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    Global equity funds draw robust inflows on rate cut hopes

    The MSCI All-World index surged to 3184.32 on Thursday, its highest since January 13, 2022 amid market optimism over the prospects of rate cuts.According to LSEG data, global equity funds received a net $16.01 billion during the week, logging their most significant weekly net purchase since March 22.Investors poured about $14.57 billion into U.S. equity funds, the biggest amount since June 14. European and Asian funds however, faced outflows of roughly $1 billion and $182 million, respectively.Global bond funds, meanwhile, received $1.07 billion in inflows after two successive weeks of outflows.Investors purchased $2.62 billion worth of global corporate bond funds in contrast to disposals of about $3.9 billion in the prior week. High yield funds also secured inflows, worth about $679 million but government bond funds had outflows of $265 million.Meanwhile, global money market funds attracted $9.12 billion, their first weekly inflow in three weeks.Among the commodities segment, precious metal funds attracted about $111 million as inflows extended into a fourth successive week. Energy funds also attracted about $36 million in net buying.Data covering 29,066 emerging markets funds showed equity funds secured $1.94 billion worth of inflows, breaking a 19-week-long selling streak. EM bond funds however, had $1.33 billion worth of outflows. More

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    India’s Nov infrastructure output rises at slowest pace in 6 months

    It was the slowest growth in infrastructure output, comprising eight sectors also including coal and electricity, since the 5.2% recorded in May 2023.Diwali, one of India’s main festivals, is usually celebrated in October, but fell later this year, in November. Cement output dropped 3.6% year on year in November while crude oil production fell 0.4%.Electricity generation rose 5.6% in the month, coal production was up 10.9% and the steel sector expanded 9.1% year on year, the data showed. Production of refinery products increased 12.4%. “Given the larger number of factory holidays, we anticipate a modest 2-4% rise in the Index of Industrial Production (IIP) in November 2023,” said Aditi Nayar, an economist at ICRA. In the first eight months of the financial year that started on April 1, infrastructure output, which accounts for nearly 40% of industrial production, rose 8.6% year on year, the data showed. More

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    From FedEx to airlines, companies are starting to lose their pricing power

    After years of strong consumer spending, some companies are now finding the limits of their pricing power.
    Companies including FedEx, Target and General Mills have cut their sales outlooks, while airlines have slashed off-peak fares.
    Faced with slipping demand, more price-sensitive consumers, easing inflation and better supply, some companies are looking for ways to grow profits without price hikes.

    A FedEx worker delivers packages in New York, May 9, 2022.
    Andrew Kelly | Reuters

    After years of unbridled consumer spending on everything from home improvement to dream vacations, some companies are now finding the limits of their pricing power.
    Shipping giant FedEx last week said customers have shied away from speedier, pricier shipping options. Airlines including Southwest discounted off-peak fares in the fall. The likes of Target and Cheerios maker General Mills have cut their sales outlooks as more consumers watch their budgets.

    It’s a shift from the recent years when consumers spent at a breakneck pace — and at high prices — lifting corporate revenues to new records. But faced with weakening demand, more price-sensitive consumers, easing inflation and better supply, some sectors are now forced to find profit growth without the tailwind of price hikes.
    The answer across industries has been to cut costs, whether it’s through layoffs or buyouts, or simply becoming more efficient. Executives have spent the past several weeks selling these cost-cutting plans to Wall Street.
    Nike last week lowered its annual sales growth forecast and unveiled plans to cut costs by $2 billion over the next three years. Companies including Spirit Airlines, hit by a slowdown in domestic bookings and higher costs, offered salaried workers buyouts, while toymaker Hasbro announced layoffs of 1,100 employees as it struggles with lackluster toy sales.

    Spirit Airlines jetliners on the tarmac at Fort Lauderdale Hollywood International Airport. (Joe Cavaretta/South Florida Sun Sentinel/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)
    Joe Cavaretta | South Florida Sun-sentinel | Getty Images

    “I think companies are better at controlling costs than maintaining pricing power,” said David Kelly, chief global strategist at J.P. Morgan Asset Management.
    “Goods companies don’t have the pricing power they did in the pandemic, and some in the hotel and travel [industries] — they don’t have the pricing power they did in the immediate post-Covid,” he added.

