More stories

  • in

    ECB’s Villeroy: France has clearly passed inflation peak – statement

    “This state of the economy fully justifies the halt to the rate hike sequence decided by the (ECB) Governing Council last Thursday,” Villeroy de Galhau said in a statement.”Our monetary policy must now be guided by confidence and patience: confidence that we are making firm progress towards bringing inflation down to 2% by 2025; patience in stabilising interest rates at their current level for as long as is still necessary”, he said. More

  • in

    Some Chinese institutions borrow at 50% rate as liquidity squeezed

    In addition to seasonal factors, the cash shortage was caused by an upcoming flood of government bond issuance, and traders also pointed to market fears of default by cash-strapped institutions.The highest overnight rate for pledged repo – a short-term financing business – hit 50% on Tuesday, according to official interbank data, although the average rate remains modest at roughly 3.6%. Two-day repo rates jumped to as high as 30%, and the highest rate for seven-day repos was 12%. “The liquidity tightness caught me off the guard, the price suddenly shot up,” said a trader at a brokerage.The jump in rates stirred memories of a June 2013 cash crunch when the overnight repo rate leapt to a historic high of 30% in an event that roiled global markets. Rocky Fan, economist at Guolian Securities, said that while the 2013 crisis had resulted from China’s crackdown on shadow banking, the current stress was likely due to a high level of leveraged trades in the money market. Several traders at small lenders were still seeking to borrow money in later afternoon trading when contacted by Reuters. Some also expressed concern over default in the market, without giving details. “Liquidity is extremely tight today,” Caitong Securities wrote in a note to clients.The brokerage attributed the cash shortage to a “record supply” of government bonds, as well as restricted channels for banks to borrow money. China last week approved 1 trillion yuan ($136.67 billion) of sovereign bond sales to stimulate economic growth while local governments are rushing to issue refinancing bonds to repay existing debts. “We expect tight liquidity to force authorities to speed up the rollout of monetary easing measures,” Caitong analysts wrote. Ming Ming, chief economist at Citic Securities, expects repo rates to fall back in November as the central bank will likely maintain loose monetary conditions, with a cut in banks’ required reserve ratio possible.The average seven-day repo rate – a widely watched indictor of short-term borrowing costs in China – remained modest at 2.0765% on Tuesday, meaning many institutions can still borrow money at relatively low rates. More

  • in

    RBI data indicates slowdown in credit growth, rise in agriculture and services sectors

    On the other hand, the agriculture and services sectors saw an increase in credit growth. The agriculture sector rose to 16.8% from 13.4%, while the services sector increased to 21.3% from 20.2%. This growth was primarily driven by Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs) and trade.Despite the overall slowdown in the industrial sector, certain segments experienced acceleration. The ‘basic metal & metal products’, ‘food processing’, and ‘textiles’ sectors saw increased growth rates, contrasting with ‘all engineering’, ‘chemicals & chemical products’, and ‘infrastructure’ sectors that faced deceleration.This comprehensive data, which represents 93% of total non-food credit, was collected from 40 select banks. The report provides significant insights into credit trends and sectoral performance, highlighting the shifting dynamics within the economy.This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C. More

  • in

    Rwanda secures $262 million IMF credit facility amid climate shocks

    Despite a robust growth of 6.3% in the second quarter of 2023, Rwanda faces numerous challenges. These include increased food prices, global geopolitical tensions, and tight global financing conditions, in addition to the environmental crises. Substantial post-flood reconstruction costs are projected at 3% of GDP over the next five years.To address these issues, a range of measures are being implemented. These include fiscal consolidation, proactive monetary policy, exchange rate adjustment, digital delivery of public services, enhanced efficiency of public investments, and nominal exchange rate flexibility. These measures are aimed at controlling inflation and improving debt sustainability.Furthermore, amidst tightening global financing conditions and the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, policies for second reviews of Rwanda’s existing Policy Coordination Instrument and a Resilience and Sustainability Facility program have been defined.This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C. More

  • in

    As wars rage, Biden administration to make case for $106 billion for Ukraine, Israel

