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    White House no longer sending top officials to Detroit for UAW strike talks this week

    The Biden administration is no longer sending two key officials to Detroit this week to potentially help broker a deal between striking autoworkers and the Big Three car companies, a White House official told NBC News.
    President Joe Biden last week said he would dispatch White House senior advisor Gene Sperling and acting Labor Secretary Julie Su to support discussions between the companies and the United Auto Workers union.
    Biden largely sided with the striking autoworkers in an address Friday, calling on Ford, General Motors and Stellantis to share record profits with their workers.

    A United Auto Workers member on a picket line outside the Ford Motor Co. Michigan Assembly plant in Wayne, Michigan, on Sept. 15, 2023.
    Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    The Biden administration is no longer sending two key officials to Detroit this week to potentially help broker a deal between striking autoworkers and the Big Three car companies, a White House official told NBC News.
    President Joe Biden last week said he would dispatch White House senior advisor Gene Sperling and acting Labor Secretary Julie Su to support discussions between the companies and the United Auto Workers union.

    But the White House and the UAW mutually agreed it would be better to speak virtually via Zoom, the official said Tuesday.
    Sperling and Su could still go to Detroit next week but there are no firm plans for them to do so, the official added. “We’ll continue to assess travel timing based on the active state of negotiations,” the White House official said.
    Biden largely sided with the striking autoworkers in an address Friday. The president called on Ford, General Motors and Stellantis to share record profits with their workers.
    Despite that, Biden has received a relatively cold reception from the UAW.
    The union’s president, Shawn Fain, told MSNBC on Monday that he does not see a major role for the White House in resolving the dispute.

    “This battle is not about the president,” Fain said. “It’s not about the former president or any other person prior to that. This battle is about the workers standing up for economic and social justice and getting their fair share because they’re fed up with going backwards.”
    Nearly 13,000 UAW members are on strike at three key plants in Michigan, Missouri and Ohio. It is the first time the union has targeted all three automakers at the same time.
    Fain said late Monday that the UAW would launch additional strikes at more Ford, GM and Stellantis plants if “serious progress” is not made in negotiations by midday Friday.
    “Autoworkers have waited long enough to make things right at the Big Three. We’re not waiting around, and we’re not messing around. So, noon on Friday, Sept. 22, is a new deadline,” Fain said in a video released by the union.
    Biden, who often touts his middle-class upbringing, has sought to closely associate himself with the labor movement. But the strikes could test the president’s commitment to organized labor if the work stoppages expand and threaten broader economic disruption as he seeks a second term in office.
    Former President Donald Trump had called on the UAW to endorse his 2024 bid to retake the presidency, while at the same time attacking the union’s leadership.
    Trump is planning to skip the GOP primary debate next week and instead travel to Detroit to speak with union members. More

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    Eli Lilly sues clinics allegedly selling knockoff versions of Mounjaro diabetes drug

    Eli Lilly sued 10 medical spas, wellness clinics and compounding pharmacies across the U.S. for allegedly selling cheaper, unauthorized versions of the company’s diabetes drug Mounjaro. 
    The lawsuits come as Eli Lilly grapples with a shortage of Mounjaro, which can also help patients lose unwanted pounds.
    Eli Lilly initiated several lawsuits in federal courts in Florida, Texas, Arizona, Georgia, Minnesota, South Carolina and Utah. Those suits asked the courts for orders blocking the sales of counterfeit versions of Mounjaro and an unspecified amount in monetary damages.

    A pharmacist displays boxes of Ozempic, a semaglutide injection drug used for treating type 2 diabetes made by Novo Nordisk, at Rock Canyon Pharmacy in Provo, Utah, March 29, 2023.
    George Frey | Reuters

    Eli Lilly on Tuesday sued 10 medical spas, wellness clinics and compounding pharmacies across the U.S. for allegedly selling cheaper, unauthorized versions of the company’s diabetes drug Mounjaro. 
    The actions come as Eli Lilly grapples with a shortage of Mounjaro in the U.S. due to skyrocketing demand. Much of the drug’s popularity comes from its off-label ability to help patients lose unwanted pounds.

