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    Israel inflation rate reaches two-year low of 3.0%, returns to target

    A Reuters poll had expected the rate to ease to 3.1% last month. The consumer price index fell 0.1% in December from November.Israel’s war against Hamas militants is weighing on economic growth and helping to bring down inflation back down, with the rate now within an official rate of 1-3% for the first time since December 2021.The Bank of Israel earlier this month lowered its benchmark interest rate by 25 basis points to 4.5%, its first cut in four years. But it cautioned that looser fiscal policy due to higher defence spending could slow the pace of future reductions. More

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    There’s no more money, German minister tells rowdy farmers

    BERLIN (Reuters) -Germany’s Finance Minister Christian Lindner took to the stage on Monday in front of thousands of jeering farmers protesting against tax rises and told them there was no money for further subsidies.Berlin has been brought to a near standstill by the demonstration, which filled one of its central avenues with trucks and tractors as some 10,000 farmers arrived to cap a week of protests against taxes that have become a flashpoint for anti-government anger. “I can’t promise you more state aid from the federal budget,” Lindner told the crowd from a chilly stage in front of the Brandenburg Gate. “But we can fight together for you to enjoy more freedom and respect for your work.”The protests have heaped pressure on Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s coalition as it struggles to fix budget disarray and contain right-wing groups.The protests surged after a government decision to phase out a tax break on agricultural diesel as it tried to balance its 2024 budget following a constitutional court ruling in November that forced it to revise its spending plans.Faced with a backlash, the government has already said it maintain a tax rebate on new agricultural vehicles and spread the scrapping of the agricultural diesel subsidy over several years.But farmers, with the vocal backing of the opposition conservatives and the far-right, say that is not enough.”I have respect for every politician who is prepared to come to us,” said Farmers’ Union head Joachim Rukwied, who at one moment had to take the microphone from Lindner and beg the crowd to stop jeering for long enough to listen to him.”The finance minister is here,” he said. “It makes no sense to boo him.”The government has taken a conciliatory tone as concern has grown that political debate has become radicalised and demonstrations could turn violent. Protest leaders will meet coalition leaders later this afternoon.MUCKING OUTLindner, describing himself as a lad from the countryside who had mucked out stables in his time, sought, to little avail, to win over farmers by contrasting their peaceful protest in Berlin to the behaviour of climate activists who had sprayed paint on the Brandenburg Gate – “the symbol of German national unity”.But he said scarce money was needed for long neglected investments in schools and roads and for industrial energy subsidies.Jeers grew especially loud when Lindner said money was needed because of the war in Ukraine.”With the war in Ukraine, peace and freedom in Europe are threatened once again, so we have to invest once again in our security as we used to,” he said.Vehicles that arrived overnight from across Germany parked nose-to-tail along the route, and crowds of farmers, wrapped up against the cold, waved German flags and held up banners marked with slogans including: “Without farmers, no future”. The governing parties are divided over how best to meet farmers’ demands. Agriculture Minister Cem Ozdemir, a Green, has suggested financial rewards for humane animal husbandry, while some Social Democrats want to offer higher produce prices, and Lindner’s Free Democrats want to cut administrative overheads.Several bus and tram lines closed for the protest, which was patrolled by around 1,300 officers, police said.Disruption caused by protests and train strikes last week hurt coalition parties in the polls and propelled the far-right Alternative for Germany party to new heights. More

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    China, Switzerland sign declaration with view to expanding trade

    Li, the most senior Chinese official to visit Switzerland since President Xi Jinping’s visit in 2017, met President Viola Amherd alongside a high-ranking Chinese delegation ahead of the World Economic Forum in Davos.The declaration entails the finalisation of a joint study to develop the two countries’ existing free trade agreement. “This marks an important step towards the start of possible negotiations,” the Swiss government said.China is Switzerland’s third-biggest trading partner after the United States and the European Union. The two countries signed a free trade agreement in 2013, Beijing’s first such deal with an economy in continental Europe.But efforts to refresh it previously stalled amid reports of concerns about China’s human rights record. A dialogue between the Swiss and Chinese foreign ministries will resume this year and is set to include human rights.Li and Amherd, who met in an 18th century manor house near the capital Bern, also discussed Russia’s war against Ukraine and the Israel-Hamas conflict, the Swiss statement said. More

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    Nigeria’s inflation rises to more than 27-year high in December

