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    EU proposes move to avoid tariffs on EV trade with Britain

    BRUSSELS (Reuters) -The European Commission proposed on Wednesday delaying by three years a tightening of local content rules that would have led to import tariffs on many electric vehicles (EVs) traded between the European Union and Britain from the start of 2024.The Commission also said it was setting aside an additional 3 billion euros ($3.24 billion) to boost the EU’s battery manufacturing industry, a move designed to boost local content and reduce reliance on batteries and materials from China.The post-Brexit Trade and Cooperation Agreement (TCA) says that, to qualify for zero tariffs, at least 55% of the value of EVs need to be from the European Union or Britain, with values of 65% for battery cells and modules and 70% for battery packs.However, it contains two transition periods, the first with EVs requiring 40% local content and battery packs and components 30%, the second for 2024-2026 at 45% for EVs, 50% for battery cells and modules and 60% for battery packs.Import tariffs of 10% apply for EVs falling short of those requirements.The proposal is to extend the first transition period for three years to 2027, when the full local content requirements of the TCA will apply. The second transition period will not apply.European Commission Vice President Maros Sefcovic, who oversees EU relations with Britain, said that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and soaring energy prices, along with support schemes of rivals, meant that EU battery production had not scaled up as planned.Given batteries represent 30-40% of a car’s value and that most are from China, many carmakers argued they would have struggled to meet the content requirements of the second transition period. ($1 = 0.9267 euros) More

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    Saudi Arabia offers 30-year tax relief plan to lure regional corporate HQs

    Saudi Arabia announced a 30-year tax exemption package for foreign companies establishing their regional headquarters in the kingdom.
    The move is the latest in its aggressive campaign to attract international investment and headcount.

    Cityscape of Saudi capital Riyadh.
    Harri Jarvelainen Photography | Moment | Getty Images

    DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Saudi Arabia announced a 30-year tax exemption package for foreign companies establishing their regional headquarters in the kingdom, the latest move in its aggressive campaign to attract international investment and headcount.
    “The Ministry of Investment of Saudi Arabia, in coordination with the Ministry of Finance and the Zakat, Tax and Customs Authority today announced 30-year tax incentive package for The Regional Headquarters (RHQ) Program, to further streamline the process for multinational companies (MNCs) to establish their RHQ in Saudi Arabia,” the Saudi state press agency wrote in a statement Tuesday.

    The offer includes a 0% corporate tax rate for 30 years, which will be applied for companies “from the day they obtained their RHQ license,” the statement read.
    The program “aims to attract MNCs to set up their RHQ in Saudi Arabia and position the Kingdom as the leading commercial, industrial and investment hub for the MENA region, by offering a range of benefits and premium support services that complement the Kingdom’s globally competitive value proposition,” the statement added.

    A controversial ultimatum

    The kingdom grabbed investor attention and sparked controversy in February 2021 when it first announced its RHQ campaign, declaring that any foreign company that did not have its regional headquarters office in Saudi Arabia by the start of 2024 would be barred from doing business with state entities.
    The news stunned investors and expat workers, many of whom saw the move as a shot at Dubai, the United Arab Emirates commercial capital that is home to the highest concentration of Middle East regional headquarters.
    In October of this year, Saudi ministers made clear that the ultimatum still held firm: Foreign companies will need to base their regional headquarters in the kingdom by Jan. 1, 2024 or be barred from lucrative government contracts.

    Many foreign investors are still skeptical of the ability of Saudi Arabia — an infamously conservative Muslim theocracy known for its highly criticized human rights record — to sufficiently attract foreign talent.
    Expats in the regional HQ hub of Dubai question the kingdom’s ability to provide sufficient quality-of-life services like international schools, ample housing, and aspects of a more Western lifestyle, such as alcohol, which is currently illegal in Saudi Arabia.
    Saudi Arabia says the RHQ program has so far licensed more than 200 companies to operate their regional head offices in the kingdom. And in an apparent response to the concerns of many expat workers that families there would struggle to find international schools for their children, “seven international K-12 schools have announced their new campuses in the Kingdom,” the Saudi Press Agency statement wrote.