    Eli Lilly initiated several lawsuits in federal courts in Florida, Texas, Arizona, Georgia, Minnesota, South Carolina and Utah. The litigation asked the courts for orders blocking the sales of counterfeit versions of Mounjaro and monetary damages.
    Eli Lilly specifically accuses the spas, clinics and compounding pharmacies of marketing and selling “compounded” drug products that claim to contain tirzepatide, the active ingredient in Mounjaro. Compounded drugs are custom-made versions of a treatment that are not approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. 
    Eli Lilly is the sole patent holder of tirzepatide and does not sell that ingredient to outside entities. It’s unclear what the spas and clinics are actually selling to consumers. 
    “Rather than invest the time and resources necessary to research, develop, and test their products in order to ensure that they are safe and effective and to obtain regulatory approval to market them, Defendant is simply creating, marketing, selling, and distributing unapproved new drugs for unapproved uses throughout Florida and fourteen other states,” Eli Lilly wrote in one suit against Rx Compound Store, a compound pharmacy based in Florida. 
    Eli Lilly, in the suit, added that selling counterfeit versions of Mounjaro “puts patients at risk by exposing them to drugs that have not been shown to be safe or effective.”

    Rx Compound Store did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment on the suit.
    The moves come months after Novo Nordisk filed several lawsuits accusing spas and medical clinics of selling compounded versions of its highly popular weight-loss drugs Ozempic and Wegovy. 
    The FDA in May warned about the safety risks of unauthorized versions of Ozempic and Wegovy after reports emerged of adverse health reactions to compounded versions of the drugs.
    The FDA has not issued a warning about compounded versions of tirzepatide. However, Mounjaro, Ozempic and Wegovy have all been in short supply in the U.S. since last year, according to the FDA’s database. 
    Analysts and industry executives have said annual sales of those drugs and similar treatments for weight loss could hit $100 billion within a decade. More

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    Live sports are headed to Max, as Warner Bros. Discovery adds a new tier to streaming app

    Live sports is coming to Warner Bros. Discovery’s streaming service app Max beginning Oct. 5.
    The tier, called the Bleacher Report Sports Add-On, will simulcast live sports events including for the MLB, NHL, NBA and NCAA March Madness, among others.
    Max subscribers will receive the tier for free through Feb. 29, and then it will cost an additional $9.99 a month.

    Los Angeles Dodgers center fielder Cody Bellinger (35) steals second base as St. Louis Cardinals second baseman Tommy Edman (19) takes the late throw at Dodger Stadium in the 2021 National League Wild Card game.
    Robert Hanashiro | USA TODAY Sports

    Sports are coming to Warner Bros. Discovery’s streaming app Max.
    Beginning Oct. 5, Max will include a tier that will simulcast live sports events that already appear on the company’s traditional TV networks TNT and TBS. The tier kicks off in time for Major League Baseball’s postseason, which airs on TBS.

    The membership, called the Bleacher Report Sports Add-On, will also include NHL, NBA, NCAA March Madness and U.S soccer games. Max subscribers will get free access through Feb. 29. Then, it will cost an additional $9.99 a month.
    CNBC previously reported Warner Bros. Discovery’s plans to add sports to Max under the Bleacher Report brand, as it tries to target a younger audience that has increasingly sidestepped the traditional pay-TV bundle.
    Media companies have been doing a delicate dance to make their streaming services more attractive in a push to get to profitability and are now trying a variety of methods to do so.
    Warner Bros. Discovery’s streaming segment was profitable in the first half of the year, and the company has said it expects that to continue for the full year.
    Max has undergone various changes in the past year and has been bulking up on content for the fall.

