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    US manufacturing mired in weakness, economy heading for slowdown

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. manufacturing remained subdued in November, with factory employment declining further as hiring slowed and layoffs increased, more evidence that the economy was losing momentum after robust growth last quarter.The survey from the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) on Friday followed on the heels of data on Thursday showing moderate growth in consumer spending and subsiding inflation in October. Economic activity is cooling as higher interest rates crimp demand. Most economists, however, do not expect a recession next year and believe the Federal Reserve will be able to engineer the hoped-for “soft landing.” Speaking during an event at Spelman College in Atlanta on Friday, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said “we are getting what we wanted to get” out of the economy.The ISM said that its manufacturing PMI was unchanged at 46.7 last month. It was the 13th consecutive month that the PMI stayed below 50, which indicates contraction in manufacturing. That is the longest such stretch since the period from August 2000 to January 2002. Some economists believed that the United Auto Workers strike, which ended in late October, continued to have an impact on the PMI. A rebound anytime soon is unlikely as manufacturers in the ISM survey mostly described inventories as bloated.”This implies the goods sector overestimated demand and production could slow further in the next few months, though that too could reflect lingering strike effects if auto parts piled up when production was idled,” said Will Compernolle, macro strategist at FHN Financial in New York.Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the index creeping up to 47.6. According to the ISM, a PMI reading below 48.7 over a period of time generally indicates a contraction of the overall economy. The economy, however, continues to expand, growing at a 5.2% annualized rate in the third quarter.Three industries – food, beverage and tobacco as well as transportation equipment and nonmetallic mineral products – reported growth last month. The 14 industries reporting contraction included paper products, electrical equipment, appliances and components, computer and electronic products, machinery and miscellaneous manufacturing.Comments from manufacturers were mostly downbeat and cited the need to reduce inventory levels. Makers of computer and electronic products said the “economy appears to be slowing dramatically.” Miscellaneous manufacturing firms said “customer orders have pushed into the first quarter of 2024, resulting in inflated end-of-year inventory.”Producers of food, beverage and tobacco reported that “our executives have requested that we bring down inventory levels considerably, and it has started causing customer shortages.” Makers of fabricated metal products said “automotive sales (are) still impacted by (the) UAW strike,” adding they were “still waiting for orders to come in.” The persistent decline in the PMI likely overstates the weakness in manufacturing, which accounts for 11.1% of the economy. Orders for long-lasting manufactured goods are up strongly on a year-on-year basis and factory production has held up, excluding the effects of the UAW industrial action.”We are not inclined to infer much deterioration from the ISM composite unless it clearly drifts outside of this year’s range, from a low of 46.3 in March to a short-lived high of 49.0 in September,” said Jonathan Millar, a senior economist at Barclays in New York. Stocks on Wall Street were trading higher. The dollar fell against a basket of currencies. U.S. Treasury prices rose.STRONG CONSTRUCTION SPENDINGA separate report from the Commerce Department’s Census Bureau showed construction spending rising solidly in October, fueled by single-family homebuilding. “Despite the emerging signs of a slowdown, investors should know there are opportunities in the markets,” said Jeffrey Roach, chief economist at LPL Financial (NASDAQ:LPLA) in Charlotte, North Carolina. “The current state of the housing market could bode well for homebuilders.”The ISM survey’s forward-looking new orders sub-index rose to a still-weak 48.3 last month from 45.5 in October. A measure of factory inventories remained depressed last month, but the gauge of stocks at customers increased to what the ISM described as the upper end of “just right.””Leading indicators in the report, particularly new orders and customer inventory levels, do not point to an upturn in activity in the immediate future,” said Conrad DeQuadros, senior economic advisor at Brean Capital in New York. “However, neither does the report point to the pervasive weakness in manufacturing that is typically associated with recession.”Prices for factory inputs were subdued, though they were no longer falling at the pace seen in prior months. The survey’s measure of prices paid by manufacturers increased to 49.9, the highest reading in seven months, from 45.1 in October.Nevertheless, price pressures in the economy are subsiding. Annual inflation increased in October at its slowest pace in more than 2-1/2 years, the government reported on Thursday. Cooling inflation is fanning optimism that the Fed is probably done raising rates this cycle, with financial markets even anticipating a rate cut in mid-2024.Factory employment declined for a second straight month, with the ISM noting an increase in “attrition, freezes and layoffs to reduce head counts.” The survey’s gauge of factory employment dropped to 45.8 last month from 46.8 in October. This measure has not been a reliable predictor of manufacturing payrolls in the government’s closely watched employment report. Manufacturing payrolls are expected to have rebounded in November as about 33,000 striking UAW members returned to work. Factory payrolls dropped by 35,000 jobs in October. Overall nonfarm payrolls are expected to have increased by 170,000 jobs last month after rising 150,000 in October, according to a preliminary Reuters survey of economists. The government is scheduled to publish November’s employment report next Friday. More

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    China’s accelerating rise in consumer defaults

