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    Australia’s home prices almost steadied in Feb, too early to call end to downturn-CoreLogic

    SYDNEY(Reuters) – Australian home prices almost steadied in February as Sydney snapped a year-long losing streak, though analysts cautioned it was far too early to call an end to the downturn with interest rates set to rise further. Figures from property consultant CoreLogic on Wednesday showed prices nationally eased 0.1% in February from January, when values dropped 1.0%. That marked the smallest monthly fall since May last year when the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) started hiking interest rates. Prices were still down 7.9% from a year earlier.In particular, prices in Sydney rose 0.3% in February from a month earlier, driven by a 0.7% rise in the top end market. Every other capital city except Hobart in Tasmania saw values fall by less than half a percent over the month.CoreLogic’s research director Tim Lawless said the stabilisation in housing values over the month coincides with consistently low advertised supply levels and a rise in auction clearance rates. “Considering the RBA’s move to a more hawkish stance at the February board meeting, along with an expectation for a weaker economic performance and a loosening in labour markets, there is a good chance this reprieve in the housing downturn could be short-lived,” said Lawless. “We also have the fixed-rate cliff ahead of us; arguably the full impact of the aggressive rate hiking cycle is yet to play out.”In Melbourne, price gains during the COVID pandemic have all but been erased, while prices in Sydney still were 7.7% higher than March 2020 levels. Separate data from PropTrack also out on Wednesday showed home prices rose 0.2% in February from January, with every capital city aside from Hobart seeing prices rebound. The RBA has lifted rates by a whopping 325 basis points to a 10-year high of 3.35% to curb red-hot inflation.In a hawkish tilt that surprised many, the RBA flagged at least two more rate hikes earlier this month, prompting investors to wager on further hikes towards a peak rate of 4.35%. More

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    Portugal economy grows 6.7% in 2022, but slowing down

    In its second reading of gross domestic product released on Tuesday, the National Statistics Institute (INE) revised fourth-quarter growth slightly higher yet kept the annual figure unchanged.It said the economy grew 0.3% in the last quarter of 2022, up from 0.2% estimated a month ago and the same as in the third quarter. Year-on-year growth reached 3.2%, up from its flash estimate of 3.1%.However, INE said the contribution of domestic demand to year-on-year GDP was only 1.9 percentage points (pp) after 3.2 pp in the previous quarter, while external demand contributed with 1.1 pp compared to 1.6 pp in the third quarter.Hit by high inflation, private consumption – which represents two-thirds of GDP – grew just 2.7% between October and December compared to 4.3% in the previous three months. Quarter-on-quarter, household consumption expenditures decreased by 0.5% despite high inflation, while they had grown by 1.1% in the previous quarter. Portuguese consumer prices rose 8.2% year-on-year in February in a slowdown from 8.4% reported in the previous month, flash data from INE showed on Tuesday.Still, core inflation, which strips out volatile food and energy prices, accelerated to 7.2% from 7.0% in January.The INE said investment fell 1.2% year-on-year in the fourth quarter after a 1.6% increase in the July-September period, while exports growth halved to 8.1% year-on-year from the previous three months’ 16.3% despite the key tourism sector’s recovery to near pre-pandemic levels.The government projects expansion to slow to just 1.3% in 2023, with private consumption almost stagnating as families struggle with high energy and food prices alongside rising interest rates and slowing exports. More

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    House prices, Target earnings, Eurozone inflation – what’s moving markets