    In May, the streamer was renamed Max after the parent company blended the content of HBO Max and Discovery+ apps together. The move came more than a year after the merger of Warner Bros. and Discovery.
    The company also struck a deal with AMC Networks to feature more than 200 episodes of recent shows from the cable TV network for two months. The arrangement, which kicked off earlier this month, runs through Halloween.
    But sports and news were long-awaited additions to the app. CEO David Zaslav said during the company’s earnings call this summer that the change would happen in short order.
    On Sept. 27, the app will also include CNN Max, a 24/7 live news hub that will feature content from the network’s top anchors.
    The company hiked the price of Max earlier this year and has yet to increase it again. Currently, Max’s ad-free tier costs $15.99 a month, and a cheaper option with commercials is $9.99 a month. Company executives have said in investor calls that they see the potential to raise prices again in the future.
    In addition to MLB’s postseason, the Max sports tier will also include 60 live NHL regular season games, 65 NBA regular season matchups and postseason games for both leagues. It will also include live video and other content from Bleacher Report. More

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    Ford barrels toward new Canadian strike that could affect F-Series pickup production

    Canadian union Unifor and Ford are approaching an 11:59 p.m. ET Tuesday deadline to reach an agreement for roughly 5,600 autoworkers before a strike could occur.
    The initial deadline for the talks was Monday night, but the sides announced a 24-hour extension after the union received a “substantive offer” from Ford “minutes before the deadline.”
    A Unifor strike would affect Ford’s Oakville Assembly Plant that produces the Ford Edge and Lincoln Nautilus crossovers and engine plants that produce V8s for the F-Series pickups and Mustangs.

    2023 Ford Super Duty F-350 Limited

    DETROIT — Ford Motor’s labor troubles could become an international issue that affects U.S. production of some pickup trucks, as Canadian union Unifor and the company have only hours to reach an agreement for roughly 5,600 autoworkers.
    The sides have to reach a deal before an extended 11:59 p.m. ET Tuesday deadline to avoid a potential strike. The initial deadline for the talks was Monday night, but the sides announced a 24-hour extension after the union received a “substantive offer” from Ford “minutes before the deadline.”

    The potential Canadian work stoppage adds to pressure facing Ford days after the United Auto Workers called for targeted strikes against Ford and its crosstown rivals, General Motors and Chrysler parent Stellantis.
    A Unifor strike would disrupt Ford’s Oakville Assembly Plant that produces the Ford Edge and Lincoln Nautilus crossovers. It would also affect two engine plants that produce 7.3-liter and 5.0-liter V8 gasoline engines used in highly profitable products such as the Ford F-Series Super Duty and F-150 pickups and the Mustang muscle car.

    An aerial view shows Ford’s Oakville Assembly Plant in Oakville, Ontario, Canada May 26, 2023.
    Carlos Osorio | Reuters

    If Unifor strikes against Ford, it would be the first time both unions have simultaneously gone on strike against a Detroit automaker over national contracts — marking another unprecedented labor move after the UAW struck all three of the Detroit automakers last week for the first time.
    “Ford doesn’t want a strike anywhere. Having the extra pressure of Unifor is pushing Ford very hard to get a deal,” said Art Wheaton, a labor professor at the Worker Institute at Cornell University.
    Unifor, whose auto members were part of the UAW until a split in the mid-1980s, confirmed talks are ongoing after they continued past the deadline into Tuesday morning.

    F-Series, Mustang could be disrupted

    If a prolonged Canadian strike occurs, the work stoppage could eventually impact U.S. production of the vehicles. The breadth of the effect depends on Ford’s engine stock and how much the company would want to focus on non-V8 gasoline engine models.
    For F-150 and Mustang, Ford could increase production of four-cylinder and V6-powered engines, including EcoBoost ones that have made up the majority of sales since 2018. The company also could increase production of diesel engines for its larger Super Duty trucks.
    Gasoline V8 models make up about 50% of Mustang and 20% of F-150 models sold in the U.S. Large F-Series trucks exclusively have V8 engines. But a majority of those vehicles sold have diesel V8 engines rather than gasoline, according to the company. Those engines are made at a plant in Mexico, not Canada.

    Lana Payne speaks on stage as Unifor, Canada’s largest private sector union, announced her as their new president to replace outgoing leader Jerry Dias in Toronto, Ontario, Canada August 10, 2022.
    Cole Burston | Reuters

    “We will continue to work collaboratively with Unifor to create a blueprint for the automotive industry that supports a vibrant and sustainable future in Canada,” Ford said in a statement about the talks early Tuesday.
    Unifor, which represents 18,000 Canadian workers at the Detroit automakers, took a more traditional approach to its negotiations than its U.S. counterpart did. The Canadian union picked Ford as its “target” company instead of following the UAW’s new strategy of bargaining with all three automakers. It also announced a traditional national strike, if needed, instead of targeted ones.
    Hours before the initial deadline, Unifor National President Lana Payne said the union and Ford were “not where we need to be on key priority issues,” including wages and pensions. She noted the last time Canadian automakers went on strike was in 1990.
    “We need Ford to deliver more to meet our members’ expectations and demands, it’s as simple as that,” she said.