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.A sharp rise in Chinese consumers defaulting is the latest in a lengthening list of ailments afflicting the world’s second-largest economy. The number of people blacklisted for missing payments on everything from mortgages to business loans has risen to a record 8.54mn, from 5.7mn in early 2020.This number still only accounts for about 1 per cent of the working-age population. But the rate of increase shows that even since China rolled back its pandemic lockdown about a year ago, rising financial distress at the individual level is contributing to stiff headwinds that are frustrating a broad recovery in consumer activity. Without energising consumer spending, China may struggle to drive sustainable economic growth — which the IMF is forecasting will slow next year to about 4.6 per cent, from 5.4 per cent this year.This impact of these defaults is exacerbated by an unsophisticated governance regime in dire need of reform. Under current regulations, blacklisted defaulters are blocked from buying air tickets, making payments through the near-ubiquitous mobile apps Alipay and WeChat Pay, and conducting dozens of other commonplace transactions. At the human level, such sanctions turn defaulters economically into virtual “non-persons”, creating great difficulties in their daily lives. At a national level, they contribute to a debt crisis that is evident not only in China’s imploding property sector and local government finances but in rising credit card arrears and a surging number of property foreclosures by banks.Since the wave of defaults is in part the result of a decade-long borrowing spree by Chinese consumers, the distress is quite likely to get worse. Household debt is estimated to have doubled as a proportion of gross domestic product to 64 per cent over the past decade.Beijing needs to take the initiative to push through reforms that deal with defaults and bankruptcies in a more transparent and equitable way, not only for individuals but for corporations too. If it does not, it will hamper the cause of switching to a more consumer-driven growth model, as the IMF and others have advocated. Last year consumer spending contributed only about 53 per cent of China’s total GDP, against far higher levels in advanced economies such as the US and UK.The main focus of governance reforms should be to provide pathways back to solvency for people on debt blacklists, so that they can hope to eventually resume normal economic activity. The application of individual debt relief packages and schedules for debt workouts for individuals are two ideas being suggested by Chinese experts.But the most important reform should be to draft and implement a new law on individual bankruptcy, to complement an existing law on enterprise bankruptcy in force since 2007. Beijing can take lessons from a pilot scheme it launched in 2021 in Shenzhen which allowed local residents to file for personal bankruptcy. More broadly, China needs to address its favouritism towards state-owned enterprises over their smaller, privately owned cousins. State-owned corporations, especially those owned by the central government, rarely go bankrupt in China because state-owned banks are obliged to indulge their excesses.But an officially estimated 52mn micro, small and medium-sized enterprises are solely funded by individual households. If they fall behind on their debt repayments, the banks can foreclose on their assets and blacklist the entrepreneurs that own them. The inequity in this system goes some way to explaining why China’s private sector is underperforming so starkly this year — and holding back its wider growth. More

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    First empty lorries pass through new Ukraine crossing at Polish border

    KYIV (Reuters) – The first 30 empty lorries drove through a newly opened Uhryniv-Dolhobychuv crossing on the Ukrainian-Polish border, which Kyiv hopes will offer relief as Polish driver protests blocked other land corridors, Ukraine’s border service said on Monday.Those protests, over what Polish truckers see as unfair competition from their Ukrainian peers, started on Nov. 6, with four border crossings now under blockade.Polish hauliers’ main demand is to stop Ukrainian truckers having permit-free access to the European Union, something that Kyiv and Brussels say is impossible.Poland’s Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said on Monday that Warsaw would “strongly and unequivocally” demand that the European Union restore permits for Ukrainian truckers.He was speaking to reporters ahead of an EU ministers’ meeting in Brussels set for Monday.Poland, Slovakia and Hungary said their delegations would inform the EU about the impact of the EU-Ukraine agreement to remove permits on the road freight sector.The permits were abolished after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine last year. Polish drivers have been joined by Polish farmers, and later also Slovakian truckers. FIRST HOPEUkraine said last week it had agreed some measures with Poland that could ease the pressure at the blockaded border crossings, but that the main demands of the protests had not been discussed.Free passage of empty Polish lorries across the border was one of the demands that Ukraine can meet.”As of the morning of December 4, border guards cleared 30 heavy vehicles with a total permissible weight of more than 7.5 (metric) tons for departure from Ukraine at the Uhryniv checkpoint,” the service said on Telegram messaging app.The crossing was opened at 1.00 a.m. (midnight GMT) on Monday for empty trucks. “The ultimate goal of the work is to unblock the border, which has been blocked for a month on the Polish side and has critical consequences for the economies of both countries and the European market,”, Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Oleksandr Kubrakov said on the X social media platform on Sunday.A senior Ukrainian official last week said protests on the border could cost Kyiv one percentage point of GDP growth if they drag on. Ukrainian ambassador to Poland, Vasyl Zvarych, told the state-run Ukrinform news agency that Kyiv would continue negotiations with the Polish government and had already found “common ground and compromises”.”And we hope that these proposals that we have developed together with the Polish government will be enough for the protesters to end the protest,” Zvarych added. More

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    ReNew Energy and ADB commit to $5.3 billion green funding

    This collaboration, hailed by Sumant Sinha, CEO of ReNew, and Suzanne Gaboury, ADB’s representative, targets renewable energy sectors including green hydrogen production and carbon offsetting initiatives. The strategic alliance is set to propel international investment into India’s renewable energy landscape while furthering ADB’s longstanding mission to support sustainable energy development.The MoU aligns with ADB’s broader commitment to mobilize $100 billion for green projects by 2030 and supports India’s ambitious goal of achieving a half-terawatt of renewable energy capacity within the same timeframe. Nasdaq-listed ReNew Energy (NASDAQ:RNW, NASDAQ:RNWWW), which had already invested approximately $8 billion in clean energy initiatives by late September, plans to leverage the new agreement to expand its already impressive portfolio that boasts nearly 14 gigawatts (GW) of generation capacity.This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C. More