    Investing.com — The U.S. releases January data for house prices, amid signs of an incipient revival in the housing market. Consumer confidence data is also due. Bets on European Central Bank rate hikes reach a new peak after hot inflation data in Spain and France. Target beats expectations with its quarterly profit but its guidance for the coming year is weak. Rupert Murdoch acknowledges in a deposition that Fox News hosts endorsed false claims about the 2020 presidential election being stolen, and oil is higher ahead of U.S. inventory data later. Here’s what you need to know in financial markets on Tuesday, 28th February.1. House prices, consumer confidence dueThe U.S. releases data on house price developments in January that will perhaps draw more interest than usual after surprisingly strong data for new and pending home sales, which suggested the market may be bottoming out.The S&P Composite house price index has fallen for the last five months in a row in response to higher borrowing costs and stretched affordability.Also due is the Chicago Federal Reserve’s purchasing managers index at 09:45 ET and the Conference Board’s consumer confidence survey at 10: 00 ET.2. ECB rate hike bets intensify after hot January CPI numbersEurozone bond yields continued their relentless march upward after stronger-than-expected inflation numbers from France and Spain, the region’s second and fourth largest economies, came in significantly above expectations in February.French consumer prices rose 0.9%, pushing the annual inflation rate up to 6.2%, and separate data showed that consumer spending was also surprisingly strong. In Spain, meanwhile, prices rose a hefty 1.0% on the month, against expectations for no change.Benchmark 2-year bond yields rose as much as six basis points, with the 10-year Bund yield hitting a new 12-year high of 2.66%, as traders shifted their expectations for peak ECB rates to nearly 4%.3. Stocks edge higher; Target reports high, but guides lowU.S. stock markets are struggling for direction in the overnight session, with attention likely to focus on month-end positioning in the relative absence of heavy fundamental news.By 06:30 ET, Dow Jones futures were up 43 points or 0.1%, while S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq 100 futures were both up 0.2%. The benchmark cash indices had a moderately positive day on Monday, gaining by between 0.2% and 0.6%.The day’s big early release is Target (NYSE:TGT), which issued full-year guidance seriously below Street forecasts despite a handsome earnings beat in the fourth quarter.Other stocks likely to be in focus later include Zoom Video Communications (NASDAQ:ZM), up 6.8% in premarket after evidence of it expanding its footprint among corporate clients. Its guidance for both current quarter and full year were well ahead of market expectations. By contrast, Occidental Petroleum (NYSE:OXY) is under pressure after missing Street forecasts. AutoZone (NYSE:AZO), Advance Auto Parts (NYSE:AAP) and Sempra Energy (NYSE:SRE) are also all due to report early, while Monster Beverage (NASDAQ:MNST), HP (NYSE:HPQ) and Rivian (NASDAQ:RIVN) report after the close.4. Fox hosts endorsed false election claims, says MurdochRupert Murdoch admitted in a deposition that Fox News hosts including Sean Hannity, Lou Dobbs, and Maria Bartiromo had endorsed false claims of fraud in the 2020 presidential election.The deposition was taken in connection with a defamation lawsuit brought against Fox (NASDAQ:FOXA) by Dominion Voting Systems. In it, Murdoch, Fox’s biggest shareholder, testified that he didn’t believe any claim of major election fraud, but acknowledged that the company had been under pressure to run with the claims rather than risk losing viewers to rivals such as One America and Newsmax.The disclosures come only a couple of weeks after Murdoch abandoned plans to reunite his media empire after splitting off Fox from News Corp. (NASDAQ:NWSA) – the owner of The Wall Street Journal and a string of U.K. and Australian news titles – a decade ago.5. Crude rises ahead of U.S. inventoriesCrude oil prices were a little stronger overnight, shrugging off weak economic data out of Japan, where industrial output fell by the most in seven months in January. Reports suggest that Saudi Arabia may raise its official selling prices again for April supported prices.Attention is likely to focus on U.S. inventory data from the American Petroleum Institute at 16:30 ET. These have shown commercial crude stocks rising steeply in the last eight weeks – by a combined total of more than 50 million barrels. However, they still remain at historically low levels as a result of last year’s market tightness.By 06:45 ET, U.S. crude futures were up 1.6% at $76.87 a barrel, their highest in nearly a week, while Brent crude was up 1.4% at $83.21 a barrel. More

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    Fed might raise policy rates to 6% – BofA

    The number is higher than a peak of 5.4% by September that traders are currently pricing in.”Aggregate demand needs to weaken significantly for inflation to return to the Fed’s target. Further supply-chain normalization and a slowdown in the labor market will help, but only to a degree,” said BofA in a noted dated Feb. 27.”Moreover, these processes are taking longer than we and markets were expecting,” it added.BofA’s hawkish stance comes after it recently added expectation for another quarter basis-point hike in June following similar moves in March and May, for a peak rate expectation of 5.25%-5.5%. The brokerage expects the U.S. economy to tip into recession by the third quarter of 2023. More