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Two of President Joe Biden’s top advisers will try to convince U.S. lawmakers on Tuesday that it is in the country’s best interest to provide billions more dollars to Ukraine and Israel despite huge budget deficits and divisions over his administration’s policies toward both countries.Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin will testify to the Senate Appropriations Committee on Biden’s request for $106 billion to fund ambitious plans for Ukraine, Israel and U.S. border security.Arguing that supporting U.S. partners is vital to national security, Biden requested $61.4 billion for Ukraine, about half of which would be spent in the United States to replenish weapons stocks drained by previous support for Kyiv.Biden also asked for $14.3 billion for Israel, $9 billion for humanitarian relief — including for Israel and Gaza — $13.6 billion for U.S. border security, $4 billion in military assistance and government financing to counter China’s regional efforts in Asia.Congress has already approved $113 billion for Ukraine since Russia invaded in February 2022, but Biden’s $24 billion request for more funds in August never moved ahead. The White House has said it has less than $5.5 billion in funds to continue transferring weapons from U.S. stockpiles to Ukrainian forces fighting Russia.REPUBLICANS DIVIDEDThe path forward for Biden’s latest funding plan looks uncertain. Democrats – and many Republicans – in the Democratic-majority Senate back Biden’s strategy of combining Ukraine aid with support for Israel.”This is a moment for swift and decisive action to prevent further loss of life and to impose real consequences on the tyrants who have terrorized the people of Ukraine and of Israel,” Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell said on Monday at the University of Louisville.But Republicans who lead the House of Representatives object to combining the two issues, joined by a smaller number of party members in the Senate. Opinion polls show public support for Ukraine aid declining and many Republicans, particularly those most closely aligned with former President Donald Trump, have come out against it.With federal spending fueled by $31.4 trillion in debt, they question whether Washington should be funding Ukraine’s war with Russia, rather than backing Israel or boosting efforts to push back against a rising China.Newly elected House Speaker Mike Johnson has voted in the past against assistance for Kyiv. On Monday, he introduced a bill to provide $14.3 billion in aid to Israel by cutting funding for the Internal Revenue Service, setting up a showdown with Senate Democrats.Johnson only became speaker after a three-week stalemate in the House after former Speaker Kevin McCarthy was ousted partly because he worked with Democrats to pass a government funding bill.Biden’s support for Israel, which already receives $3.8 billion in annual U.S. military assistance, has drawn criticism amid international appeals for Gaza civilians to be protected.Palestinian authorities say that Israel’s “total siege” of Gaza since that rampage has killed more than 8,300 people, more than 3,400 of them minors, and left a dire need for fuel, food and clean water.Israel this week launched a ground offensive in the Gaza Strip as it strikes back at Islamist Hamas militants who killed 1,400 people and took at least 240 hostages in a rampage on Oct. 7. More

