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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: First Republic, Signet Jewelers, Snap and more

    A customer walks past an ATM outside of a First Republic Bank branch in Manhattan Beach, California, on March 13, 2023.
    Patrick T. Fallon | AFP | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.
    First Republic Bank — Shares of First Republic erased earlier losses and were last up about 22%. Sources told CNBC’s David Faber that a group of major financial institutions, including Goldman Sachs and Citigroup, were in talks to deposit roughly $20 billion into the beaten-down regional.

    Credit Suisse Group — The Swiss bank’s U.S.-listed shares were up 2.5% after it announced it will borrow up to 50 billion Swiss francs ($54 billion) from the Swiss National Bank. The stock is coming off a volatile trading session on Wednesday, during which it lost 13.9% after the Saudi National Bank, its largest investor, said it would not be able to provide additional funding.
    UiPath — The stock surged 17.5% after the automation software company reported fourth-quarter adjusted earnings per share of 15 cents, beating the StreetAccount estimate of 6 cents per share. Revenue also topped expectations. After the results, UiPath was upgraded by Canaccord Genuity to buy from hold.
    Signet Jewelers — Shares of the jeweler roared higher by 13% after the company posted earnings and revenue for the fourth quarter that beat analysts’ estimates. Signet also reported margins that were ahead of consensus and said it boosted its buyback by $263 million.
    Snap — The Snapchat operator jumped more than 6% midday after Reuters reported that the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States demanded that China’s ByteDance sell its interest in TikTok. A separate report by Bloomberg said TikTok is considering splitting from ByteDance if a deal with the U.S. fails.
    Foot Locker — The athletic footwear retailer saw its shares climb about 5% after Telsey Advisory upgraded the stock to outperform and said it expects some tailwind benefits from a deeper focus on products, brand partnerships, retail footprint and ecommerce investments.

    Adobe — The software maker saw its stock jump nearly 5% after the company reported fiscal first-quarter results that topped Wall Street estimates. Adobe also increased its projections for income and net new recurring revenue from its Digital Media business for the full year.
    Progressive — The insurance provider’s shares rose 4% following an upgrade by Wells Fargo to overweight from underweight. Wells said the company has defensive attributes in a tough macro environment.
    Motorola Solutions — The telecommunications equipment company gained 3% following an upgrade by JPMorgan to overweight from neutral. The Wall Street firm said the stock has fallen to levels that are attractive.
    Occidental Petroleum — The oil stock rose about 2%, outperforming the S&P 500  energy sector after Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway snapped up 7.9 million shares of the company. The average price for the purchases from Monday through Wednesday was $59.17, totaling $466.7 million. Berkshire now owns 23.1% of Occidental.
    LivePerson — The artificial intelligence company saw its shares plummet by more than 50% after posting weaker revenue for the fourth quarter and issuing full-year guidance that fell below Wall Street forecasts. Management cited a challenging macro backdrop for friction in its sales cycle.
     — CNBC’s Michelle Fox, Jesse Pound, Sarah Min and Hakyung Kim contributed reporting

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    Retailers see a tough year ahead, so they’re rolling out the recession playbook

    Retailers including Target, Macy’s and Kroger previewed their recessionary playbooks in recent earnings reports.
    The companies’ strategies include stocking up on high-frequency items like food, becoming more strategic about discounts and winning more of loyal customers’ wallets.

    A woman carries bags of merchandise from J.Crew, Nordstrom, UGG, and Victorias Secret at the King of Prussia Mall on December 11, 2022 in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania.
    Mark Makela | Getty Images

    The U.S. economy may not be in a recession, but it feels like it in a lot of stores across the nation.
    Take Kroger, for instance. Inflation-pinched customers are downloading more coupons, cooking meals at home and switching to lower-priced private label brands to save money, the grocery giant’s CEO, Rodney McMullen, told CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street” earlier this month.

    “What customers are telling us, they’re already behaving like they’re in a recession,” he said.
    Now, major retailers are dusting off their playbook for a recession — or at least for a period of slower sales. Companies previewed their strategies for the tougher backdrop in recent weeks, as they reported holiday-quarter earnings and shared full-year outlooks.
    Target is bulking up on food and household essentials to drive foot traffic. Macy’s and Walmart are trying to win more sales from their most loyal customers. Best Buy and others are chasing new and exclusive products that may nudge customers to open up their wallets and even pay full price.
    As the travel and restaurant sectors bounce back, it looks like the “rolling recession” is coming for the retail sector, even if the economy remains strong. Many retailers are calling for flat to declining sales this fiscal year, especially once the lift from inflation is taken out. It’s a sharp turnabout from the early years of the pandemic, which was a boom time for retail spending.
    Here’s a look at some of retailers’ strategies.

