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    Futures muted as caution prevails in run-up to Powell’s remarks

    (Reuters) -Futures tracking Wall Street’s indexes were largely subdued on Friday as investors were on edge in the run up to Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s comments that are expected to hold clues on the interest rate path.This comes after the S&P 500 and Nasdaq finished November with their biggest monthly gain since July 2022, while the Dow Jones rallied to close at its highest level since January 2022.Data showing slowing U.S. consumer spending, dovish comments from some Fed officials and a strong earnings season led the equity indexes to have a stellar November.The recent slew of economic data, including Thursday’s personal consumption expenditure index, signalled easing inflation in the world’s largest economy, underscoring hopes the central bank would now end its interest rates hiking cycle. Not only a pause in rate hikes has been fully priced in for the upcoming December policy meeting, traders also see an about 48% chance of at least a 25 basis point rate cut in March 2024 and an about 77% chance in May, according to CME Group’s (NASDAQ:CME) FedWatch tool.”Data yesterday adds weight to the interest-rate cutting narrative, but does throw up another challenge,” said Sophie Lund-Yates, lead equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown in a note. “Lower interest rates are introduced in times of economic challenges, and the size and shape of an incoming recession – should there be one – does have the ability to derail gains.”Market participants now await policy comments from Powell at two separate discussions scheduled for 11 a.m. ET and 2 p.m. ET. After recent conflicting remarks from other policymakers, investors are concerned that Powell could push back against the rate cut narrative.Other officials, including Fed Governors Lisa Cook and Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee are also scheduled to speak during the day. Among others, different sets of manufacturing purchasing managers’ index (PMI) data from the S&P Global and ISM, scheduled for release after the opening bell, are also in focus. Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) underperformed other megacap stocks, down 1.5% before the bell, as the EV maker priced its Cybertruck above its initial forecast.At 7:00 a.m. ET, Dow e-minis were up 47 points, or 0.13%, S&P 500 e-minis were down 1 points, or 0.02%, and Nasdaq 100 e-minis were down 25 points, or 0.16%.Among other stocks, U.S.-listed shares of Alibaba (NYSE:BABA) slipped 1.4% premarket after Morgan Stanley downgraded the e-commerce giant, citing slower turnaround in customer management revenue (CMR). Pfizer (NYSE:PFE) fell 3.2% as the drugmaker scrapped its plan to advance a twice-daily version of oral weight-loss drug danuglipron into late-stage studies.Marvell (NASDAQ:MRVL) Technology shed 5.3% after the chipmaker’s fourth-quarter revenue forecast fell short of Street estimates.Ulta Beauty (NASDAQ:ULTA) rose 10.9% after the cosmetics retailer raised the lower end of its annual net sales forecast and named Paula Oyibo its new chief financial officer. Automation software firm UiPath (NYSE:PATH) jumped 14% on beating third-quarter revenue estimates. More

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    Dollar edges lower ahead of Fed’s Powell comments

    LONDON (Reuters) -The dollar edged lower on Friday, while the euro rebounded slightly after steep overnight losses, as traders weighed data showing inflation was easing and looked ahead to a talk later in the day by U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell.Softer inflation data in both the United States and the euro zone on Thursday reinforced expectations that both central banks might be done raising interest rates in their battle against price rises and led traders to bet on earlier cuts next year.Goldman Sachs on Friday said it now expected the European Central Bank to deliver its first rate cut in the second quarter of 2024, compared to an earlier forecast of a cut in the third quarter of next year.Investors will have their sights trained on a talk due to be given by the Fed’s Powell later on Friday for any clues about the future path of interest rates in the U.S.Currency movements were more muted on Friday, after month-end trades on Thursday contributed to bigger swings, analysts said.The U.S. dollar index – which tracks the currency against six major counterparts – was last down 0.1% at 103.35, after clocking its weakest monthly performance in a year in November. Mixed economic data across Europe failed to set the tone for the euro, with a survey showing a downturn in euro zone manufacturing activity eased slightly last month but remained deeply in the red. Britain also reported contraction in manufacturing, but an improved reading for a third straight month.The euro was last up 0.1% at $1.08995, while sterling was up 0.2% at $1.26530.The dollar dipped as much as 0.4% versus the yen and was last down 0.1% at 148.140 per dollar. The yen is on course for its third straight week of gains, pulling it away from the near 33-year low of 151.92 it touched in the middle of November.Rising expectations of the Bank of Japan abandoning its ultra-easy monetary policy next year along with a drop in U.S. yields have buoyed the Asian currency in the past few weeks.In cryptocurrencies, bitcoin continued to strengthen, gaining as much as 3% to a fresh 18-month high of $38,839. More