    UAW connection

    Payne said the union has been monitoring the UAW negotiations, and she has been “in touch” with the American union, including on Monday with UAW President Shawn Fain. The UAW and Unifor showed solidarity heading up to the talks and have continued to publicly support each other.
    Spokespeople with Ford and Unifor declined to comment on details of the company’s proposal that caused the union to agree to extending the deadline.
    Extending contract deadlines is historically common during automotive collective bargaining. However, Fain declined to do so. He also unconventionally set a second deadline of noon Friday to announce additional strikes if “serious progress” isn’t made in the talks by then.
    “The automakers for decades have used whipsawing where they’re trying to pit the U.S. against Canada … Shawn Fain flipped the tables on them and is using the same or similar strategy to urge the bargaining,” said Wheaton, the Cornell labor professor.
    If the Unifor strikes don’t have an impact on F-Series production, expanded UAW strikes could do so, starting Friday. Barclays analyst Dan Levy said Tuesday that “large pickup plants could be targeted” next by the UAW in its strike against the Detroit automakers, also known as the D3.
    “As a reminder, large pickups are the profit engines for the D3,” he wrote in an investor note, pointing out that each has robust inventories of the vehicles.
    Cox Automotive reports that “days-supply” of Ford’s F-Series pickups was at 87 days to start September, including 64 for the larger Super Duty trucks; GM was at 79 for the Chevrolet Silverado and 70 for GMC Sierra; and Stellantis’ Ram was at 119 days.
    — CNBC’s Michael Bloom contributed to this report. More

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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Instacart, Disney, Planet Fitness, Rackspace and more

    An empty parking lot is pictured in front of a Planet Fitness gym and fitness club in Alhambra, California, on May 12, 2020, after stay-at-home orders in Los Angeles County were extended until July amid the Covid-19 pandemic.
    Frederic J. Brown | AFP | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.
    Starbucks — Shares fell 2% in midday trading following a downgrade to market perform from TD Cowen. Analyst Andrew Charles noted concern over macroeconomic headwinds in China that could hit consumer spending at Starbucks stores.

    Instacart — The grocery delivery stock roared out the gates as it debuted on the public market midday Tuesday, with shares popping about 12.3% and closing at $33.70. The company had priced its initial public offering at $30 a share Monday, the high end of the expected $28 to $30 range.
    Disney — The entertainment stock slumped 3.3% after Disney revealed that it plans to nearly double its spending on its parks and cruises businesses to roughly $60 billion.
    Super Micro Computer — Stock in the computer technology company climbed 1.6% after Barclays initiated coverage of shares at an overweight rating. Analyst George Wang said the stock could benefit from a still-growing artificial investment trend.
    Deere — The industrial stock fell nearly 3% on Tuesday after Evercore downgraded the shares to in line from outperform. The Wall Street firm said the trends and early color from its contacts suggest revenue declines and agriculture production cuts for Deere’s next fiscal year.
    Planet Fitness — Shares of the gym franchise slid 4.2% after JPMorgan downgraded the stock to a neutral rating from overweight. The investment bank cited the recent surprise ousting of CEO Chris Rondeau and an uncertain macroeconomic future as reasons for the downgrade.