    Customers shop in the grocery area at a Target Corp. store in Chicago, Illinois, U.S., on Saturday, Nov. 16, 2019.
    Daniel Acker | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Zeroing in on everyday items

    Gallons of milk, paper towels and soap. Retailers are stocking up on those kinds of everyday products, which shoppers frequently replenish, as shoppers think twice about discretionary purchases.
    Target, for instance, said it has intentionally skewed its inventory mix toward food and household essentials. Its overall inventory declined 3% year over year as of the end of the fiscal fourth quarter, but its inventory of discretionary merchandise dropped 13% during the same period.
    Walmart, the country’s largest grocer by revenue, benefits from getting a larger chunk of sales from groceries. It has used lower-priced groceries to draw in shoppers across income levels, including more households with annual incomes of more than $100,000.
    Yet selling evergreen items comes with a downside: They tend to be less profitable.
    Walmart Chief Financial Officer John David Rainey acknowledged that on an earnings call with investors in late February, saying “product mix shifts have negatively impacted our margins.”

    A shopper carries a Bloomingdale’s bag on Broadway in the SoHo neighborhood of New York, US, on Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2022.
    Victor J. Blue | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Relying on loyal customers

    As the going gets tougher, retailers are looking toward a familiar audience: Loyal shoppers.
    Macy’s and Costco are among the retailers that want to wring out more sales from the tried and true. Some have even turned membership programs into money-makers. Walmart is trying to attract more customers to its subscription service, Walmart+, which costs $98 a year, or $12.95 on a monthly basis. Best Buy has the Totaltech program, which costs $199.99 per year. Lululemon has a free and a paid membership program, which debuted in the fall.
    Costco, a membership-based warehouse club, is seeing more customers upgrade to Executive, its top-tier of membership. Chief Financial Officer Richard Galanti told investors on a call in early March that at the end of its most recent quarter, it had 30.6 million paid Executive memberships, which account for about 45% of overall paid members and drive about 73% of worldwide sales.
    At Macy’s-owned Bloomingdale’s, members of its Loyallist program drove over 70% of same-store sales, which includes its own brands and third-party brands. Members of that program spent 7% more year over year, as of the end of Macy’s fourth quarter, CEO Jeff Gennette told investors.
    Kroger’s McMullen said Wednesday at a Bank of America investor conference that its loyal customers tend to spend 10 times more than an occasional shopper. He said the company wants to get more of their dollars by getting “people into the rewards cycle” and better personalizing their experience.

    Televisions are seen for sale at a Best Buy store in New York City.
    Andrew Kelly | Reuters

    Chasing newness and value

    As customers become more cautious, retailers are racing toward the next hot thing or at least the thing that only they have.
    Target anticipates modest or even declining sales in the year ahead, with same-store sales ranging from a low single-digit decline to a low single-digit increase for fiscal 2023. Even so, the discounter is pressing ahead with more exclusive items and flashy customer amenities. Target shoppers can soon get a Starbucks coffee, make a return and retrieve an online purchases without leaving their cars. The company is launching or expanding more than 10 private brands in the coming year, too.
    “In an environment where consumers are making tradeoffs, more of the same is not going to get it done,” Christina Hennington, Target’s chief growth officer, said at an investor event in New York.
    Value is a key part of retailers’ fresh offers. At Kroger, shoppers can find a new exclusive brand called Smart Way that offers basic groceries like sliced bread and mustard at the lowest price point.
    And at Best Buy, CEO Corie Barry said innovation will help motivate shoppers to upgrade their phone or spring for new video game consoles, especially in the back half of the year.
    “We believe there’ll be a desire to stimulate those replacement cycles going forward,” Barry said on a call with reporters in early March. “Obviously, our vendors are very interested in creating the next hot product and we are the best place — and really the only place — for them to highlight those new technology advances.”