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    National Bank of Canada’s fourth-quarter profit jumps on capital markets strength

    An uncertain economic outlook has prompted lenders to build rainy-day funds to brace for potential loan defaults.The Montreal-based bank’s provisions for credit losses rose to C$115 million from C$87 million a year earlier.Funding costs have also increased for banks as they pay higher interest rates on deposits to stop customers from moving to higher-yield products such as money-market funds.NBC’s adjusted net interest income, the difference between what banks earn on loans and pay out on deposits, slumped about 35.1% to C$825 million.Its financial markets segment, however, posted an adjusted net income of C$289 million, up 42%, driven by strength in capital markets and global markets businesses.The bank’s adjusted net income rose to C$867 million ($641.13 million), or C$2.44 per share, for the three months ended Oct. 31, from C$738 million, or C$2.08 per share, a year earlier.($1 = 1.3523 Canadian dollars) More

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    Climate Protesters Get in Fed’s Face as Policy Clash Grows Louder

    Jerome H. Powell, the central bank’s chair, has been interrupted recently by a climate group that thinks disruption will win the day.A video of security officers wrestling a protester to the floor in the lobby of the Jackson Lake Lodge in Wyoming, outside the Federal Reserve’s most closely watched annual conference, clocked more than a million views.A protest that disrupted a speech by Jerome H. Powell, the Fed chair, at the Economic Club of New York this fall generated extensive coverage. And when the activists showed up again at Mr. Powell’s speech at the International Monetary Fund in early November, they seemed to get under his skin: The central bank’s usually staid leader was caught on a hot mic using a profanity as he told someone to close the door.All three upheavals were caused by the same group, Climate Defiance, which a now-30-year-old activist named Michael Greenberg founded in the spring. Mr. Greenberg had long worked in traditional climate advocacy, but he decided that something louder was needed to spur change at institutions like the Fed.“I realized there was a big need for disruptive direct action,” he explained in an interview. “It just gets so, so, so, so, so much more attention.”The small but noisy band of protesters dogging the Fed chair is also spotlighting a problem that the central bank has long grappled with: precisely what role it should play in the world’s transition to green energy.Climate-focused groups often argue that as a regulator of the nation’s largest banks, the Fed should play a major role in preparing the financial system for the damaging effects of climate change. Some want it to more overtly discourage bank lending to fossil fuel companies. Mr. Greenberg, for instance, said he would like the Fed to use regulation to make lending to oil and gas companies essentially cost-prohibitive.We are having trouble retrieving the article content.Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.Thank you for your patience while we verify access.Already a subscriber?  More

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    It’s a good time to be Rick Rieder