    Arm Holdings — Shares of the semiconductor company, which recently went public, dropped 5.4%. Redburn Atlantic Equities initiated coverage of the company as neutral and said it is overvalued right now.
    Array Technologies — The solar tracker solutions provider increased 4.3% during the day’s trading session after Bank of America added the company to the US1 list, saying Array is a “diamond in the rough.”
    Rocket Lab — Shares of the aerospace manufacturer tumbled 7.4% after Rocket Lab’s first launch failure in more than two years Tuesday morning. Rocket Lab’s uncrewed 41st Electron rocket launch failed about two minutes and 30 seconds after it lifted off in New Zealand.
    Lazard — The stock fell 1.2% after Goldman Sachs downgraded the investment bank to sell from neutral, saying its outlook is too “challenging.”
    Royal Caribbean — Shares of the cruise company gained 2.4% after being upgraded to buy from hold by Truist, which said forward-looking trends for 2024 and 2025 seem “exceptionally strong.” The Wall Street firm also upgraded Carnival to hold from sell, sending shares nearly 0.5% higher.
    Rackspace Technology — The cloud computing company popped Tuesday, gaining about 36%. Raymond James earlier upgraded Rackspace to outperform from market perform and said it likes the company management’s execution.
    — CNBC’s Brian Evans, Jesse Pound, Samantha Subin, Yun Li, Lisa Kailai Han and Michelle Fox contributed reporting. More

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    Kevin Durant’s Boardroom launches entertainment and sports advisory firm

    NBA superstar Kevin Durant and partner Rich Kleiman are expanding beyond their Boardroom media business.
    The duo announced Boardroom Advisory, which aims to connect athletes to various business and media opportunities.
    Durant is among a slew of superstar athletes to branch out in the sports media and entertainment world.

    NBA player Kevin Durant attends a 2023 FIBA World Cup exhibition game between Puerto Rico and the U.S. at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas on Aug. 7, 2023.
    Ethan Miller | Getty Images

    National Basketball Association superstar Kevin Durant and business partner Rich Kleiman on Tuesday announced the launch of a new advisory firm under the duo’s Boardroom media company.
    The firm, Boardroom Advisory, will operate on a yearly fee structure and work with athletes as well as executives and brands on creating business and sports ownership opportunities, content and more, the company said in a press release.

    “What our team has built with Boardroom speaks for itself, and it was born out of many of the relationships we have cultivated along the way,” Durant said in the release. “Boardroom Advisory is a natural extension of the brand, and is a way for us to bring our resources to other athletes.”
    The firm doesn’t intend to compete with agencies and will work in tandem with athletes’ preexisting representatives, a spokesperson for Boardroom said. The firm also isn’t disclosing client details at the moment. It will rely on its extensive network to draw clients.
    Durant is among a slew of superstar athletes to branch out in the sports media and entertainment world. NBA rival Lebron James’ video production company SpringHill was valued at $725 million after the company sold a minority stake to investors. Soccer star Cristiano Ronaldo is one of the richest athletes in the world, whose social media influence makes him millions per post, due in large part to his $1 billion lifetime deal with Nike.
    Durant and Kleiman founded Boardroom in 2019. The media brand covers the business behind media, sports and music. The company also produces original content. “The Boardroom,” a series of roundtable discussions on ESPN+, ran for two seasons. The company’s investment portfolio stretches to more than 100 early stage investments across the sports and business space.
    Durant, a 13-time NBA all-star and former MVP, has played for the Golden State Warriors, Oklahoma City Thunder and the Brooklyn Nets. Now, he plays for the Phoenix Suns. Kleiman is Durant’s long-time manager. The two co-founded 35V (35 Ventures), a sports, media and entertainment company, in 2016.

    Business manager Lorenzo McCloud, who has worked with Philadelphia 76ers guard and former Durant teammate James Harden, will join the firm as director of talent relations.
    Disclosure: CNBC partnered with Boardroom on the Game Plan conference over the summer. More

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    Welcome to a new era of Asian commerce