    Marko Geber | DigitalVision | Getty Images

    Savvier about discounts

    As sales dip, retailers want to make sure that every dollar counts.
    Profit margins are getting more attention from investors, particularly as retailers follow a year when they were hit with higher costs for labor, commodities and shipping, all while taking a hit from marking down excess inventory.
    Some retailers are rethinking their approach to discounts while questioning other costs, such as giving away free shipping or deliveries without strings attached.
    Macy’s has gotten more strategic about pricing. Instead of marking down goods online and across every store, it can use dynamic pricing to adjust in places where that price change can make a difference. It can send targeted discounts to a particular shopper based on what he or she has browsed or bought.
    On a call with CNBC, CEO Jeff Gennette said the company is “in the early innings of personalized offers, but there’s huge dividends for that.” He called it one of the company’s growth factors for the year ahead.
    Some retailers have also turned free shipping into a perk for only engaged or higher spending customers. Nike, for instance, offers free shipping for shoppers – if they share their personal data by joining its membership program.
    Amazon, a retailer often associated with no shipping and delivery fees, made a notable change recently, too. Starting in late February, the e-commerce giant began charging delivery fees for grocery orders under $150. It had previously offered free Amazon Fresh deliveries for Prime members who spent over $35.

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    ‘The weakest links are cracking’: Investors consider possible Credit Suisse contagion

    Shares of Credit Suisse surged higher on Thursday, rebounding from a fresh all-time low after the beleaguered lender received central bank support to shore up its finances.
    The abrupt loss of confidence in Credit Suisse, which comes as fears about the health of the banking system spread from the U.S. to Europe, has prompted some to question the “true” worth of Credit Suisse’s share price.
    “The weakest links are cracking and that’s just happening, and that was entirely predictable — and this will not be the last one,” Beat Wittmann, chairman of Switzerland’s Porta Advisors, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” on Thursday.

    A Credit Suisse logo seen displayed on a smartphone with broken screen and an illustrative stock chart background in Athens, Greece on March 15, 2023. (Photo illustration by Nikolas Kokovlis/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
    Nikolas Kokovlis | Nurphoto | Getty Images

    Shares of Credit Suisse surged on Thursday, rebounding from a fresh all-time low after the beleaguered lender announced that it would tap central bank support to shore up its finances.
    Switzerland’s second-largest bank said it would borrow up to 50 billion Swiss francs ($53.68 billion) from the Swiss National Bank, providing a moment of relief for investors after the Zurich-headquartered firm led Europe’s banking sector on a wild ride lower during the previous session.

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    The Swiss-listed stock price was trading around 19.7% higher at 12:30 p.m. London time (8:30 a.m. ET) — a massive swing from Wednesday’s more than 30% tumble after its biggest backer said it wouldn’t provide further assistance due to regulatory restrictions.
    The abrupt loss of confidence in Credit Suisse, which came as fears about the health of the banking system spread from the U.S. to Europe, has prompted some to question the “true” worth of Credit Suisse’s stock price.
    “We have to step back and look of course at the viability of the business model [and] at the overall regulatory landscape,” Beat Wittmann, chairman of Switzerland’s Porta Advisors, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” on Thursday.
    “I think the leadership of the bank has to really use now this lifeline to review their plan because obviously, the capital markets have not bought the plan as we have seen by the performances of the equity price and the credit default swaps very recently.”

    Asked for his views on the sharp fall of Credit Suisse’s share price — which fell below 2 Swiss francs for the first time on Wednesday — Wittmann said a “brutal” monetary tightening cycle led by major central banks in recent months meant companies vulnerable to shocks were now beginning to “really suffer.”

    “The weakest links are cracking and that’s just happening, and that was entirely predictable — and this will not be the last one. Now it is really time for policymakers to restore confidence and liquidity in the system, be it in the U.S., be it in Switzerland, or be it somewhere else,” Wittmann said.
    Asked for his advice to investors amid the market turmoil, he said: “The upside momentum in inflation and interest rates is receding very clearly so I think there is a very healthy underpinning in capital markets.”
    “But I would very strongly recommend sticking to high-quality companies — that means strong management, strong balance sheets, strong value proposition. And now you can pick them up at more attractive valuations,” Wittmann added.

    ‘Material weaknesses’

    Even before the shock collapse of two U.S. banks last week, Credit Suisse has been beset with problems in recent years, including money laundering charges and spying allegations.
    The bank’s disclosure earlier this week of “material weaknesses” in its reporting added to investor concerns.
    Credit Suisse management said Wednesday, however, that its latest step to secure a sizable funding deal showed “decisive action” to strengthen the business. They thanked the Swiss National Bank and the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority for their support.