  • in

    Central banks hold interest rates at a scary time

    This article is an on-site version of our Chris Giles on Central Banks newsletter. Sign up here to get the newsletter sent straight to your inbox every TuesdayWelcome to this Halloween edition where I am going to focus on shocks. We are in the middle of a flurry of monetary policy meetings across the G7 with no interest rate changes so far. How are important economies coping with the trauma of higher interest rates? And how do central banks view the frightening prospects of a war between Israel and Hamas and much higher long-term US government borrowing costs? A word about the Bank of Japan’s meeting this morning is also below. A shocking worldIt’s time for a shift in tone. After last week’s deserved blast at inflation crimes and misdemeanours, I am going to focus squarely on the emerging thinking within large central banks on the state of the world. You might think that a series of meetings in which officials stroke their chins and hold interest rates is boring. But I would argue that it is often the opposite. Last Thursday, I found myself entirely in agreement with Christine Lagarde when the European Central Bank president said, “sometimes inaction is action, and a decision to hold is actually meaningful”. So, what is the meaning emerging from the ECB and the Bank of Canada ahead of this week’s meetings at the Federal Reserve on Wednesday and the Bank of England on Thursday? First, we need some essential context. The Bank of Canada last Wednesday set interest rates at 5 per cent for the third consecutive meeting. Previously, it had raised interest rates sharply in 2022 before slowing down this year. The ECB, by contrast has doubled borrowing costs this year with the deposit rate reaching 4 per cent in September. Holding rates in October was the first no change meeting since summer 2022. You can see the inflation dilemma for both central banks in the following chart. If core inflation is a guide to future price rises, Canadian measures (a median and a trimmed mean) were declining nicely, but have become sticky at around 4 per cent since April this year. Eurozone core inflation, excluding food and energy prices, looked much more problematic earlier in the year, but the most recent data for October has shown a sharp decline to 4.2 per cent. You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.Both central banks, therefore, face a similar problem. Inflationary pressures have not disappeared and it was no surprise that the main policy message was similar on both sides of the Atlantic. In Canada, governor Tiff Macklem (speaking in English and French) said monetary policy needed to “stay the course”, adding that if inflation remained sticky around 4 per cent rather than the 2 per cent target, the central bank was “prepared to raise our policy rate further”. In Athens, Lagarde (in English only) said that “even having a discussion on a cut is totally premature”, adding that, “the fact that we are holding doesn’t mean to say that we will never hike again”.The interesting issues are how these two central banks see the global economic environment when we look past their similar problems and monetary stances. Do the BoC and ECB think higher interest rates are working?Yes, but not directly through the labour market. There was no talk about raising unemployment to get inflation down. Instead, Macklem and the BoC focused on signs that households were less willing to borrow and this had led to “softer demand for housing, durable goods and many services”. With interest rate-sensitive spending weakening, he said there was clearly going to be a slowdown in growth, leading to lower inflation. “Demand pressures have eased more quickly than we forecast in July,” Macklem added.Following the meeting, Lagarde had to note that unemployment in the eurozone was at a historic low of 6.4 per cent in August, so she focused on bank lending to companies, which had become more expensive, she said, leading to a sharp drop in credit growth. “Banks are becoming more concerned about the risks faced by their customers and are less willing to take on risks themselves,” she said. The message from both central banks was to stop looking only at the unemployment rate because there are other ways monetary policy acts to reduce demand and trim price rises. It is not the strongest argument, but it is the best they have given the data. How will monetary policy work from here?Orthodoxy reigns in the BoC and ECB with both banks counting on a period of weak economic performance to lower inflation, but without any talk of a recession. The BoC was explicit in expecting sub-par economic growth, leading to “excess supply” helping to ease price pressures. It is expecting a second year of growth at around a 1 per cent annualised rate during 2024. Similarly, in Europe, the ECB expects further weakness in lending, investment and the housing sector to continue into 2024. None of this screams recession, according to Lagarde. So, the soft landing story is not just a US thing. But if the central banks are wrong and tight monetary policy has a bigger recessionary effect, we could expect both the ECB and BoC to end the period of “higher for longer” interest rates pretty quickly. What about Gaza?If the ECB and BoC are almost at one regarding the shock they are imposing on their economies with high interest rates, they differ in their analysis of geopolitics. The war between Israel and Hamas has two offsetting effects on inflation. It threatens to push energy prices higher, raising headline inflation and could then lead companies and households to defend their interests by respectively raising prices and demanding higher wages. By contrast, weaker global confidence and growth stemming from heightened geopolitical tensions would amplify economic weakness, reducing inflationary pressure. Although both central banks mentioned these two forces, their focus could not have been much further apart. Lagarde primarily stressed confidence effects damping global growth and highlighted that interest rates were already high, unlike in 2021 and 2022. Macklem took the opposite tack, placing more weight on higher energy prices slowing progress in defeating inflation and saying this would make the BoC more “cautious” in declaring victory over inflation. The tension over the effect of war in Gaza on inflation is something to watch. What about rising US bond yields?Again, the ECB is more dovish than the BoC. For Lagarde, rising long-term US government borrowing costs reflected something nasty being imposed on the European economy from afar. She talked about “external tightening” and factors, “not directly related to the fundamentals of the euro area”. The upshot was that eurozone interest rates might need to be correspondingly lower, she said, calling higher US yields “something that clearly impacts our own rates and we take that into account”. Macklem passed all questions about the subject to Carolyn Rogers, his senior deputy governor. She was much less willing than Lagarde simply to blame the US. She did not reject the possibility that rising bond yields also reflected a market view about Canada needing to keep interest rates higher for longer to tame inflation. “It’s not a substitute for what the bank needs to do,” she said. Rogers accepted there was a possibility that it could add to monetary tightening, but the message in Ottawa was much more hawkish than in Athens. So what?The bar to raising interest rates further in Canada is lower than in the eurozone. Although both central banks view the effects of monetary tightening to date similarly, their instincts on global shocks are very different. Canada sees inflationary signs everywhere and feels it might well not have done enough, while the ECB tends to focus on reasons global shocks will damp inflation further. Things to read and watchIf you’ve not had enough of Christine Lagarde, read Martin Arnold’s lovely lunch with the ECB president, in which she admits having “screwed up” central bank communications in 2020. It probably explains why she is so precise when speaking now, something that does not always aid communication itself. My colleague Robin Wigglesworth over at Alphaville had some fun with the Riksbank, highlighting how the Swedish central bank has gone cap in hand to the government, seeking a bailout. He praised the Czechs, who let their central bank run with negative equity by contrast. I don’t disagree with Robin, but it is a topic I will come to come back to as there are a bunch of important public finance and central bank issues to chew through.Gita Gopinath, first deputy managing director of the IMF, makes a passionate case for higher taxation to foster sustainable public finances, fund the energy transition and help central bankers in their fight against inflation. She’s right. This week, we could not ignore the rampant growth of the US economy, which refuses to slow like the rest of the world, but its latest inflation figures were not as good as recent vintages, as the brilliant Jason Furman explained on X, formerly Twitter. A date for your diaries. At the FT’s Global Boardroom between November 8 and 10, you can tune in to Lagarde and Kazuo Ueda, Bank of Japan governor. I will also be making an appearance. A chart that mattersCore inflation in Tokyo has long tracked that of Japan. Excluding fresh food and energy, it stayed close to 4 per cent in October, much higher than expected. No wonder the Bank of Japan is concerned and relaxed yield curve control this morning, in effect removing the cap it had placed on 10-year Japanese government bonds of 1 per cent. An interest rate rise cannot be far off. You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.Recommended newsletters for you Free lunch — Your guide to the global economic policy debate. Sign up hereUnhedged — Robert Armstrong dissects the most important market trends and discusses how Wall Street’s best minds respond to them. Sign up here More