    ABUJA (Reuters) – Nigeria’s inflation rate rose to its highest in more than 27 years in December as food prices surged, exacerbating a cost-of-living crisis and piling more pressure on the central bank to raise interest rates.Consumer inflation rose for the 12th straight month in December to 28.92% year on year from November’s 28.20%, the National Bureau of Statistics said on Monday.Inflation in Africa’s biggest economy and most populous nation has not climbed this high since mid-1996.The food inflation rate, which accounts for the bulk of Nigeria’s inflation basket, rose to 33.93% in December from 32.84% a month earlier. The statistics office said prices rose for a broad range of food items including bread and cereals, oil, fish, meat, fruit and eggs.Analysts say higher fuel prices and a weaker naira currency have also stoked price pressures.David Omojomolo, Africa economist at Capital Economics, said “inflationary pressures are only likely to build from here,” citing second-round effects from the removal of a fuel subsidy last year and naira weakness.He predicted that inflation would breach 30% by the end of the first quarter and said it was unlikely to peak until the middle of 2024.President Bola Tinubu last May embarked on Nigeria’s boldest reforms in decades by scrapping a costly but popular fuel subsidy and devaluing the currency to try to revive economic growth. But growth is yet to pick up while inflation has worsened.Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Olayemi Cardoso is yet to hold a rate-setting meeting since taking office in September.”At the next meeting, we think that the CBN will need to raise rates by 400 basis points, to 22.75%, to show that it is taking the inflation fight more seriously,” Capital Economics’ Omojomolo said in a research note.”There’s a clear risk, though, the CBN underwhelms again. Doing so would undermine much of the momentum and optimism around the policy shift that President Tinubu started last year.” More

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    The red ink that flows from the Red Sea attacks

