Netherlands and started brewing the beer there. Production in Mexico has since restarted, but the company is now far more aware that it needs to have alternative production hubs — with access to the necessary supplies — for its biggest, most lucrative brands. All over the world, companies have encountered snags in their supply chains during the pandemic and the shipping bottlenecks that have followed as economies restarted. Car production lines have been halted by a lack of semiconductors, liquor distillers have run out of bottles and department stores are short of Christmas stock.Such troubles are forcing a rethink of corporate strategy. For decades, companies prioritised costs above all else when selecting suppliers, building factories and deciding how much stock to keep on hand. This philosophy was often dubbed “just in time” because it emphasised keeping inventory to a minimum and using short-term, flexible contracts that could be adjusted quickly to changes in demand.But the drive for efficiency encompassed far more than that. Companies also moved production to low-wage locations, consolidated orders to maximise economies of scale, and tried to minimise their physical presence in high-tax jurisdictions. The pandemic forced Heineken to rethink its strategy of producing regional brands locally and then exporting them to bigger markets © Jasper Juinen/Bloomberg“A lot of the operating models in the supply chains we see as broken today, were cemented 20 years ago on what at the time were universal truths, that going after low-cost suppliers . . . made a tonne of sense,” says Brian Higgins, head of KPMG’s US supply chain and operations practice. “It lends itself to these very long supply chains because they are [focusing on] cost, not risk. We’ve seen that fracture many, many times.”Companies are not entirely abandoning existing supply chain policies, but they are revamping them to build additional resilience. Some businesses are increasing the inventory they keep on hand and entering into longer term contracts with key suppliers. Others are diversifying their manufacturing to create regional hubs with local suppliers and investing in technology to give them greater advance warning of potential bottlenecks. Some companies are also investigating ways of working with their rivals to share information to develop emergency back up facilities without falling foul of competition regulators.“What companies love to do is to optimise working capital. So many manufacturers went to just-in-time inventory, and, pre-pandemic, that worked pretty well,” Carol Tomé, chief executive of UPS, said at a recent industry event. “But when the pandemic hit and everything was shut down, including manufacturing, and then the economy started to open and the demand . . . jumped, well, that just-in-time inventory didn’t work any more. Companies are now thinking about, I need ‘just in case’ inventory,” she added.‘The pandemic changed everything’ The changes are being driven by the pandemic and the supply chain shock that followed. But they also reflect the geopolitical tensions between China and the west and the growing pressure on companies to reduce their carbon footprint. Tens of thousands of tiny changes are fundamentally reshaping the way things are designed, manufactured and sold. In some cases, these shifts are driving up costs and contributing to inflation, but the end result may be more reliable, more local supplies, reducing both price volatility and future carbon emissions.This new mindset took root in the early days of the pandemic, when a McKinsey survey of senior supply chain executives found that 73 per cent of companies had encountered problems with their supplier footprint — from parts shortages to shipping delays — that required changes.“The supply chain is like your car. If it runs, you don’t give it much thought. But when it breaks down, you sure know the difference,” Hamid Moghadam, chair of Prologis, a real estate investment trust that invests in logistics facilities, said at the same industry event. “The pandemic changed everything.”Carmakers are forming partnerships with semiconductor manufacturers to improve access to chips © Lauryn Ishak/BloombergOne big German industrial group caught flat-footed by the semiconductor shortage has shifted from three-month non-binding arrangements with suppliers to 24-month commitments that require it to pay in advance of receiving its chips. “We had to give the supply chain more stability,” a top executive says. “It’s a change from a buyer’s to a seller’s market.”It is not alone. US carmakers Ford and GM are setting up partnerships, rather than just supplier contracts, with semiconductor manufacturers to improve their access to chips. Their German rival Volkswagen is looking at extending the length of its contracts with key suppliers, and Chinese energy groups have been rushing to sign liquefied natural gas contracts that extend as long as 20 years, more than double the old normal length. A follow-up McKinsey survey this year found that 61 per cent of companies had increased inventory of critical products and 55 per cent had taken action to ensure they had at least two sources of raw materials.As a result, warehouse costs are rising sharply in many markets, as manufacturers and retailers boost inventory levels. US industrial vacancy rates — a measure of available warehouse space — hit a historic low of 3.6 per cent nationally in the third quarter, according to CBRE. In California’s Inland Empire, a key bottleneck near the ports of Los Angeles, vacancy rates scraped 0.7 per cent. And property agent Cushman & Wakefield predicts the UK could run out of warehouse space within a year.With supply chains becoming more complex and natural disasters disrupting them more often, “you have to reinvent ‘just in time’,” says Oscar de Bok, who runs DHL’s supply chain business. “You can’t plan it as lean any more as you wanted it in the past.”