    Analysts welcomed the move and suggested fears of a fresh banking crisis may be overstated.
    “A stronger liquidity position and a backstop provided by the Swiss National Bank with the support from Finma are positive,” Anke Reingen, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets, said Thursday in a research note.
    “Regaining trust is key for the CS shares. Measures taken should provide some comfort that a spillover to the sector could be contained, but the situation remains uncertain,” she added.
    Analysts at UBS, meanwhile, said market participants were “grappling with three interrelated but different issues: bank solvency, bank liquidity, and bank profitability.”
    “In short, we think bank solvency fears are overdone, and most banks retain strong liquidity positions,” they added.

    ‘A great turnaround story’?

    For Dan Scott, head of multi-asset management at Swiss asset manager Vontobel — who used to work at Credit Suisse — it’s not all bad news.
    “I would say that Credit Suisse specifically is still one of the world’s largest asset managers, it has half a trillion in assets, and certainly this could be a great turnaround story if the execution is good,” he told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” on Thursday.
    Asked by CNBC’s Geoff Cutmore whether this would mean investors staying patient despite market turbulence and the scale of outflows from the bank, Scott replied, “Absolutely. But I think again that the stress that we’re seeing at the moment really should have been predictable.”
    “When rates come up so fast, certain business models get challenged and I don’t think it is a wealth management business model that gets challenged. I think much more and why we saw it at Silicon Valley Bank, is private markets are going to be challenged,” Scott added.

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    Stocks making the biggest premarket moves: Credit Suisse, Snap, Adobe, PagerDuty & more

    The Snapchat application on a smartphone arranged in Hastings-on-Hudson, New York, US, on Wednesday, Feb. 1, 2023.
    Tiffany Hagler-Geard | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making the biggest moves in premarket trading:
    Credit Suisse — U.S.-listed shares of Credit Suisse gained nearly 6% after the Swiss bank said it will borrow up to 50 billion Swiss francs ($54 billion) from the Swiss National Bank. The stock tumbled 13.9% on Wednesday after its largest investors said it couldn’t provide any more funding.

    Snap, Meta — Snap rallied 6%, while Meta rose 1.5% following a Wall Street Journal report that the Biden administration said competitor TikTok could be banned unless it is sold by its Chinese owner, ByteDance. A separate report by Bloomberg said TikTok is considering splitting from ByteDance if a deal with the U.S. fails.
    Regional banks — Regional banks continued their slide amid the fallout of Silicon Valley Bank’s failure.First Republic Bank tumbled nearly 28%, and Zions Bancorporation lost 3.6%. Comerica shed 1.6%.
    Dollar General — The discount retailer sank 1.6% after its quarterly same-store sales missed Wall Street’s estimates. Same-store sales rose 5.7% in the fourth quarter, versus the 6% expected by analysts polled by Refinitiv.
    Adobe — Shares of the software giant rose 5.4% after the company lifted its profit forecast for fiscal 2023 and announced its quarterly results beat Wall Street estimates. It increased income and net new recurring revenue projections for its digital media business for the full year.
    Occidental Petroleum — Shares rose nearly 1% after Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway bought another 7.9 million shares, totaling $466.7 million.

    UiPath — The automation software company surged nearly 16% after reporting fourth-quarter adjusted earnings per share of 15 cents, beating the StreetAccount estimate of 6 cents per share. Revenue came in at $308.5 million, well above the $278.6 million expect.
    Baidu — U.S. listed shares of Baidu sank nearly 6% after the Chinese tech company unveiled its ChatGPT alternative, Ernie bot.
    PagerDuty — Shares rallied nearly 6% after the digital operations management platform’s earnings and revenue topped estimates for the fourth quarter. Adjusted earnings per share came in at 8 cents per share, versus the 2 cents expected, per Refinitiv. Revenue was $101 million, topping the $98.8 million expected.
    Five Below — The discount retailer shed more than 3% after it gave a muted outlook for the first quarter. However, Five Below’s revenue beat analysts’ estimates, per Refinitiv, and earnings were in-line with expectations.
    Motorola — The telecommunications equipment company gained 1.8% following an upgrade by JPMorgan to overweight from neutral. The Wall Street firm said the stock has fallen to levels that are attractive.
    —CNBC’s Tanaya Macheel contributed reporting.