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.This article is an on-site version of our Trade Secrets newsletter. Sign up here to get the newsletter sent straight to your inbox every MondayNow there’s a geopolitical trade policy for you. Never mind Brussels earnestly setting AI regulations and hoping they osmose abroad through the Brussels Effect. The US and assorted allies, especially the UK, trying to smash trade routes open in the Red Sea by bombing the Houthi militants really does have some echoes of the gunboat diplomacy of earlier centuries. Later this week I’ll write about the security that underpins globalisation, which is about more than just patrolling shipping lanes. But today I’ll focus on the immediate effects on trade from the continued disruption, and how long till it gets really serious. It’s certainly going to add a bit of spice to the World Trade Organization meeting in Abu Dhabi next month. Charted waters is on expectations of falling global interest rates.Get in touch. Email me at [email protected] the HouthisI don’t claim you exactly needed to be a strategic genius to spot this, but I said just before Christmas it was pretty obvious that there would be serious pushback to militants clogging up one of the world’s great trade arteries.Together with the world’s other great shipping canal, Panama, being severely affected by drought, the supply shock to freight might finally have arrived. I say might because it seems unlikely the Houthi rebels will be able permanently to shut the Suez Canal to shipping without there being some fairly serious reaction.Last week’s strikes from the US, UK, Australia, Bahrain, Canada and the Netherlands were pretty impressive. It’s also notable that, although the Houthis have tied their attacks to Israel’s bombing of Gaza, governments joining in don’t necessarily back the US stance on Israel.So far, though, they haven’t deterred the Houthis or indeed made any noticeable impact on the rising prices of freight or insurance. As the FT reported over the weekend, reinsurers have been putting get-out clauses into contracts protecting them against having to pay out for damage during a full-scale Middle East conflict. Freight rates for routes through the canal are currently four or five times higher, and journeys are taking 20-25 per cent longer by going round the southern tip of Africa, than before the Houthis started attacking ships. Because the global container system is so interconnected, prices are spiking elsewhere, such as the US west coast routes.I’ll stick to my prediction that this isn’t a major crisis for globalisation, but it’s obviously a big deal. So what happens now? As is now traditional at Trade Secrets during times of supply chain turmoil, I went to the mountaintop to consult Ryan Petersen, chief executive of the freight forwarder and logistics company Flexport, who was one of the most incisive analysts of the snarl-ups in container traffic back in 2021-22. Here are the main points from that and other conversations:Things are likely to get worse this year but then get better even if traffic through the Suez Canal remains blocked. Carriers ordered a lot of new vessels in recent years. Peterson says that between 2022 and 2025, the total capacity of container shipping is reckoned to go up by about 25 per cent. “There’s so much shipping capacity coming on stream that in the long run the increase in rates evens out. But you could see the rates remaining elevated for a couple of quarters, maybe a year.”Freight demand is price inelastic in the short run and transport isn’t a big part of overall costs. Petersen says the average container holds about $100,000 worth of goods wholesale, which will be sold at destination for $300,000. So a price increase of $6,000 adds about 2 per cent — not negligible for inflation if it gets passed through to consumer prices, but not big enough for manufacturers of, say, high-value electronics to stop shipping product. It’s not clear whether most customers are in that much of a hurry. There’s obviously a trade-off whereby the Red Sea journey is faster but has a higher risk than going the long way round. Petersen says: “I haven’t seen evidence that customers are asking to go through the canal rather than round Africa.”Most will wait a few months before making big changes in production. Manufacturers in the Middle East, whose journey times to Europe have tripled by having to go round Africa, may already be pausing production. But Asian companies whose journey times have only increased by 20 per cent will wait at least a quarter or so to see how the situation develops before shifting location of factories or changing target markets.The Suez Canal is uniquely vulnerable and uniquely valuable. It carries something like 30 per cent of all global container traffic — more than the Panama Canal, which is having its issues with low water levels at the moment. And while there are security concerns in other parts of the world, such as piracy off Somalia and in the Malacca Strait, dealing with pirates is relatively straightforward (you sink their boats) compared with fighting a land-based force such as the Houthis. The value of traffic suggests there will be rising diplomatic or military pressure for a solution to the blockages. Petersen says: “The whole world is pretty much lined up wanting to have smooth sailing through this region.”Air and land freight can’t make up the difference. There has predictably been increased demand for air freight as a result of the Red Sea attacks, particularly from companies with high-value time-contingent goods. But as Petersen points out, a container ship holds 10,000 40-foot containers while a Boeing 747 holds seven. “If 1 per cent of ocean freight switched to air, it would more than fill all the capacity.”Charted watersExpected cuts in interest rates are good news for global growth and hence for trade. With underlying inflationary pressure coming down and inflation expectations well contained, the Red Sea disruptions might delay them but probably won’t put them into reverse. Just as the rise in inflation and interest rates over the past two years was largely a global phenomenon, so is the expected loosening of monetary policy now.Trade linksThe Chinese carmaker BYD is expanding its global presence, looking to acquire a lithium producer in Brazil to supply its car plant there after also agreeing to set up in Hungary. This is a great FT profile of the company’s head, Wang Chuanfu.On that note, the Economist boldly argues that Europe and the US should just relax and enjoy cheap Chinese EVs rather than trying to lock them out of their markets.That’s going to hurt: the Dutch semiconductor equipment manufacturer ASML, which is subject to a US-led sanctions regime on exports to China, says the EU is not in the Champions League of economic security and statecraft. The FT’s Swamp Notes newsletter looks at whether Joe Biden can outflank Donald Trump on trade.The brave start to the self-styled libertarian Javier Milei’s presidency in Argentina, with the peso devalued and price-fixing agreements abandoned, has led to inflation shooting above 200 per cent in December.Trade Secrets is edited by Jonathan MoulesRecommended newsletters for youEurope Express — Your essential guide to what matters in Europe today. Sign up hereChris Giles on Central Banks — Your essential guide to money, interest rates, inflation and what central banks are thinking. Sign up here More

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    Italian firms less gloomy on outlook as inflation eases -central bank survey

    In the last three months of the year the percentage of businesses that expected better economic conditions rose to 8% from 4% in the previous three months, the central bank said in its quarterly survey.Those expecting things to get worse decreased to 29% from 37% but uncertainty about the political and economic outlook and the future course of energy prices was still weighing on sentiment, the survey warned.Expectations improved thanks to both stronger domestic demand and better conditions for investment, it said.The euro zone’s third-largest economy expanded a meagre 0.1% in the third quarter from the previous three months after contracting by 0.4% between April and June. National statistics bureau ISTAT said on Nov. 10 that the fourth quarter would also be weak. It will issue a flash estimate of fourth quarter gross domestic product on Jan. 30.The Bank of Italy’s poll showed businesses expect inflation to stand at 2.3% in 12 months’ time, down from 4.7% in the previous survey.The survey’s 12-month projection was the lowest since the second half of 2021 and is not far from the European Central Bank’s target of 2% for the euro zone as a whole.The International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) both see Italian inflation averaging 2.6% this year.The Bank of Italy survey was conducted between Nov. 22 and Dec. 14 among Italian industry and services companies with at least 50 employees. More