    Seven hundred years ago, maritime trade routes that stretched from the coast of Japan to the Red Sea were peppered with Arab dhows, Chinese junks and Javanese djongs, ferrying ceramics, precious metals and textiles across the region. At its centre, a trading post known as Singapura flourished. The enormous intra-Asian commercial network was disrupted only by the arrival of sailors from rising European empires and the emergence of farther-flung markets for Asian goods.Today another reconfiguration is under way. The “Factory Asia” model of the late 20th century, in which the continent produced products for American and European consumers, provided an astonishing boost to the prosperity of China, Japan, South Korea and Taiwan. In 1990 just 46% of Asian trade took place within the continent, as enormous volumes of goods flowed to the West. Yet by 2021 that figure had reached 58%, closer to European levels of 69%. Greater regional trade has prompted an increase in capital flows, too, binding countries tighter still. A new era of Asian commerce has emerged—one that will reshape the continent’s economic and political future.image: The EconomistIts emergence began with the growth of sophisticated supply chains centred first on Japan in the 1990s, and then later China. Intermediate goods—components that will eventually become part of finished products—soon started to move across borders in greater numbers. They were followed by foreign direct investment (fdi). Asian investors now own 59% of the stock of fdi in their own region, excluding the financial hubs of Hong Kong and Singapore, up from 48% in 2010. In India, Indonesia, Malaysia, South Korea and Japan the share of direct investment from Asia rose by more than ten percentage points, to between 26% and 61%.After the global financial crisis of 2007-09, cross-border banking also became more Asian. Before the crisis hit, local banks accounted for less than a third of the region’s overseas lending. They now account for more than half, having taken advantage of the retreat of Western financiers. China’s huge state banks led the way. Overseas loans by the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China more than doubled from 2012 to last year, rising to $203bn. Japan’s megabanks have also spread, in order to escape narrow margins at home, as have Singapore’s United Overseas Bank and Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation.The presence of Western governments has also diminished. In a recent survey of South-East Asian researchers, businessfolk and policymakers by the iseas-Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore, some 32% of respondents said that they thought America was the most influential political power in the region. Yet just 11% of respondents named it the most influential economic power. State-led investment from China to the rest of the continent under the Belt and Road Initiative has captured attention, but official assistance and government-facilitated investment from Japan and South Korea are also growing.These trends are likely to accelerate. In the face of deteriorating relations between America and China, companies in the region that rely on Chinese factories are looking to alternatives in India and South-East Asia. At the same time, few bosses expect to desert China entirely, meaning two Asian supply chains will be required, along with some doubling-up of investment. Trade deals will speed this along. A study published last year suggested that the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, a broad but shallow pact inked in 2020, will increase investment in the region. By contrast, as a result of America’s abandonment of the Trans-Pacific Pact trade deal in 2017, there is little chance of Asian exporters gaining greater access to the American market.The need to establish new supply chains means that transport and logistics are another area where intra-Asian investment will probably increase, notes Sabita Prakash of adm Capital, a private-credit firm. Matching investors searching for reliable income with projects looking for finance—the mission of such private-credit companies—has been a lucrative pastime in Asia, and is likely to become a more attractive one. The size of the private-credit market in South-East Asia and India rose by around 50% between 2020 and mid-2022, to almost $80bn. Other big investors are also turning to infrastructure. gic, Singapore’s sovereign-wealth fund, which manages a portion of the country’s foreign reserves, is spending big on the building required for new supply chains.Changes to Asian savings and demography will also speed up the economic integration. China, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan have climbed the ranks of overseas investors, becoming some of the world’s largest. These richer and older parts of the continent have exported striking volumes of capital into the rest of the region, with cash following recently established trade links. In 2011 richer and older countries in Asia had about $329bn, in today’s money, invested in the younger and poorer economies of Bangladesh, Cambodia, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Thailand. A decade later that figure had climbed to $698bn.Silk flowsIn India and South-East Asia, “you’ve still got urbanisation happening, and capital follows those trends,” says Raghu Narain of Natixis, an investment bank. Not only do bigger cities require more infrastructure investment, but new companies better suited to urban life can thrive. Asian cross-border merger-and-acquisitions (m&a) activity is changing, according to Mr Narain, becoming more like that found in Europe and North America. Even as deals into and out of China have slowed considerably, m&a activity has become more common elsewhere. Japanese banks, facing low interest rates and a slow-growing economy at home, are ravenous for deals. Over the past year Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group and Mitsubishi ufj Financial Group have snapped up Indonesian, Philippine and Vietnamese financial firms.Meanwhile, rising Asian consumption makes local economies more attractive as markets. Whereas in Europe 70% or so of consumption goods are imported from the local region, just 44% are in Asia. This is likely to change. Of the 113m people expected next year to enter the global consumer class (spending over $12 a day in 2017 dollars, adjusted for purchasing power), some 91m will be in Asia, according to World Data Lab, a research firm. Even as Chinese income growth slows after decades of expansion, other countries will pick up the pace. The five largest economies in asean, a regional bloc—namely, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand—are expected to see imports grow by 5.7% a year between 2023 and 2028, the most rapid pace of any region.image: The EconomistThese regional trading patterns would represent a return to a more normal state of affairs. The globe-spanning export model that delivered first-world living standards to large parts of Asia, and encouraged investment from far afield, was a product of unique historical circumstances. The amount of goods that travel from the continent’s industrial cities to America is far higher than would be predicted by the relative size of their respective export and import markets, and the distance between them. Indeed, a paper by the Economic Research Institute for asean and East Asia suggests that machinery exports from North-East and South-East Asia to North America in 2019 were more than twice as high as such factors would suggest.Closer commercial links will bind the business cycles of Asian economies even more tightly together. Despite the enduring use of the dollar in cross-border transactions and Asian investors’ continuing penchant for Western listed markets, a study by the Asian Development Bank in 2021 concluded that Asian economies are now more exposed to spillovers from economic shocks to China than America. This has been on display in recent months, as China’s faltering trade has hit exporters in South Korea and Taiwan. More trade, not just in intermediate parts but in finished goods for consumption, means the continent’s currencies and monetary-policy decisions will increasingly move in sync.This will have political ramifications. America will retain influence over Asian security, but its economic importance will deplete. Local businessfolk and policymakers will be more interested in and receptive to their neighbours, rather than customers and countries farther afield. With local factories still being built, consumption growing and a deep pool of savings from Asia’s increasingly elderly savers desperate for projects to finance, the high point for regional integration is yet to be reached. The new era of Asian commerce will be more locally focused and less Western-facing. So will the continent itself. ■ More