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    Sunak threatens to push through Brexit deal without DUP

    Rishi Sunak has hinted the UK government will press ahead with his new Brexit deal for Northern Ireland even if it is rejected by the Democratic Unionist party, saying the agreement was not about “any one political party”.The British prime minister arrived in Belfast on Tuesday to sell this week’s agreement with the EU to business leaders, arguing it would unlock fresh investment in the region.Sunak unveiled the so-called Windsor framework with European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen on Monday, with both sides hailing it as a “new chapter” after years of fraught relations. On Tuesday morning the Democratic Unionists, the region’s main pro-UK party, welcomed progress but said concerns remained. Asked whether the agreement struck with the EU would go ahead without the support of the DUP, Sunak replied: “This is not necessarily about me or any one political party. This is about what is best for the people and communities and businesses of Northern Ireland and this agreement will make a hugely positive difference to them.”The DUP has boycotted the region’s Stormont assembly since May in protest at the previous agreement with the EU — known as the Northern Ireland protocol — which introduced checks on trade with Great Britain in a bid to prevent a hard border on the island of Ireland.This week’s deal was reached under provisions set out by the protocol for the amendment of its rules, and does not technically require ratification — although Sunak has said the House of Commons will have a vote “at the appropriate time”.Sir Jeffrey Donaldson, DUP leader, said on Tuesday that this week’s agreement made progress “across a number of areas about which we had concerns”. The DUP says the fact the deal went beyond what the EU initially said was possible has vindicated its boycott of the assembly and push for sweeping change to the protocol. But Donaldson added: “We continue to have some concerns.”The new deal eliminates many checks for goods sent from Great Britain to Northern Ireland, ranging from sausages and medicines to oak trees, allows VAT cuts in the region for products such as beer, and sets out provisions for local legislators to object to new EU rules. But, despite the calls of some Eurosceptics, it does not end the jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice over Northern Ireland.Sunak said he understood why unionist politicians would want to take “the time and the space to consider the details” before deciding whether to back the deal.But he held out the prospect of a big increase in investment should the DUP agree to the deal: “I’ve spent a lot of time engaging with business groups and what they say is if we get this resolved in the way that we have, that will unlock an enormous investment,” he said. “Remember, Northern Ireland has this very special position where it has access to the UK market, it has access to the EU market which makes it an incredibly attractive place to invest,” he added.The deal has appeared to mollify even some of the hardest-line Eurosceptics in the Conservative party, with early signs that any rebellion from the prime minister’s own backbenches could be limited.But it was not immediately clear whether it would achieve one of its key objectives: restoring Northern Ireland’s devolved government by ending the DUP’s boycott of the Stormont assembly.While some Brexiters describe the continued sway of EU law and the ECJ over Northern Ireland as a “democratic deficit”, Sunak said the biggest such deficit was that the suspension of the power-sharing agreement in Stormont. The deal includes one possible incentive to reconvene the assembly. It contains provisions for a new emergency “Stormont brake”, allowing the UK — at the request of 30 members from at least two parties in the assembly — to block updates to EU goods regulations in exceptional circumstances.“With the Stormont brake . . . the assembly and people of Northern Ireland are in control,” Sunak said.The prime minister added that the practical steps in his deal would end “any sense of a border in the Irish Sea”. He said there would only be checks on goods moving from Great Britain to Northern Ireland where officials suspect “criminality or smuggling” while Northern Irish businesses producing goods for the UK internal market would only have to follow “less than 3 per cent” of EU single market rules.

    The DUP wants businesses and consumers to have “unfettered” access to goods from Britain and set out seven conditions for its endorsement of the new deal, including that there should be no Irish Sea border and the people of Northern Ireland should have a say in the rules that govern them.Under this week’s deal, a “green lane” with significantly reduced checks would be created at Irish Sea ports for goods destined to stay in Northern Ireland, while a “red lane” would be created for goods continuing into Ireland and the single market.Donaldson welcomed the so-called Stormont brake but said his party would study the fine print of the deal to decide whether it could “deliver on the areas of concern that we set out in our seven tests”.