    “The tax incentive gives multinational companies operating in the region yet another reason to make Saudi Arabia home to their regional headquarters, on top of other benefits such as relaxed Saudization requirements and work permits for the spouses of RHQ executives,” Saudi Minister of Investment Khalid Al-Falih was cited by the SPA as saying.
    The kingdom’s regional HQ drive is a part of Vision 2030, an ambitious campaign launched by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in 2016, which aims to create private sector jobs and diversify its economy away from oil as Saudi Arabia’s population — more than 60% of whom are under the age of 30 — grows. More

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    Bank of Canada to keep rates on hold given likely economic slowdown -analysts

    OTTAWA (Reuters) – The Bank of Canada (BoC) on Wednesday is expected to keep rates on hold at a 22-year high of 5% after growth contracted in the third quarter and is seen slumping next year, analysts predicted. The central bank hiked rates by a quarter point in both June and July and has left them on hold since, adding that it is prepared to tighten further to tame inflation that has remained above the bank’s 2% target for 31 months.Canada’s economy unexpectedly contracted at an annualized rate of 1.1% in the third quarter, avoiding a recession, but most economists forecast that upcoming mortgage renewals at higher rates will take another chunk out of growth next year.Inflation eased more than expected to 3.1% in October.”There’s little question that the Bank of Canada will keep its policy rate at 5% this week,” Desjardins Group economists Royce Mendes and Tiago Figueiredo said in a note. “Mortgage renewals will become a far greater headwind to the economy as time passes. This is likely to cause the economy to go from balanced to weak, with a brief recession expected in 2024,” they said.The decision will be announced at 10 am ET (1500 GMT). Deputy Governor Toni Gravelle will deliver a speech explaining the bank’s reasoning and hold a news conference on Thursday.The BoC projects that inflation will hover around 3.5% until mid-2024, before inching down to its 2% target in late 2025. Macklem last month said that interest rates may be at their peak, given excess demand has vanished and weak growth is expected to persist for many months.Money markets are betting that there could be a rate cut as early as March, but Macklem has said that the BoC is not even thinking about cuts yet because inflation is still well above target.”The Bank will continue to sing from the hawkish song sheet, still openly talking about the possibility of rate hikes, not cuts,” Douglas Porter, chief economist at BMO Capital Markets, said in a note.”A renewed rising crescendo of inflation would sound a sour note indeed for the 2024 outlook,” he said.The BoC will start cutting interest rates in the second quarter of next year as inflation and the economy slow, according to a Reuters poll published last week. More

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    Bank of England warns on risks in private credit and leveraged lending

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.Private credit and leveraged lending markets remain vulnerable to “sharp revaluations”, the Bank of England warned on Wednesday, in its latest attempt to sound alarm bells about risks building up in non-bank finance.The BoE’s financial stability watchdog said that despite some recent improvements in market conditions, the two sectors appeared “particularly vulnerable” as war in the Middle East adds to geopolitical risks.“Although there are few signs of stress in these markets so far, a worsening macroeconomic outlook could . . . cause sharp revaluations of credit risks,” the BoE’s Financial Policy Committee wrote in its quarterly update, adding that valuations appeared “stretched . . . particularly in the US”.The BoE’s financial stability experts also drew attention to the continued growth in bets on US government bonds. Hedge funds have taken on big short positions as asset managers add US Treasuries to their portfolios.Those hedge fund short positions have continued to grow, the BoE said, and are now bigger than they were in the run-up to the March 2020 “dash for cash” when bets against Treasuries were swiftly unwound as the value of government bonds rose when investors dashed towards safe assets.Global financial regulators have also expressed concerns about the trend’s potential to destabilise one of the world’s most important financial markets.US government bond yields have fallen sharply in recent weeks, and markets are now pricing in faster interest rate cuts, relieving some of the pressure on asset valuations.Despite the tough outlook for global financial stability, the BoE said that in the UK households, businesses, and banks had been “broadly resilient” to a steep rise in interest rates and a bruising cost of living crisis, and that some trends around UK debt levels were improving.The BoE said that while the full impact of interest rate increases had “yet to come through for households, businesses and borrowers”, there was some evidence of improving trends.The percentage of households with a high cost of living adjusted debt burden fell slightly to 1.4 per cent in the third quarter versus 1.8 per cent in the first quarter of the year, “driven by a stronger-than-expected recovery in real incomes”, the BoE said.Regulators are also moving to make money market funds more resilient, and the Financial Conduct Authority on Wednesday published a consultation plan on measures to boost liquidity in UK-based funds.The Financial Policy Committee also signalled that they will carry out their first review into the potential impact of artificial intelligence on financial stability, but did not give details on what it would involve. More