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    Credit Suisse shares soar over 20% on Swiss National Bank loan announcement

    Credit Suisse shares rose over 30% at the market open after the bank said that it will borrow up to $54 billion from the Swiss National Bank.
    It comes after shares of Credit Suisse plunged to a fresh all-time low on Wednesday when top investor the Saudi National Bank said it would not pump in any more cash due to regulatory restrictions.
    The Swiss National Bank and the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority said in a statement that Credit Suisse “meets the capital and liquidity requirements imposed on systemically important banks.”

    A Credit Suisse Group AG bank branch in Bern, Switzerland, on Thursday, March 16, 2023.
    Stefan Wermuth | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Credit Suisse shares soared more than 30% at Thursday’s market open after the bank said it will borrow up to 50 billion Swiss francs ($54 billion) from the Swiss National Bank.
    The Swiss-listed stock’s rally cooled slightly in early trading, but the shares were still up 21.8% at 10 a.m. London time (6 a.m. ET).

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    The embattled lender announced late Wednesday that it would exercise its option to borrow from the Swiss central bank under a covered loan facility and a short-term liquidity facility.
    The Swiss National Bank and the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority said in a statement Wednesday that Credit Suisse “meets the capital and liquidity requirements imposed on systemically important banks.”
    Credit Suisse also offered to buy back around 3 billion francs’ worth of debt, relating to 10 U.S. dollar-denominated senior debt securities and four euro-denominated senior debt securities.
    “These measures demonstrate decisive action to strengthen Credit Suisse as we continue our strategic transformation to deliver value to our clients and other stakeholders,” Credit Suisse CEO Ulrich Koerner said in the release Wednesday.
    “We thank the [Swiss National Bank] and FINMA as we execute our strategic transformation. My team and I are resolved to move forward rapidly to deliver a simpler and more focused bank built around client needs.”

    The stock of Credit Suisse, Switzerland’s second-largest bank, began to slide at the start of the week, along with many other European banks, on fears of contagion in light of the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank.
    The Swiss bank’s losses deepened on Tuesday after it announced in its delayed annual report that “material weakness” had been found in its financial reporting in 2021 and 2022, although it said this did not affect the accuracy of the bank’s financial statements.

    Credit Suisse’s shares plunged to a fresh all-time low for the second consecutive day on Wednesday after the Saudi National Bank — a top investor — said it would not pump in any more cash due to regulatory restrictions.
    The Saudi National Bank took a 9.9% stake in Credit Suisse as part of the lender’s $4.2 billion capital raise to fund a massive strategic overhaul, aimed at improving investment banking performance and addressing a litany of risk and compliance failures.

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    Baidu shares drop to 8-week lows after company reveals ChatGPT rival

    During a livestreamed release event Thursday, Baidu CEO Robin Li emphasized the company’s product — called Ernie bot — is not perfect.
    Instead, he described how it would improve through users’ ability to give it feedback.
    Baidu is prioritizing initial Ernie bot access for what it calls 650 ecosystem business partners.

    Men interact with a Baidu AI robot near the company logo at its headquarters in Beijing, China April 23, 2021.
    Florence Lo | Reuters

    BEIJING — Chinese tech company Baidu on Thursday gave the public a peek at what its Chinese-language ChatGPT alternative can do, while warning of its imperfections.
    During a livestreamed release event, Baidu CEO Robin Li emphasized the company’s product — called Ernie bot — is not perfect. Shares fell nearly 6.4% in Hong Kong, amid a wider fall for Asian stocks, and posted their lowest close since Jan. 19.

    Li emphasized how the product would improve through users’ ability to give it feedback.
    Baidu is prioritizing initial Ernie bot access for what it calls 650 ecosystem business partners, which include some media companies, banks and car firms. Baidu has a large enterprise cloud business and said that users of its AI cloud could apply for access to Ernie bot’s application programming interface.
    Within an hour of the Ernie bot announcement, Baidu said 30,000 corporate clients had joined the waitlist for access to the chatbot. CNBC, other media and the mass public did not immediately receive access.