    Video: The Brexit effect: how leaving the EU hit the UK More

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    There is too much we don’t know about Russia’s central bank reserves

    It has been a good month for sanctions policy: just in the past few weeks, the EU import ban and G7 price cap on Russian crude have been extended to refined oil products, and the tenth EU sanctions package has been agreed, alongside similar sanctions in its partner countries. As I wrote last week, while most sanctions developments have involved those on economic flows in and out of Russia — much of the current effort is to scrutinise those flows more closely to prevent sanctions circumvention — there is much more to say on how we impose sanctions on economic “stocks”, in particular on Russia’s state assets abroad. Over the past few months, I have been looking closely at this with my colleagues Claire Jones and Daria Mosolova. In a series of articles I will share what we have learnt.Before even looking at how effective the sanctions on Russia’s reserves have been, and what to do next, we should understand better what precisely has and hasn’t been done. When I first started looking at this issue, I naively assumed that the sanctioning coalition would assemble a “master list” of all Russia’s central bank reserves — we frequently hear that more than $300bn has been blocked. Indeed, I was puzzled why they wouldn’t have published it. The reason, it turns out, is that no such master list exists. To this day, the EU does not know the amount, location and form of the assets the Russian central bank holds within the bloc’s jurisdiction. I have had many conversations with people who have expressed disbelief that this information should be lacking, so I am clearly not the only one who presumed these assets were closely monitored. In fact, several people who are well placed to assess this have assured me that the right decision makers “must know”. But the European Commission president has now publicly admitted in a speech what my background conversations and leaked commission documents indicated. Under Sweden’s lead, the EU has just set up a working group to examine what can be done with the Russian reserves — and its chair, Anders Ahnlid, told me that mapping out the information on “what assets there are and where the assets are . . . is an important task”. But that means that a year into these sanctions, this has not yet been achieved.Where, then, does the “more than $300bn” number come from? From Russia itself. The central bank’s last public report on gold and foreign exchange management, from January 2022, breaks down its international reserves by type of asset, by currency, by jurisdiction, and by risk rating. Looking at jurisdictions, between 55 and 66 per cent (depending on what is in the “others” category) of reserves were held in countries that would soon block access to them.Since the war started, the central bank has not updated these numbers, but it does still publish its total reserves on a weekly basis. When Russia invaded Ukraine, they amounted to $629bn. Applying the latest known geographic distribution to this total gives a rough range of $345bn to $415bn in deposits and securities that the CBR owns but is prevented from using (exchange rate movements mean the real number could be somewhat different, though not much).It is a puzzle that sanctioning governments, at least in public, have relied for so long on Russia’s own numbers rather than their own. They can, of course, establish their own information. By definition, national central banks know how much others have on deposit with them. Their governments can require them to report the amounts (whether publicly or not). They can put the same requirement on providers of custodial services for their public debt securities, which make up the bulk of CBR foreign exchange reserves. No doubt many governments do.But it is clear that they don’t do so publicly — we have asked a lot of central banks and came up empty-handed — and there is no systematic sharing of this information between the sanctioning governments. Otherwise, the EU would not be in the dark about the total amount of Russian reserves it has blocked. The only government I have seen publish the amount of CBR assets in its country is France. Last year its finance minister said €22bn had been immobilised. Others are not telling us as far as I have seen (but I will gladly be corrected by eagle-eyed Free Lunch readers).Why do we not know? The answer relates to another too little-known fact. The CBR’s assets are not technically frozen. Politicians may slip up in their descriptions — Ursula von der Leyen herself used the term “frozen” in the speech I mentioned above. But the Bank of Russia does not figure on the EU’s sanctions list, and so does not fall under the regulation on asset freezes. Sanctions experts make sure to describe the sanctions affecting the CBR as “immobilising” or blocking” (but not freezing) the reserves. In the EU, this is implemented through a ban on EU residents’ engaging in any transactions “related to the management of reserves as well as of assets of the Central Bank of Russia”. That ban, however, lives in a different EU regulation. And the reporting requirements in the two regulations are quite different — and