    Sales growth for companies in the S&P 500 is on track to average 2.7% this year, according to mid-December analyst estimates posted by FactSet. That’s down from an average of 11% growth in 2022 over the year earlier. Meanwhile, net margins are forecast to fall only slightly year over year to 11.6% from 11.9%, FactSet said.
    “Companies are extraordinarily committed to maintaining margins,” said Kelly.
    FedEx, for example, despite its weaker sales forecast, maintained adjusted earnings outlook for its fiscal year that ends May 31. The company announced cost-cutting measures last year.

    Sector shifts

    Consumer spending has largely been resilient, but growth is slowing.
    The Mastercard SpendingPulse survey showed holiday retail spending, which excludes auto sales and travel spending, rose 3.1% from Nov. 1 through Dec. 24 of this year over the same time frame in 2022, when consumers’ year-over-year retail spending increased 7.6%. Those figures are not adjusted for inflation.
    The drag isn’t felt equally across industries.
    According to the Mastercard survey, restaurant spending rose 7.8% during the holiday period, outpacing overall gains. Executives at Starbucks, for one, say sales are still strong and customers are opting for pricier drinks, fueling sales and profits.
    Consumer spending on apparel and groceries rose 2.4% and 2.1%, respectively, from the year-earlier period, according to the survey. Spending on jewelry, however, fell 2.4% and spending on electronics dropped 0.4%, the report showed.
    Airline executives have touted robust demand through the summer as travel rebounds from pandemic halts, but fares are dropping from 2022, when capacity was constrained by staffing shortages and aircraft delays. The latest inflation report from the U.S. Department of Labor showed airfare declined 12% in November from a year earlier.

    Travelers walk with their luggage at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York on Dec. 23, 2023.
    Jeenah Moon | Getty Images

    Southwest Airlines CEO Bob Jordan told CNBC on the sidelines of an industry event in New York earlier this month that the carrier’s fares are still up from last year, despite some discounting during off-peak travel times. The carrier has trimmed its capacity growth plans for 2024 and plans to utilize aircraft more during higher demand periods.
    “The capacity changes next year are all about getting the network optimized to match the new demand patterns,” Jordan said. “In some cases, the peak and trough [of demand] are farther apart.”
    Automakers are also losing their pricing power following years of resilient demand and low supplies of new vehicles that led to record North American profits for Detroit automakers as well as foreign-based companies such as Toyota Motor.
    Average transaction prices of new vehicles climbed from less than $38,000 in January 2020 to more than $50,000 at the start of 2023 — an unprecedented 32% increase over that time. Prices remain elevated but were down more than 3.5% through October to roughly $47,936, according to the most recent data from Cox Automotive.
    “The consumer is definitely pushing back,” said Ohsung Kwon, an equities strategist at Bank of America, referring to some prices.
    “But we think the consumer is healthy,” he continued. “The balance sheet of the consumer still looks phenomenal.”

    Spending hangover

    There is plenty to cheer about the state of the U.S. consumer — the job market is still strong, unemployment is low and spending has been resilient.
    But consumers have also tapped into their savings and racked up credit card debt, with balances reaching a record $1.08 trillion at the end of the third quarter, according to the New York Federal Reserve. Credit card delinquency rates are above pre-pandemic levels.
    Those dynamics have some consumers pulling back on expenses at a time when companies had already been grappling with spending shifts as pandemic fears eased. Consumers that had spent heavily during Covid lockdowns on things such as home improvement supplies shifted their money to services such as travel and restaurants when restrictions lifted.
    While airlines, many retailers and others have forecast a strong holiday season, the question remains whether consumers will continue their spending habits in the coming months, which are typically a low season for shopping and travel, especially as they pay off their recent purchases. That could mean a challenging period for companies to push price increases on consumers.
    Even if companies can’t raise prices and if sales growth is muted, analysts are still upbeat about earnings next year.