    This article is an on-site version of our Unhedged newsletter. Sign up here to get the newsletter sent straight to your inbox every weekdayGood morning. For our third Friday interview, we talked with Rick Rieder, head of fixed income at BlackRock, probably the most important bond investor in the world. He is responsible for some $2.4tn in assets. It’s going to be hard to follow Reider, Olivier Blanchard and Bill Dudley. Let us know who you would like to hear from on future Fridays: [email protected] and [email protected]. Rick Rieder on Treasury supply, short yields, thin spreads and private credit  Bond investing has been a painful profession in recent years. Even the best in the business were crushed in 2022. This year, though easier, has still wrongfooted plenty of investors: broad corporate bond return indices are flat and Treasury funds have taken losses.That is changing. November is on track for the best month for bonds in 40 years. Consensus holds that rates have peaked, in large part because inflation isn’t the threat it once was. Nonetheless, anxieties linger: recession risk, above-target inflation, an inverted yield curve, huge deficits. Rieder, who’s been in bond market for three decades, acknowledges all of this, but nonetheless sees a landscape rich with opportunity.The interview below has been edited for clarity and concision.Unhedged: We all know why the short end of the yield curve is higher: policy has forced it higher. But it is less clear why long yields have risen and whether they will stay high. What’s your view?Rieder: It goes without saying that inflation stayed sticky high. The three- or six-month moving averages seem to be trending towards the mid-to-high twos, depending on the metric you use, in the first quarter of 2024, and then by the end of 2024, the low-to-mid twos. But it’s been sticky. Meanwhile, growth has been surprisingly high. I’ve been pretty out there about my view that the US economy is much more resilient than people give it credit for. We have a 70 per cent service-sector economy. Historically, there’s only been 13 quarters of negative growth in 100 years of the service sector. Many people were overly bearish on the US economy, and I think part of why rates have moved higher is that the economy has proved resilient. Lastly, I think markets underestimate the amount of supply of duration and Treasuries coming to the market. While we’re doing this interview [on Tuesday], there’s $626bn of Treasuries coming this week. We got $252bn on Monday. Today at 11:30 in the morning, we got $122bn and then another $130bn at 1:00. It’s unbelievable.In the past 10 years, the average rate on Treasury bills was 0.8 per cent. Now we’re pricing at five and a half. That’s a lot of yield coming into the system! And investors don’t have to go out on the yield curve; you can stay in the front. So part of why rates are staying high is (a) the amount of issuance and (b) most people are like, “Wow, five and a half staying in the front end with no risk?”Between more supply, the Fed lifting rates, and the inverted yield curve, there’s a reticence to take yield curve risk. The term premium is not that exciting relative to what it’s been historically, either. That confluence of events has created the paradigm that’s lifted long rates to where they are today.Unhedged: Do you think long yields can resume their climb? Rieder: I do. Rates can go a bit higher from where they are today. Again, you’ve got to absorb a lot of supply. Eventually, as inflation falls, getting real rates to a level that is merely restrictive will mean bringing rates down, maybe 100 basis points. But I don’t think the Fed will start doing that until the second half of next year.Unhedged: For anybody who doesn’t have to match duration, why not just hold cash? Why go out on the yield curve at all? Why isn’t cash the all-purpose strategy for today?Rieder: We’ve done things like buying commercial paper, one-year commercial paper at six and a quarter. You don’t even have to do anything with it!Today, I think the world’s different. You have a slowing economy and inflation approaching 2 per cent. So ask yourself: what is the break-even from buying three-to-five-year assets? For example, if you buy three-year investment grade credit, rates go up 200bp, and you hold it for a year, you would still make money. That is impressive. Let’s say, which I think is right, that the Fed and the ECB and the Bank of England are motivated to start cutting rates. You can hit high single-digit to low double-digit returns on high-quality assets in the belly of the yield curve, that three-to-five-year range. The convexity of returns is the best I’ve seen in decades.I’ve been pretty adamant about my view that the front end to the belly of the yield curve is pretty attractive, even just to capture a yield. Not just in Treasuries, but also in mortgages and investment-grade credit, the ability to build 6.5 per cent or 7 per cent yielding portfolios without going out beyond, say, the belly of the curve and without going aggressively down the credit spectrum is pretty darn attractive today.Unhedged: How far do you take your services-oriented view of the US economy? Is it that a recession is virtually impossible, barring a 2008 or Covid-level crisis?Rieder: A modern economy is supported by technology. People say we haven’t seen productivity growth in the past decade. But to