    Microsoft-backed OpenAI this week announced GPT-4, the latest version of the artificial intelligence tech behind its highly popular ChatGPT chatbot. The bot was initially released to the public for free in November, and individuals wanting to access GPT-4 capabilities need to pay $20 a month.
    ChatGPT is able to converse in a human-like way and generate everything from content summaries to business proposals.

    While ChatGPT is free to anyone who can set up an account, people had to join a waitlist to try Microsoft’s Bing AI chatbot — which uses OpenAI tech — that launched last month. Some users reported a creepy experience.
    Baidu’s Li said Ernie bot had similar issues if used enough, and that it wasn’t perfect. But he noted the model is trained on a set of 550 billion facts.
    The AI isn’t meant to highlight rivalry between the U.S. and China, but the result of Baidu’s efforts to “change the world with technology,” Li said in Mandarin, translated by CNBC.
    Baidu’s Hong Kong-traded shares are still up 12% for the year so far.
    Microsoft shares are up by about 11% for the year so far, while Google parent Alphabet’s Class A shares are up nearly 9%.

    Stock chart icon

    Major ChatGPT-related tech companies stocks

    ChatGPT has caught local interest in China, despite not being officially available in the country. ChatGPT does have a Chinese-language function, although not at the same level as in English.
    Beijing has pushed for national self-sufficiency in tech, while maintaining censorship and increasing regulation of data.
    Many Chinese companies, other than Baidu, are developing similar tech.
    In February, Baidu’s Li told analysts on an earnings call the company would first embed its version — Ernie bot — into the company’s search engine and open the product to the public in March.
    Li said the company also planned to use the AI tech for content creation. Baidu backs one of China’s major video streaming platforms, iQiyi.
    It was not immediately clear how Baidu’s Ernie bot and AI capabilities compare with ChatGPT’s.
    OpenAI said this week its GPT-4 can beat 90% of humans on the SAT, a college admissions exam in the U.S.

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    The search for Silicon Valley Bank-style portfolios

    The demise of Silicon Valley Bank had many causes. But at its heart was the institution’s bond portfolio, which plummeted in value as interest rates rose. Little surprise, then, that analysts and investors are scrambling to locate similar hoards elsewhere. One disconcerting finding lies in Japan. Investment institutions there have accumulated vast stocks of domestic and foreign long-maturity bonds.These bond holdings have already slumped in value, thanks to a combination of sales and the revaluation that occurs when rates rise—the potential for which is known as “duration risk”. Long-term foreign-bond holdings by “other financial corporations”, a category which includes insurance firms, investment outfits and pension funds, ran to $1.5trn in June, the most recent figure available, some $293bn below their level at the end of 2021. Norinchukin Bank, a Japanese investment firm, is one holder of such bonds. The company has been a mammoth buyer of collateralised-loan obligations, bundles of loans secured in a single product. The value of its bond portfolio has been clipped by rising rates, from ¥36trn ($293bn) in March last year to ¥28trn in December. Japan Post Bank, a savings bank, of which the Japanese government owns almost a third, is another exposed institution. Foreign securities have risen from essentially zero in 2007 to 35% of the firm’s total holdings. These institutions’ customers are likely to prove less flighty than svb’s. In Silicon Valley the run was led by panicked venture capitalists. Japan Post Bank has an army of individual depositors across the country, boasting around 120m accounts. Norinchukin Bank’s clients, which are mostly agricultural co-operatives, also seem less likely to flee than excitable tech types. But there is a risk from currency movements. As Brad Setser of the Council on Foreign Relations, a think-tank, has noted, the rise in American interest rates has made hedging against currency risk far more expensive. This is true for both investors and the companies and governments from which they once bought bonds. Japanese investors sold $165bn more in foreign long-term bonds than they bought last year, the largest disposal on record. Rising rates have left bond issuers across huge swathes of the world paying more to borrow. The disappearance of previously reliable buyers only adds to the pain.And enormous holdings of foreign financial assets are just one element of the risk. Japanese interest rates have been at rock-bottom levels by global standards since the early 1990s, after the country’s infamous land and stock bubble burst. Three decades of relative economic stagnation and occasional deflation have meant very low bond yields, which have driven financial institutions to long-term yen-denominated bonds for modestly higher returns. This increases the amount of damage even slightly tighter monetary policy might do. [embedded content]But it is increasingly unclear whether Japan will actually be able to maintain its low-rate approach. Consumer-price inflation rose to 4.3% in January; wages at large firms look set to rise at their fastest pace in decades. More

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    Is the global investment boom turning to bust?