in the case of the central bank sanctions, too weak. The fact that they were significantly tightened in the EU’s tenth sanctions package, agreed just a few days ago, proves as much.I am told the reason why Russia’s official reserves could not be treated like normal frozen assets has to do with the degree of sovereign immunity afforded in international law. But that does not justify the lax reporting requirements: if they can and should be tightened up today, they could and should have been tighter from the start. I also asked Tom Ruys, a professor of international law at Ghent University, if immunity principles prevent making CBR holdings public. He pointed out that individuals under sanctions, such as oligarchs, may have a right to privacy, but “I fail to see . . . what international law obligation would prevent the disclosure of the amounts held by the CBR”.All of which leads to the question: is this a problem? Is it so important to know the details of the reserves, as long as Russia can’t touch them? If you have to ask the question, I’m not sure there is much I can say to convince you. But it does matter very much indeed. Partly because there is an intensifying debate about whether to confiscate the reserves or otherwise mobilise them to fund Ukraine’s reconstruction — hence the creation of the working group headed by Ahnlid — a debate I will discuss at length later this week. And partly, because transparency is a good way to minimise errors and discrepancies. Go back to the French example. If the CBR is to be believed, it has somewhere about €70bn worth of reserves in France. Even allowing for exchange rate fluctuations, that’s a big gap from the €22bn announced by Paris. Perhaps the French figure is only money held with the Banque de France — the Bank of Russia says it puts on average about two-thirds of its foreign exchange holdings in securities rather than in central bank deposits. But wouldn’t it be good to know?One expert friend, in response to my mention last week of shortcomings in the reserves sanctions, wrote: “My understanding so far is that it’s perhaps the most solid of the sanctions in terms of not being vulnerable to circumvention: I have heard nothing whatsoever suggesting that [Vladimir] Putin could regain access to that money.” My worry is: how would we know? If we don’t know what reserves we have blocked access to, it is hard to know if the blocks have been circumvented. Making sure would require compiling the full list of CBR assets in the sanctioning countries at the time the sanctions were imposed, and periodically check they were all still there over time. Making them public would crowdsource the scrutiny.I also have no indication any circumvention has happened. But I do have some indications of how it could happen. One reserve manager suggested to us that even if Russia doesn’t have access to the reserves, it could theoretically use them as collateral for liquidity with friendly central banks in non-sanctioning countries (no suggestion that this has actually happened). That would be risky, of course, since the friendly central bank may struggle to seize the collateral in case of a default, and it would therefore no doubt command a premium borrowing rate. But is it inconceivable, given the current legal situation that the reserves are not outright frozen, the EU’s transactions bans explicitly “do not apply extraterritorially”, and access will one day be restored to Russia?Another speculative possibility is that the KGB tradition of holding assets abroad in the name of proxy entities — “friendly firms” — did not end with the Soviet Union. That’s unlikely. By all accounts, the modern CBR has long been thoroughly professional and those I have talked to have never heard a whiff of any possibility that some reserves may be hidden in this way. But the best way to be sure would be to tally up the CBR’s published figures against the sanctioning countries’ own.At a practical level, all of this may be irrelevant. Fear of the US, which is more willing to impose secondary sanctions, may be enough to scare off any circumvention. And as international balance sheet guru Brad Setser told me, Russia doesn’t need to mobilise its blocked reserves: it has built up so much unsanctioned money it can use instead. I will address that topic next week. For now, it seems that the sanctioning coalition’s inattention to mapping and reporting the details of the CBR’s assets over the past year has been at best complacent. And the lack of interest in reporting this information publicly is even worse. Other readablesRussia’s war against Ukraine is often seen in the west about who gets to govern which territories. In my column this week, I argue it is just as much a conflict over how they are governed. Habemus deal — or as I see it, the UK finally decides to take yes for an answer! Here is the FT’s explainer of the new Windsor framework for Northern Ireland.Once the car industry goes fully electric, it will employ many fewer workers than today, explains Peter Cambell. (The battery recycling industry, in contrast, may need a lot more.)Numbers newsFrench and Spanish inflation numbers came in higher than expected. More

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    Mexico’s ‘historic moment’ for housing needs financing help – study