say that there aren’t productivity gains from GPS, mobile communications, payments improvements, Internet delivery, is crazy. There are huge productivity gains taking place because you’re shifting from a goods-oriented economy to a technology-oriented, service-oriented economy, including the demographic shifts that cause spending on healthcare and education.When you have 70 per cent of the economy revolving around consumption, and especially around services, the bar for recession becomes really high. You need a pandemic or a financial crisis to create one. That’s one part. The second part is an unemployment rate that’s under 4 per cent. Even if unemployment rises above 4 per cent, we still have high wage levels, over $1tn in savings, and a consumer that’s delivered. In a 70 per cent consumption economy, you would need capex and business spending to fall off a cliff [to have a recession].It’s not impossible that residential real estate comes under pressure, à la the financial crisis or the savings and loan crisis. Part of why I think the Fed should stop is caution about this market. It’s holding up really well because inventory levels are low, because you have a 3.9 per cent unemployment rate. But if unemployment moved up significantly, and you had forced selling of homes, that could be a real mess. A big portion of household wealth is in homes. Commercial real estate could create, say, $40bn-$50bn in losses; it’s not a structural dynamic of the US economy. Residential would be. But without a residential crisis and assuming consumption growth stays around 2 per cent, you’d have to really crush business spending to get a recession. I’m pretty sanguine about growth. It’s moderating, but I’m comfortable about it.Unhedged: Why bother taking any credit risk at all? Corporate bond spreads over Treasuries are quite thin, in some cases historically thin. Of course, some absolute-return investors are going to nab whatever incremental return they can find. But from a risk-return point of view, is credit risk attractive right now?Rieder: I’d say it’s a B-. But it’s not a C. Why are you getting these sorts of yields in credit today? You’re getting them because the risk-free rate is so darn [high].When rates were low, companies termed their debt out. I thought this stat was unbelievable: 72 per cent of high-yield companies refinanced when the fed funds rate was under 1 per cent. I remember going through 2020-21 and asking why aren’t companies issuing more bonds. Some did, but many said “we have enough”.What do you do with these spreads? Well, gosh, I’m getting to buy companies at yields that are really high because the risk-free rate is so high. The technicals in high yield are incredible because you don’t see a lot of issuance. I can clip coupons and I’m getting companies at a cheap level.Every day, I go through where the soft spots are. There are some, in sectors like retailing, parts of media, tech etc. But it’s largely priced in. So if you assume somewhat higher default rates in high yield, a lot of those fragile issuers, like those that haven’t termed out debt, the market is pricing in that risk today. Look at triple-C’s [where average spreads are nearly 10 per cent, right in line with historical averages], for example.My sense is you’re going to have some increase in defaults, certainly in high yield. But it’s really hard for investment-grade companies to default.Unhedged: As a person who is known as a public markets bond guy, has what you do been changed by the rise of private credit?Rieder: It has. In my funds, I can use private bespoke financing both on corporate and structured finance. My view is that a 60/40 portfolio today should be more like 60/30/10. In equities, assuming you have a two or three year window, you’ll get your 8-11 per cent return consistent with return on equity. Then take 30 per cent and buy high-quality yielding assets, stay in the belly of the curve, but keep your beta largely in equities. And then with the final 10 per cent, I would do private credit and structured finance.I’ve been doing this for 36 years. If you’re in a rush to put a huge chunk of private credit to work in the market, I wouldn’t do it. But the ability to see and structure assets is pretty attractive — setting covenants, structuring cash flow sweeps, protecting collateral. I would argue in many cases you’re controlling your own destiny (obviously alongside others that are participating in a given deal).My sense is that you’ll get so much money into the space that it’ll squeeze out opportunity, like always happens. But today I feel like because you’re at the nexus of the banking system tightening lending standards, reducing risk-weighted assets on balance sheets and money coming into the market, you have a window that is still pretty attractive for investors.One good readThe secret to immense wealth: rich parents.FT Unhedged podcastCan’t get enough of Unhedged? Listen to our new podcast, hosted by Ethan Wu and Katie Martin, for a 15-minute dive into the latest markets news and financial headlines, twice a week. Catch up on past editions of the newsletter here.Recommended newsletters for youSwamp Notes — Expert insight on the intersection of money and power in US politics. 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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    The UK economy no longer looks like an outlier to investors