    Almost wherever you look, companies seem to be scaling back their ambitions. Meta, the owner of Facebook, recently said that it would invest less in 2023 than previously promised. Disney is slimming its capex plans for this year by a tenth, meaning punier investment in its theme parks. Calavo Growers, a huge producer of avocados and other fruit, intends to reduce its capital expenditures “while we navigate near-term uncertainties”. The anecdotes are part of an unfortunate broader trend. A global survey of purchasing managers tracks new orders of investment goods, a proxy for capital spending. After surging in 2021, it now points to demand in line with the 2018-19 average. An American capex “tracker” produced by Goldman Sachs, a bank, offers a picture of businesses’ outlays, as well as hinting at future intentions. It is currently registering close to zero growth, year on year (see chart 1). A global tracker produced by JPMorgan Chase, another bank, also points to a sharp deceleration. The Economist analysed capital-spending data from 33 oecd countries. In the fourth quarter of last year capex fell by 1% from the previous quarter.Investment is the most volatile component of gdp. When it soars, the economy as a whole tends to do the same. Extra capex and r&d boosts productivity, raising incomes and living standards. There were hopes the covid-19 pandemic would mark the start of a new “capex supercycle”. In response to the crisis, firms ramped up spending on everything: digitisation, supply chains and more. Rich-world fixed investment took just 18 months to regain its pre-pandemic peak, a fraction of the time it took after the global financial crisis of 2007-09. In 2021 and 2022 firms in the s&p 500 index of large American firms spent $2.5trn, equivalent to 5% of the country’s gdp, on capex and r&d, a real-terms rise of around a fifth compared with 2018-19.Thus the latest figures are sobering. What people thought was the start of a structural trend may in fact have been end-of-lockdown exuberance. Businesses are revising down future capex investment, too. Our analysis of the plans of around 700 big, listed American and European firms suggests real-terms spending will fall by 1% in 2023. Markets have caught on to this change. In Europe, for instance, the share prices of companies that usually do well when capital spending is high—such as semiconductor and chemicals companies—soared relative to the wider stockmarket in 2021, but have since fallen back. Why is the boom coming to an end? Three potential explanations are most convincing. The first is that companies have less cash to burn than even a few months ago. Firms across the rich world accumulated extraordinarily high cash balances during the pandemic, in part because of grants and loans from governments. According to our calculations, however, since the end of 2021 the piles have fallen by about $1trn in real terms (see chart 2).The second relates to global economic conditions. Supply-chain snarl-ups are not as bad as in 2021, meaning there is less need to invest in extra capacity or stock up on inventory. Figures from PitchBook, a data provider, suggest that in the fourth quarter of 2022 the number of venture-capital deals in supply-chain tech fell by about half compared with the year before. Inflation has eaten into consumers’ real incomes—and businesses are less likely to invest in new products and services if they worry that no one will buy them. Meanwhile, survey data suggest that higher interest rates are also prompting cuts. The third factor may be the most significant. The capex boom was based in large part on the assumption that pandemic lifestyles would last forever, prompting economic reallocation that would require an ever-larger number of new technologies. In many ways, however, the post-pandemic economy looks remarkably similar to the pre-pandemic one. It turns out there is a limit to people’s Netflix consumption and Peloton use. Spending on services has nearly caught up with spending on goods. There are exceptions—not least oil companies—which are likely to boost capex this year, but these firms account for only a small share of overall spending. The companies that led the capex charge are retreating. Semiconductor firms, in particular, have realised that they massively overinvested in capacity, and are now pulling back. In the final quarter of 2022 American real spending on information-processing equipment was down by 2%, year on year. The big tech firms are likely to cut capex by 7% in real terms in 2023, forecasters think. In America the Inflation Reduction Act will offer big incentives for green spending; the eu is unveiling its own subsidies. Russia’s war in Ukraine is encouraging Europeans to invest in alternative sources of energy. And in an attempt to rely less on China and Taiwan, many firms are looking to break ground on factories elsewhere. In time, these various changes may cause investment to tick up once again. But there is no getting away from the fact that the capex boom has fizzled out. ■For more expert analysis of the biggest stories in economics, finance and markets, sign up to Money Talks, our weekly subscriber-only newsletter. More