‘Local for local’ supply chains Abandoning the “efficiency above all else” mantra goes beyond warehouses and order books. Companies that had consolidated their production into one or a few low-cost locations got a nasty shock last year as pandemic-related shutdowns and shipping bottlenecks left them without key parts or even merchandise to sell. The message was reinforced by the unexpected February freeze in Texas which shut down petrochemical plants and led to shortages of resin, a core ingredient in everything from plastic straws to auto parts.The pandemic strengthened the hand of corporate executives who were already exploring whether to set up regional networks for other reasons — such as sidestepping rising US-China tensions or to take advantage of government incentives aimed at stimulating local manufacturing.Multinational companies are now talking about “local for local” supply chains. That’s partly because logistics problems have eaten away the advantages of shipping products from low-cost factories half a world away. It now takes anywhere from 28 to 52 days to ship a pair of shoes produced in China from Shanghai to Los Angeles, up from between 17 and 28 days before the pandemic. And the total cost has gone up by $1.77 per pair, according to research by consultancy AlixPartners — an additional cost which smaller industry members with slimmer profit margins will struggle to absorb.“The problem is the volatility. If you always have a 10-day delay, you could put 10 days’ extra material into the supply chain. But some things arrive on time and others are delayed for 20 days,” says Volker Blume, who heads up material control, transport and delivery assurance at the German carmaker BMW. “Our systems are designed for smooth flows.” Companies that had consolidated production in a low-cost location were hit by shipping bottlenecks that left them without key parts or even merchandise to sell © Apu Gomes/AFP/Getty Manufacturers and retailers of everything from cars and footwear to vaccines are rediscovering the advantages of having suppliers closer to consumers. In strategically important sectors such as healthcare, they are also receiving government support. This is reviving interest in manufacturing in North America where, for instance, Ford and South Korea’s SK Innovation recently announced a plan to build a $5.8bn lithium-ion battery plant in Kentucky, and in continental Europe, where Intel has promised to spend $20bn on semiconductor manufacturing. “The pendulum has swung and . . . I don’t think it will ever go back completely. Not even China is going to be the low-cost manufacturing centre it [once] was,” says Simon Freakley, chief executive at AlixPartners. “It does mean areas like Texas and Kentucky become [more attractive because they] have the added advantage of just in time and just in case.”Resilience, a San Diego-based biopharmaceutical company, is one of the beneficiaries of this trend. Founded during the pandemic, it specialises in high-tech onshore manufacturing. It received a direct investment from the Canadian government worth $164m for its Ontario site and has won contracts from Moderna and other companies that have developed vaccines and medicines to produce them in North America. It has four sites operating already and plans for at least another six. “It is a myth that cost depends on geography,” says Resilience co-founder and chief executive Rahul Singhvi, who previously worked for Takeda, the Japanese drugs group. “We had manufacturing technologies that we could deploy to reduce cost even in Japan. It was cheaper than some Indian and Chinese markets.” Shared responsibility, shared riskVW and BMW have been trying to standardise components across each of their various models and brands so that suppliers have sufficient volume to manufacture regionally.VW’s design platform for petrol and diesel cars “is highly flexible so if volume decreases we can combine combustion engine cars of different brands in one plant and redesign the others,” says Arno Antlitz, the company’s chief financial officer. “We are heavily reducing complexity because we have to.”While much of the focus on localisation has been driven by logistics issues, executives say the trend also dovetails with their efforts to address global warming, and capitalise on changing government policies.Cutting back on the number of parts and products that are shipped around the world is an easy way to improve a company’s carbon footprint. Some groups are also moving their manufacturing to places where renewable energy is abundant and there are substantial markets for their products such as Yunnan province in China, where hydropower has helped it become a centre of aluminium production. At the same time, the financial incentives around siting plants are changing. Not only are governments scrambling to boost domestic manufacturing, but some of the advantages of production in low-tax jurisdictions are shrinking. The groundbreaking global deal on corporate taxes, signed in October, calls for companies to pay at least a 15 per cent effective tax rate and declare profits. And to pay more taxes in the countries where they do business. That would remove the current incentives for companies to avoid having a physical presence in high-tax countries where they have lots of sales so they can shift the revenue and profits elsewhere, says Kate Barton of EY.The tweaks to supply chains go beyond physical shifts. Many companies are using technology to quickly identify supply chain delays. BMW has increased its use of digital trackers to follow its parts across Europe and receive real time alerts if a truck is running late. The current backlog at key ports means that sea transport times are more variable, so the automaker is working with a couple of start-ups that are trying to develop predictive algorithms. But information from direct suppliers can only go so far. “If you have good information about your supply chain, you need less stock and you can decrease the buffers,” says BMW’s Blume. “You need a solution for standardised communications to allow participants in a supply chain to look deeper.”That is why the major German car companies and their biggest suppliers — Bosch, Siemens, Schaeffler, among others — joined together last spring to found Catena-X. This automotive alliance sets standards for information and data sharing, to make it easier for all of them to see what is going on not just at their direct suppliers but also at the hundreds of thousands of smaller companies that they rely on. Supply chain snags have left department stores short of Christmas stock © Lam Yik/BloombergAt the same time, retailers and manufacturers who belong to the Consumer Goods Forum are exploring ways they could collaborate to build resilience, perhaps by investing in shared back-up facilities that would be needed in an emergency situation. These could include alternative ports, extra warehouses and trucks. This would likely require regulatory blessing because of cartel concerns, but there are precedents. The UK government allowed grocers and suppliers to work together to divert supplies from restaurants to supermarkets in the early days of the pandemic.