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    As America’s influence wanes, Asian economies are integrating

    Seven hundred years ago, maritime trade routes that stretched from the coast of Japan to the Red Sea were peppered with Arab dhows, Chinese junks and Javanese djongs, ferrying ceramics, precious metals and textiles across the region. At its centre, a trading post known as Singapura flourished. The enormous intra-Asian commercial network was disrupted only by the arrival of sailors from rising European empires and the emergence of farther-flung markets for Asian goods.Today another reconfiguration is under way. The “Factory Asia” model of the late 20th century, in which the continent produced products for American and European consumers, provided an astonishing boost to the prosperity of China, Japan, South Korea and Taiwan. In 1990 just 46% of Asian trade took place within the continent, as enormous volumes of goods flowed to the West. Yet by 2021 that figure had reached 58%, closer to European levels of 69%. Greater regional trade has prompted an increase in capital flows, too, binding countries tighter still. A new era of Asian commerce has emerged—one that will reshape the continent’s economic and political future.image: The EconomistIts emergence began with the growth of sophisticated supply chains centred first on Japan in the 1990s, and then later China. Intermediate goods—components that will eventually become part of finished products—soon started to move across borders in greater numbers. They were followed by foreign direct investment (fdi). Asian investors now own 59% of the stock of fdi in their own region, excluding the financial hubs of Hong Kong and Singapore, up from 48% in 2010. In India, Indonesia, Malaysia, South Korea and Japan the share of direct investment from Asia rose by more than ten percentage points, to between 26% and 61%.After the global financial crisis of 2007-09, cross-border banking also became more Asian. Before the crisis hit, local banks accounted for less than a third of the region’s overseas lending. They now account for more than half, having taken advantage of the retreat of Western financiers. China’s huge state banks led the way. Overseas loans by the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China more than doubled from 2012 to last year, rising to $203bn. Japan’s megabanks have also spread, in order to escape narrow margins at home, as have Singapore’s United Overseas Bank and Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation.The presence of Western governments has also diminished. In a recent survey of South-East Asian researchers, businessfolk and policymakers by the iseas-Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore, some 32% of respondents said that they thought America was the most influential political power in the region. Yet just 11% of respondents named it the most influential economic power. State-led investment from China to the rest of the continent under the Belt and Road Initiative has captured attention, but official assistance and government-facilitated investment from Japan and South Korea are also growing.These trends are likely to accelerate. In the face of deteriorating relations between America and China, companies in the region that rely on Chinese factories are looking to alternatives in India and South-East Asia. At the same time, few bosses expect to desert China entirely, meaning two Asian supply chains will be required, along with some doubling-up of investment. Trade deals will speed this along. A study published last year suggested that the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, a broad but shallow pact inked in 2020, will increase investment in the region. By contrast, as a result of America’s abandonment of the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal in 2017, there is little chance of Asian exporters gaining greater access to the American market.The need to establish new supply chains means that transport and logistics are another area where intra-Asian investment will probably increase, notes Sabita Prakash of adm Capital, a private-credit firm. Matching investors searching for reliable income with projects looking for finance—the mission of such private-credit companies—has been a lucrative pastime in Asia, and is likely to become a more attractive one. The size of the private-credit market in South-East Asia and India rose by around 50% between 2020 and mid-2022, to almost $80bn. Other big