    FactSet data shows analysts expect a 6.6% increase in earnings of S&P 500 companies in the first quarter of 2024 from a year earlier. They forecast a sales increase of 4.4%. Both growth metrics would mark an annual improvement and quarter-on-quarter improvement. Net margins are expected to expand 11.8%.
    Bank of America’s Kwon said he expects earnings to improve even if U.S. economic growth slows due in part to company strategy shifts.
    “Companies are really focusing on what they can cut,” he said. “Companies have overhired and overbuilt capacity. They’ve stopped doing that.”
    — CNBC’s Michael Wayland contributed to this article.Don’t miss these stories from CNBC PRO: More

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    Shares post best year in four, volatile Treasuries flat on year

    SINGAPORE/LONDON (Reuters) -World shares took a breather on the last trading day of the year but were heading for their best annual performance since 2019, while U.S. Treasuries are set to finish the year broadly where they started, camouflaging some wild moves for the benchmark in 2023. Shares around the world have risen sharply in the last two months of the year, as benchmark bond yields fell on the back of expectations of central bank rate cuts early in 2023. The S&P 500 closed on Thursday just 0.3% shy of its record closing high, reached on Jan. 3, 2022. Futures for the index are up 0.1%, leaving traders on edge to see whether the benchmark will reach a new peak before the year-end. The S&P500 is up nearly 25% this year thanks to a massive rally in megacap tech stocks, while Europe’s STOXX 600, currently around a 23-month peak, is heading for a 12% yearly gain, and MSCI’s world share index a 20% gain, its most in four years. All rallied sharply in November and December. “We have eaten a lot of the returns that were expected in 2024. The positive momentum in markets is obviously associated with the fall in yields, and so now the question is how long can this trend continue?” said Samy Chaar, chief economist at Lombard Odier. “It doesn’t necessarily have to stop, future returns are probably more moderate than they were at the beginning of November, but if you think the long end of the U.S. curve can settle around 3.5%- 4%, which is where we are now, there is little danger of a big U-turn, and if companies can continue to generate profits there might still be a few percent of upside.” The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield was 3.885%, up 3 basis points on the day, and remarkably just 5 basis points above its level at the start of the year. That yearly performance masks some major swings, as the note’s yield reached 5.021% in October, its highest since 2007, before retreating and driving the share rally. Behind the move lower in yields has been a sustained decline in inflation around the world that has driven expectations that central banks will be cutting interest rates early next year, even as the U.S. economy has broadly remained strong. Markets are pricing in a 88% chance of the U.S. Federal Reserve starting its rate cuts in March, according to CME FedWatch tool, compared to 35% chance at the end of November. Traders are also pricing in over 150 basis points of easing next year by the Fed, the European Central Bank, and the Bank of England. Spanish inflation was a rare piece of economic data during the quiet period between Christmas and New Year. The country’s European Union-harmonised 12-month inflation was unchanged from November at 3.3%, though below the 3.4% expected by analysts polled by Reuters.CHINESE UNDERPERFORMANCE Chinese markets have been standout underperformers, despite optimism at the start of the year when Beijing ended its zero-COVID policy. Both Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index and China’s onshore bluechip index lost more than 10% in the year on waning investors confidence in the world’s second largest economy. [.SS] In the currency market, the dollar was rooted on the back foot and headed for a 2% decline this year after two years of strong gains, with declines mirroring the fall in U.S. yields. Against a basket of currencies, the dollar was last at 101.25, edging away from the five month low of 100.61 it touched on Wednesday. [FRX/]In commodities, Chicago wheat and corn futures were set for the biggest annual drop in a decade as easing supply bottlenecks in the Black Sea region and higher production weighed on prices. [GRA/]Oil prices were due to end 2023 down 10% after a year of wild swings driven by geopolitical concerns, production cuts and global measures to rein in inflation.On Friday, U.S. crude rose 0.7% to $72.06 per barrel and Brent was at $77.69, up 0.7%. [O/R]Gold prices rose a touch on Friday and were poised to end their best year since 2020. Spot gold was at $2,064.7 an ounce. [GOL/] More

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    Spanish PM appoints Carlos Cuerpo as economy minister

