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    Lebanon’s central bank chief says he will not renew his term

    “No one has asked me to continue [as central bank chief] but even if they do, I think this is enough,” he said in a televised interview with Egypt’s AlQahera News on Sunday.Salameh, who became the head of the central bank in 1993, has come under increased scrutiny both at home and abroad since Lebanon’s financial system began unraveling in 2019.The collapse has locked most savers out of their bank accounts and pushed more than 80% of Lebanon’s population below the poverty line. Salameh, meanwhile, is being investigated in Lebanon and abroad for alleged embezzlement. Lebanon’s finance minister has said he would be difficult to replace once his term ends. On Sunday, Salameh said the economic crisis was due to ongoing political instability and that inadequate foreign currency reserves had prompted parallel exchange rates. Earlier this month, Lebanon officially devalued the national currency for the first time in more than two decades to 15,000 pounds to the U.S. dollar, a 90% devaluation from the previous peg of 1,507.That still lies far off the parallel market, which has hovered around a record-breaking 80,000 pounds to the U.S. dollar over the last week.Salameh on Sunday said Lebanon’s foreign exchange reserves currently measured at $10 billion and that he was in favor of unifying all exchange rates – one of the preconditions set out by the International Monetary Fund for Lebanon to get access to $3 billion in relief funds. Those preconditions also included an audit of the central bank’s foreign asset position, which includes gold. Salameh said on Sunday that Lebanon’s gold reserves were valued at $17 billion.The central bank had announced in November 2022 that a “specialized and professional international auditing firm” had completed an audit of the gold reserves but had not announced its value. More

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    Rishi Sunak hopes to seal N Ireland trade deal early this week

    Rishi Sunak is pressing to seal a deal with Brussels on post-Brexit Northern Ireland trade rules early this week, rejecting calls from Boris Johnson, his predecessor as prime minister, to take a more confrontational approach.Sunak’s officials held talks with their Brussels counterparts on Sunday on how to give Northern Ireland politicians a say in the application of EU law in the region, addressing a “democratic deficit”.British officials said there were still “hard yards” ahead in the talks, but Sunak hopes to agree a deal and confront Johnson and other Tory Eurosceptics with the result as early as Tuesday.“He’s focused on securing a deal that works for the people of Northern Ireland,” said one ally, noting that “really good progress” had been made in settling the bitter post-Brexit dispute with Brussels.Sunak hopes that a deal will restart Northern Ireland’s power-sharing executive, which is currently boycotted by the pro-UK Democratic Unionist party, and transform relations with the EU.UK officials left open the possibility of a breakthrough on Tuesday or possibly Wednesday. Cabinet ministers would be asked to approve the deal, which would then probably be laid out in a command paper and presented to parliament. Although Downing Street says an agreement would not “technically” have to be put to a House of Commons vote, senior Tories expect MPs to have a say, with all eyes on Johnson and Tory MPs in the pro-Brexit European Research Group.Johnson intervened in the dispute on Sunday, warning Sunak that it would be a “great mistake” to ditch the Northern Ireland Protocol Bill, which would allow ministers to unilaterally override the 2020 Brexit treaty with the EU.The bill, tabled by Johnson and described by one senior EU official as “a loaded gun on the table”, is on hold in the House of Lords, and Brussels expects it to be dropped as part of a deal.Sunak’s allies said the bill would not be needed if the deal to reform the protocol resulted in a better outcome. They said the legislative measure might not be axed, but could be left to die quietly at the end of the parliamentary session.One senior Tory said Johnson was guilty of “hypocrisy”, given that, as prime minister in December 2020, he dropped a threat to break international law from the UK Internal Market Bill in a deal with the EU over the implementation of the Brexit agreement.George Osborne, former Tory chancellor, told Channel 4’s Andrew Neil on Sunday that Johnson was “interested in becoming PM again” and would use any instrument to hit Sunak “over the head”.The pro-Brexit cabinet minister Penny Mordaunt said on Sunday that any deal had to be backed by the DUP, which has set out seven tests for assessing a deal.Sunak believes his deal will meet those tests, which include no border in the Irish Sea and no checks on goods moving between Great Britain and Northern Ireland, which remains in the EU’s single market for goods.A big focus is now on the DUP’s fourth test, which party leader Sir Jeffrey Donaldson has described as giving “the people of Northern Ireland a say in making the laws that govern them”. Sunak’s allies confirmed this was “an important part of what we are trying to fix”.Brussels has suggested establishing “structured dialogues between Northern Ireland stakeholders” — including the Stormont assembly — and the European Commission.Officials have talked about early consultation on legislative changes. A decision that left Northern Ireland paying tariffs on some steel imports from Great Britain could have been avoided with better co-ordination, one said.But updates to the more than 300 single market regulations in force at the time of Brexit apply automatically. While Belfast’s views will be taken into account, no one in Brussels has countenanced giving it a veto.Sunak, who held talks with EU leaders at the Munich Security Conference on Saturday said no deal was yet done, adding: “We need to find solutions to the practical problems that the protocol is causing families and business in Northern Ireland, as well as address the democratic deficit.”Edwin Poots, a former DUP leader, called the protocol in its current form “the antithesis to democracy”. In a recent interview with the FT, Poots said the democratic deficit was a major concern for unionists. More