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    German coalition parties at loggerheads as budget crisis grows

    BERLIN (Reuters) – Germany’s coalition partners will step up efforts on Wednesday to find a way to plug a 17-billion-euro ($18.3 billion) hole in next year’s budget after failing to resolve the crisis overnight, increasing uncertainty about financial plans in Europe’s biggest economy.The failure of crunch talks between coalition leaders before Wednesday means it is unlikely parliament will approve a 2024 budget by the end of the year, leaving in limbo spending plans from climate projects to benefits and for local authorities.Social Democrat (SPD) Chancellor Olaf Scholz, Greens Vice Chancellor Robert Habeck and Finance Minister Christian Lindner of the fiscally conservative Free Democrats (FDP), had hoped to get an agreement overnight to put to cabinet on Wednesday.However, coalition sources have told Reuters that little progress was made overnight and the parties were still far apart. “The budget will not be discussed at cabinet today,” Greens co-leader Ricarda Lang told Bavarian radio.The budget crisis arose last month when the Constitutional Court blocked the reallocation of 60 billion euros of unused pandemic emergency funds to climate projects, throwing the government’s financial planning into disarray.At stake is funding for local authorities, businesses and federal states and the longer the wrangling goes on, the greater the uncertainty becomes.DEBT BRAKE CONUNDRUMA central question is whether to lift Germany’s self-imposed limit on net new borrowing in 2024, a move Lindner fiercely opposes.He bowed to pressure to suspend the cap, known as the debt brake, for this year after the constitutional court ruling but on Tuesday reiterated his opposition to doing that for a fifth straight year, saying it must not become the norm.To suspend the debt brake, the government can declare an emergency situation – such as the coronavirus pandemic or energy price spike due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine – and parliament has to agree.”You cannot make an emergency situation a normal situation,” Lindner told ARD.The debt brake is embedded in Germany’s constitution and restricts the public deficit to 0.35% of gross domestic product.Lindner also opposes tax increases and wants to plug the budget gap mainly through cuts to spending – a fundamentally different approach to the SPD and Greens.The Greens want to stick with investment climate projects and ensure Germany’s transformation to a green economy.Scholz, who will face party members at a conference at the weekend, is loathe to agree to trimming spending on welfare benefits, such as unemployment pay, which the FDP favours. The budget wrangling has raised tensions in the already loveless three-way coalition and polls show the big winners of the crisis are the opposition conservatives and far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD).If no deal is reached, the coalition could collapse but most observers say it is in all the parties’ interests to hammer out an agreement and stay in power.The Greens’ Lang said a political decision would be made “very very soon” and the coalition had to hammer out a compromise to avoid a wider government crisis. As long as the sides keep talking, a temporary budget could kick in for next year until agreement is reached. This happens regularly after federal elections are held but before a budget has been agreed.($1 = 0.9267 euros) More

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    US regulators clamp down in bid to prevent more bank failures

    WASHINGTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) – U.S. bank supervisors are increasing scrutiny of lenders’ risk management practices and taking disciplinary action as they try to fix problems that could lead to more bank failures, banking industry sources said. The changes follow the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank, Signature Bank (OTC:SBNY) and First Republic Bank (OTC:FRCB) earlier this year after depositor runs sparked, in part, by worries that high interest rates would hurt bank balance sheets. After official reviews found frontline examiners failed to act quickly upon spotting problems, they are taking a tougher, more proactive approach. Interviews with a dozen industry executives, lawyers and regulatory officials show examiners are executing surprise reviews of a key confidential supervisory bank health rating and in some cases have issued downgrades. They are increasingly warning big banks they will be placed under an order restricting a range of activities if they don’t fix lapses; and are pressing top executives to take personal accountability for addressing the banks’ problems. While regulators including the Federal Reserve and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) have pledged to get tough on supervision, the process is confidential and officials have not released details. The activity, which Reuters is reporting for the first time, sheds light on how the agencies are making good on that promise, and suggests they continue to have concerns about some lenders’ health amid high interest rates and a slowing economy.Supervisors are targeting small, mid-size and larger banks, the people said. Reuters could not ascertain exactly how many banks overall were targeted, but eight of the sources said they each had knowledge of multiple cases or banks affected. “This is not unlike some of the more enhanced monitoring we saw during the Great Recession, where there was concern over all the banks’ financial health,” said John Geiringer, a Partner and banking attorney at Barack Ferrazzano Kirschbaum & Nagelberg LLP. The FDIC and other regulators wrote in recent months to regional and community banks in a number of states notifying them they had launched surprise reviews of their “CAMELS” rating, five of the people said. The confidential rating measures bank safety and soundness on metrics including capital adequacy, asset quality, management competence and liquidity.Examiners typically review small banks’ ratings every 12 to 18 months via an analysis of financial and loan data banks report quarterly, onsite exams, and discussions with executives.Anne Balcer, a senior executive vice president at the Independent Community Bankers (NASDAQ:ESXB) of America (ICBA), said members of the Washington trade group in different regions had received letters around October notifying them of the off-cycle reviews. In some cases, banks were advised components of their CAMELS rating had been downgraded. The reviews were based on regulators’ analysis of the quarterly data, she and three other people with knowledge of several other cases said. The implications “are pretty far reaching,” said Balcer. CAMELS ratings contribute to banks’ deposit insurance premiums and affect their audits. Downgraded lenders can be barred from doing deals, and could be denied emergency Fed liquidity. Reasons regulators cited for downgrades included insufficient capital, management issues, and in many cases, exposure to commercial real estate, a sector struggling amid high rates and lingering office vacancies, the people said.The ICBA, which represent banks with up to $50 billion in assets, declined to name the banks concerned. “Off-cycle downgrades are a touchy thing,” said Michael Tierney, CEO of the Community Bankers of Michigan, who said he had been briefed on some off-cycle reviews. “What I’ve been told by regulators is that this will be used sparingly, they will only downgrade CAMEL components, not the overall CAMELs rating.”In those conversations, officials said they are looking much harder at liquidity and interest rate risk management. “They’ve been very clear…those are their top priorities,” said Tierney.’PAINFUL’ A spokesperson for the FDIC said the agency has long used off-site monitoring to supplement and guide examinations, and has developed tools using quarterly data reports to do so.”Off-site monitoring programs can provide an early indication that an institution’s risk profile may be changing,” he said.”CAMELS ratings, including those that are changed on an interim basis are confidential, but as a general matter, ratings trends tend to deteriorate as macroeconomic conditions worsen,” he continued, citing inflation and high rates as key headwinds.Two small banks have failed since First Republic, and the FDIC recently added another to its list of problem banks. Many lenders are holding onto piles of cash as insurance against a slowing economy, Reuters has reported. Spokespeople for the Fed and Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, another federal regulator, declined to comment. Bigger banks are monitored continuously but they are still feeling increased pressure, said five other sources that work with multiple big lenders. Their supervisors are more frequently warning top management that failing to fix problems could result in a confidential “4(m)” sanction, the people said. Supervisors typically impose a 4(m) for weak capital, poor management, or following a CAMELS downgrade. Banks under a 4(m) must get regulatory approval to engage in some new business, such as securities underwriting, or to make nonbank investments. Exiting a 4(m) can take years. It can involve hiring new people and reorganizing businesses. “It’s really painful,” said one source who asked not to be identified discussing confidential supervisory issues. Supervisors are also pressing big bank bosses to take more personal accountability for problems, in some cases seeking briefings with C-suite executives or board members to secure assurances that they are personally on top of the problems, two of the people said.They said this had raised concerns for some senior executives worried about personal liability. “As risks increase, supervisors are going to react appropriately,” said Karen Lawson, executive vice president for policy and supervision at the Conference of State Bank Supervisors, the national organization representing state regulators, which supervise 79% of U.S. banks alongside federal agencies. State regulators are discussing ways to be more responsive, including by moving independently to quickly address problems without waiting for a consensus with federal regulators, she said.”Certainly, we all learned things earlier this year.” More