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.Spain’s new economy minister will be Carlos Cuerpo, head of the country’s treasury and a key negotiator in a recent deal over the EU’s fiscal rules, replacing Nadia Calviño as she leaves to head the European Investment Bank.Announcing the appointment on Friday, prime minister Pedro Sánchez described Cuerpo, 43, as “a young professional of proven competence and a public servant with an exemplary career within the administration”.Cuerpo will take the reins of the ministry with Spain’s economy in a stronger position than many of its EU peers but heading into a crunch year when tough debt reduction rules agreed by member states in December come into force.Sánchez said Cuerpo would bring the same “professionalism and honesty” that distinguished Calviño, who became well-known and respected in her five years as the face of Spanish economic policy in Brussels and at international forums such as the G20 and IMF.Cuerpo has been a close ally of Calviño and his appointment represented “continuity”, according to one government official.As head of the treasury and a salesman for Spanish sovereign debt, Cuerpo is already well known to many international investors, said another Spanish official.In Spain, the economy ministry also has a crucial role in managing how the EU’s post-pandemic recovery funds are spent. The country is the second-biggest recipient in the bloc after Italy, and is due to receive a total of €164bn in grants and loans — but some businesses have criticised the handling of the funds.The prime minister decided to split Calviño’s role in a mini-cabinet reshuffle, handing her other duties as the most senior of Spain’s deputy prime ministers to finance minister María Jesús Montero.Montero, who is already the number two official in Sánchez’s Socialist party, had been junior to Calviño while running a finance portfolio that was focused on tax and budget policy but excluded international issues.Sánchez said Montero had been essential to making his government’s “reinforcement of the welfare state compatible with fiscal consolidation policies”.Spain’s public debt was equal to 109.9 per cent of gross domestic product in the third quarter of this year, down from a high of 120 per cent at the height of the pandemic in 2020.The EU earlier this month agreed to update fiscal rules in the so-called Stability and Growth Pact, which were suspended during the Covid-19 pandemic but will come back into force in 2024. The deal gave high-debt states some extra wriggle room as part of a transition period, but included stricter overall limits on spending that were crucial to winning over Germany.Countries with debt ratios above 90 per cent of GDP will be required to cut excess debt by one percentage point per year over the duration of their national spending plans.Cuerpo was a negotiator in the talks over the rules because Spain has for the past six months held the rotating presidency of the EU. In an interview with the Cinco Días news site published on December 27, Cuerpo said the deal was “balanced” and that it allows “fiscal consolidation paths adapted to the specific characteristics of each country”. “This is a very important element that the previous, more rigid framework did not have,” Cuerpo added. “We do not want what happened after the great financial crisis to happen to us, where investment was the great victim of consolidation and we spent years decapitalising our economy.”Cuerpo has previously held a series of roles in government relating to public debt and macroeconomic analysis. He has also worked at Airef, Spain’s independent fiscal watchdog.Sánchez applauded the appointment of Calviño as the first woman to lead the EIB, the world’s biggest multilateral lender. He said it “reinforces Spain’s presence and influence at the heart of the European project” along with Josep Borrell, the EU’s chief diplomat and another Spaniard from the Socialist party. More

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    Futures inch up, firm rate cut bets drive strong gains in 2023

    The Dow touched its all-time peak on Thursday, while the S&P 500 and the tech-heavy Nasdaq also inched closer to their one-year highs. The benchmark S&P was within a whisker of its Jan. 4 2022 intraday high.The three main indexes also eyed their ninth straight weekly gain as well as both monthly and quarterly advances.They were set for double-digit gains in 2023, with the Nasdaq on track for its strongest yearly jump since 2003, sharply rebounding from a slump last year.With the Fed’s aggressive rate hikes cooling the U.S. labor market as well as pressuring the economy, investors have amplified their bets of rate cuts heading into 2024. As per CME’s FedWatch tool, the probability of policymakers cutting the Fed funds target rate by 25 basis points in March stood at 70.1%.The year 2023 was marked by aggressive Fed rate hikes, which were finally halted in September, the U.S. banking crisis in March, an artificial intelligence stocks boom, the Israel-Hamas war, economic concerns that eventually bolstered the case for policy easing bets, among others.The information technology is set to emerge as the top sectoral gainer in 2023, up 56.8%, benefiting from an AI exuberance and a surge in megacap stocks, while the defensive utilities sector was the worst hit with a 10.1% decline.Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) and Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:META) were the top annual gainers on the S&P 500, eyeing around three-fold gains.Investors are winding down for the holiday season, with markets staying shut on Monday, Jan. 1, on account of New Year’s Day.At 5:39 a.m. ET, Dow e-minis were up 17 points, or 0.04%, S&P 500 e-minis were up 2.75 points, or 0.06%, and Nasdaq 100 e-minis were up 21.75 points, or 0.13%.Among corporate movers, Uber Technologies (NYSE:UBER) and Lyft (NASDAQ:LYFT) lost 1.3% and 4.8%, respectively, in premarket trading, on report that Nomura downgraded the ride-sharing platforms. More