  • in

    Italy wants more public debt in domestic hands – econ minister

    ROME (Reuters) – The Italian government aims to place an increasing proportion of the public debt in domestic hands, Economy Minister Giancarlo Giorgetti said on Tuesday.In a speech to bankers in Rome, Giorgetti said the recent success of bond issues dedicated to Italian retail investors was “a very important sign” of trust between the government and savers.”That is part of a broader strategy aimed at placing the main part of the public debt within our country, as it should be,” he said.Italy has collected around 45 billion euros ($47.93 billion) this year through the issuances of the ‘BTP Valore’ and ‘BTP Italia’ bonds, both products specifically earmarked for retail investors.Data from the Bank of Italy showed that in July foreign investors held a 27.4% stake of the country’s 2.84 trillion euro public debt.To further boost domestic holdings, Rome introduced in its 2024 budget a measure to partly discount government bond income from the ISEE, an indicator of wealth that determines access to welfare benefits under government means testing.Under the bill, still subject to change in parliament, taxpayers can deduct a maximum of 50,000 euros in sovereign bonds and investment products for small savers whose repayment is guaranteed by the state.The proposal drew criticism from the opposition and academics, who said it would blunt welfare programmes’ focus on the poor.Giorgetti on Tuesday stressed the need for the Treasury to consolidate the “confidence of savers and markets in Italy” against a difficult economic backdrop in which the risk of a new global recession “is not entirely unlikely.”The Treasury last month raised its budget deficit targets for the 2023-2025 period, worrying markets and setting it up for a possible clash with the European Commission.($1 = 0.9388 euros) More