investors are also turning to infrastructure. gic, Singapore’s sovereign-wealth fund, which manages a portion of the country’s foreign reserves, is spending big on the building required for new supply chains.Changes to Asian savings and demography will also speed up the economic integration. China, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan have climbed the ranks of overseas investors, becoming some of the world’s largest. These richer and older parts of the continent have exported striking volumes of capital into the rest of the region, with cash following recently established trade links. In 2011 richer and older countries in Asia had about $329bn, in today’s money, invested in the younger and poorer economies of Bangladesh, Cambodia, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Thailand. A decade later that figure had climbed to $698bn.Silk flowsIn India and South-East Asia, “you’ve still got urbanisation happening, and capital follows those trends,” says Raghu Narain of Natixis, an investment bank. Not only do bigger cities require more infrastructure investment, but new companies better suited to urban life can thrive. Asian cross-border merger-and-acquisitions (m&a) activity is changing, according to Mr Narain, becoming more like that found in Europe and North America. Even as deals into and out of China have slowed considerably, m&a activity has become more common elsewhere. Japanese banks, facing low interest rates and a slow-growing economy at home, are ravenous for deals. Over the past year Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group and Mitsubishi ufj Financial Group have snapped up Indonesian, Philippine and Vietnamese financial firms.Meanwhile, rising Asian consumption makes local economies more attractive as markets. Whereas in Europe 70% or so of consumption goods are imported from the local region, just 44% are in Asia. This is likely to change. Of the 113m people expected next year to enter the global consumer class (spending over $12 a day in 2017 dollars, adjusted for purchasing power), some 91m will be in Asia, according to World Data Lab, a research firm. Even as Chinese income growth slows after decades of expansion, other countries will pick up the pace. The five largest economies in asean, a regional bloc—namely, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand—are expected to see imports grow by 5.7% a year between 2023 and 2028, the most rapid pace of any region.image: The EconomistThese regional trading patterns would represent a return to a more normal state of affairs. The globe-spanning export model that delivered first-world living standards to large parts of Asia, and encouraged investment from far afield, was a product of unique historical circumstances. The amount of goods that travel from the continent’s industrial cities to America is far higher than would be predicted by the relative size of their respective export and import markets, and the distance between them. Indeed, a paper by the Economic Research Institute for asean and East Asia suggests that machinery exports from North-East and South-East Asia to North America in 2019 were more than twice as high as such factors would suggest.Closer commercial links will bind the business cycles of Asian economies even more tightly together. Despite the enduring use of the dollar in cross-border transactions and Asian investors’ continuing penchant for Western-listed markets, a study by the Asian Development Bank in 2021 concluded that Asian economies are now more exposed to spillovers from economic shocks to China than America. This has been on display in recent months, as China’s faltering trade has hit exporters in South Korea and Taiwan. More trade, not just in intermediate parts but in finished goods for consumption, means the continent’s currencies and monetary-policy decisions will increasingly move in sync.This will have political ramifications. America will retain influence over Asian security, but its economic importance will decline. Local businessfolk and policymakers will be more interested in and receptive to their neighbours, rather than customers and countries farther afield. With local factories still being built, consumption growing and a deep pool of savings from Asia’s increasingly elderly savers desperate for projects to finance, the high point for regional integration is yet to be reached. The new era of Asian commerce will be more locally focused and less Western-facing. So will the continent itself. ■ More