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.The writer is senior vice-president and economist at PimcoRewind a few months and some people feared the UK was a global outlier. Core inflation was running at close to 7 per cent in May in year-on-year terms — almost 2 percentage points above that in the euro area and the US at that point. Worse, underlying price pressures appeared to be accelerating, while activity remained depressed, with GDP still below its pre-pandemic level and underperforming the post-pandemic recovery in almost all other developed countries.At face value, the UK seemed to suffer from structurally higher inflation. Many blamed Brexit or other supply shocks, including a fall in labour participation, while others pointed to a lack of monetary policy credibility. At one stage, in early July, financial markets expected the Bank of England to hike its policy rate to around 6.5 per cent, well above that in the US and the rest of Europe. The UK seemed different.But there were good reasons to dig deeper. Smaller open economies like the UK tend to be more vulnerable to external shocks and experience higher inflation volatility than larger ones like the US. Indeed, other small open economies, including Sweden, Australia, and Norway, faced similarly high inflation rates.While Brexit might have added to consumer prices, this was probably a one-off level adjustment, rather than ongoing inflation. The timing of the post-pandemic reopening mattered too. The UK eased its restrictions later than the US, so inflation was likely to follow a similar sequencing. The cumulative rise in core prices since the start of the pandemic was indeed the same in the two countries.Most importantly, monetary policy credibility seemed intact, with medium-term inflation expectations anchored around the inflation target. Although the BoE’s communication at times appeared dovish, its actions were conventional and hawkish, responding to higher inflation with repeated hikes in the policy rate.Fast forward to today, and the UK no longer stands out. Let’s start with inflation. Granted, in year-on-year terms, core inflation remains higher than in the US and the euro area. But sequentially, UK inflation is falling sharply, even more so than elsewhere. Annualise the last three month-on-month prints (in seasonally adjusted terms), and core inflation is now even back to the inflation target. You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.It’s a similar story with wage growth, which remains high at approximately 7-8 per cent in year-on-year terms, but sequentially has been falling recently, and wage surveys point to an even sharper deceleration ahead. When annualising the last three month-on-month prints, wage growth in the private sector is closer to 4 per cent.Meanwhile, the underperformance in activity was — it turns out — misplaced. GDP has been revised sharply higher and is now almost 2 per cent above its pre-pandemic level, on par with France, Japan, and Spain, even better than in Germany. There are question marks on the reliability of labour market data too.The Office for National Statistics has recently stopped publishing the labour force survey because of sampling issues. But a new experimental ONS survey suggests the UK unemployment rate fell to 3.5 per cent in the spring. No doubt, some smaller parts of the UK economy still struggle but the broader picture now resembles that of most other developed countries.Looking ahead, in our baseline outlook, we expect the UK outlook to resemble that in the rest of Europe: broadly stagnant growth, continued normalisation in inflation, which opens up the door for the central bank to ease its policy rate at some stage next year.But recent market volatility serves as a good example that investors should look beyond the short-term noise. Up until recently, in our expectation that UK inflation would normalise, we favoured gilts over US Treasuries in our global portfolios, with the former yielding about 0.60 percentage points above the latter. The market has repriced sharply since, with gilts now yielding 0.15 percentage points less than their US equivalent.As such, we have shifted to a more neutral stance on gilts from a relative value perspective, although from an absolute point of view, we continue to find both attractive. US duration — a gauge of a bond’s sensitivity to interest rate movements — in itself offers the potential for attractive return and we also see very good opportunities in other regions such as Australia, Canada, and Europe. Still, the UK’s journey from outlier to convergence reminds us that perhaps it can pay for investors to look under the bonnet. More