    The conversations are in early stages but “the fact that the word ‘collaboration’ is even part of a boardroom meeting is a change,” says Ruediger Hagedorn, the group’s end-to-end value chain director. “If you have shared facilities you share the risk.”Building up inventory is much easier than relocating factories or agreeing to share space with a competitor and it is not at all clear that companies will follow through. While 93 per cent of companies told McKinsey last year they intended to make their supply chain more flexible, agile and resilient, only 15 per cent had made structural changes by the time this year’s survey came around.Still, Daniel Swan, who heads the consultancy’s operations practice, says “there’s a meaningful increase in CEO engagement in supply chain issues. That gives me encouragement that it won’t be a flash in the pan.”Additional reporting by Claire Bushey in Chicago More

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    The case for a universal basic income

    The coronavirus pandemic has opened the door to radical economic reform, argues FT columnist Martin Sandbu. A no-strings regular cash transfer to everyone could shake up the welfare system, bring new economic security, and create more opportunities for all. Welcome to Free Lunch on Film where unorthodox economic ideas are put to the test.

    December 20, 2021

    Presented and written by Martin Sandbu. Produced, directed and edited by Josh de la Mare. Filmed by Gregory Bobillot, Petros Gioumpasis, Donell Newkirk, Antti Ahokoivu and Silas Firth. Animation by Russell Birkett. Additional editing by Alex Langworthy. Produced in Alaska by Mary Katzke. Additional material from Getty, Reuters and Dreamstime. More