    MEXICO CITY (Reuters) – For housing access to improve in Mexico, financial support such as mortgages or subsidies, along with greater buy-in from local governments and the private sector, is key, according to a study published on Tuesday.”The idea is to now turn the focus to the poorest 20%, 30% of Mexico’s population,” Albert Saiz, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) who led the study, told Reuters ahead of its publication.To reach the poorest Mexicans, urban housing must become three to four times denser than current levels to keep up with surging demand, Saiz and his fellow MIT researchers argue in the study.This would require a multi-sector initiative tackling supply, including government subsidies for new developments in coordination with the private sector, Sainz said.”The private sector is needed in reaching that poorest 20%,” Saiz said, urging cooperation with local governments and developers, non-profit groups or even the use of communal land plots known as ejidos to increase housing access.Local governments also have a proactive role to play by planning for growth and expanding utilities, the researchers said. In Mexico City, water access has led to increasing tensions between long-established communities and new developments.In Mexico, where access to credit is low and many workers are outside the formal economy, financing for housing remains low and many turn to self-constructed builds.About six in 10 new builds in Mexico are built by owners, the study, backed by Colombian startup La Haus, found. Government data on housing is scarce.Mexico’s public housing policies, which have targeted the middle class through underwriting loans, can go further in extending housing access by shifting or increasing direct subsidies to the lowest income bracket, Sainz argues.”This is a historic moment for Mexico,” Saiz said, pointing to increasing demand for housing amid population growth and a projected boom in nearshoring, or firms moving operations closer to home. “If there’s political stability and a little bit of consensus among parties, it can be done.” More

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    US Supreme Court scrutinizes Biden college student debt relief

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The fate of President Joe Biden’s plan to cancel $430 billion in student debt for some 40 million borrowers is placed in the hands of the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday in a case that presents another major test of executive branch authority.The nine justices are set to hear arguments in the Biden administration’s appeal of two lower court rulings blocking the policy that he announced last August in legal challenges brought by six conservative-leaning states and two student loan borrowers opposed to the plan’s eligibility requirements.Under the Democratic president’s plan, the U.S. government would forgive up to $10,000 in federal student debt for Americans making under $125,000 who took out loans to pay for college and other post-secondary education and $20,000 for recipients of Pell grants awarded to students from lower-income families. The program fulfilled Biden’s 2020 campaign promise to cancel a portion of the nation’s $1.6 trillion in federal student loan debt but was criticized by Republicans and others as an overreach of his authority.The policy, intended to ease the financial burden on debt-saddled borrowers, could face scrutiny by the court under the so-called major questions doctrine. Its 6-3 conservative majority has employed this muscular judicial approach to invalidate major Biden policies deemed lacking clear congressional authorization.Biden’s administration has said the plan is authorized under a 2003 federal law called the Higher Education Relief Opportunities for Students Act, or HEROES Act, that allows student loan debt relief during wartime or national emergencies.Many borrowers experienced financial strain during the COVID-19 pandemic, a declared public health emergency. Beginning in 2020, the administrations of President Donald Trump, a Republican, and Biden, a Democrat, repeatedly paused federal student loan payments and halted interest from accruing, relying upon the HEROES Act.Biden’s administration contends that the challengers have not suffered the sort of legal injury needed to give them the proper standing to bring their lawsuits. The challengers have said Biden’s administration failed to provide an adequate legal underpinning for the program. In the legal challenge brought by individual borrowers Myra Brown and Alexander Taylor, Texas-based U.S. District Judge Mark Pittman ruled the student loan forgiveness program lacked “clear congressional authorization.” The New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals declined to put Pittman’s decision on hold pending appeal.Missouri-based U.S. District Judge Henry Autrey found the states – Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska and South Carolina lacked the legal standing to sue. On appeal, the St. Louis-based 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals found at a minimum that Missouri likely had standing to sue and that court temporarily blocked the Biden program from taking effect while the case proceeded.One theory of legal standing advanced by the states is that Biden plan’s would harm a Missouri-based student loan servicer – a company involved in collecting payment – which in effect would injure that state. The two individual borrowers have said the administration’s failure to allow public comment over Biden’s student debt forgiveness plan deprived them of “procedural rights” under federal law. More