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    Marking a year in the Ukraine war

    Hello and welcome to the working week. Friday marks the first anniversary of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, an event that shocked the world by bringing large-scale conflict to European soil. US president Joe Biden’s visit to Poland at the start of the week will serve as a show of strength to Ukrainian and Nato allies in the face of Russia’s long-expected spring offensive.The EU’s Foreign Affairs Council meeting on Monday will focus on the war and it will be the keynote item at Friday’s UN Security Council meeting in New York. Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy may travel to Manhattan to address the assembled delegates. The Financial Times has a special magazine issue marking the anniversary of the war featuring essays by our Ukrainian correspondent Christopher Miller and academic Mary Elise Sarotte, alongside a powerful picture package by Ukrainian photographers.Henry Foy examines how western governments have provided more than $110bn in support to Kyiv since last February — $38bn in the form of weapons — and how the reality of maintaining these numbers is only just beginning to dawn on the west. The UK’s winter of industrial unrest rumbles on. Staff at more than 150 higher education institutions will walk out in a long-running dispute over pay and conditions while regional ambulance staff in England and Northern Ireland will hold various strikes this week.FT Live holds a free online event, the Future of Business Education: Spotlight on MBA, on Wednesday, where the FT’s global education editor and business education rankings manager, will share details about how the best business schools are rated. Click here to register.As ever your comments and suggestions about items are appreciated. For this edition, email me at [email protected] or if you received this email in your inbox just hit reply. Jonathan will be back next week. Economic dataGross domestic product is the main US data point on Tuesday and minutes from the last Federal Reserve’s meeting land on Wednesday. UK public-sector borrowing figures for January are out on Tuesday. Increases in debt interest and spending on energy support schemes made last month’s release the highest monthly total since records began in January 1993. Turkey’s central bank announces interest rates on Thursday. CompaniesUK banks will stay in the spotlight. Last week NatWest announced an almost tripling of profits driven by higher interest rates. These should also boost profits for HSBC and Lloyds Banking Group when they report on Tuesday and Wednesday respectively, but these revenue channels are looking increasingly exhausted. Several miners report this week, including Newmont, the world’s largest gold miner, which launched an all-share $17bn bid for Australian rival Newcrest earlier this month. Global demand for gold is surging as central banks and investors shelter from persistent inflation and geopolitical upheaval. Key economic and company reportsHere is a more complete list of what to expect in terms of company reports and economic data this week.MondayEU, December construction output figures EU, Consumer confidence data UK, Sam Woods, deputy governor for Prudential Regulation and chief executive of the Prudential Regulation Authority, speaks at the Association of British Insurers Annual DinnerUK, Office for National Statistics publishes its evidence review on hidden homelessness TuesdayEU, S&P Global manufacturing PMI flash dataEU, Zew Economic Sentiment IndexUK, S&P Global/Cips Services and Manufacturing PMI Flash data UK, CBI Industrial Trends ordersResults: Standard Chartered FY; HSBC FY; Antofagasta FY; InterContinental Hotels FY; Home Depot. Q4; Medtronic Q3; Palo Alto Networks Q2; Capgemini FY; Engie FY; Coinbase FYWednesdayFrance, Business confidence data Germany, January harmonised index of consumer price inflation data Italy, January consumer price index (CPI) inflation data US, Federal Reserve Bank of New York president John Williams participates in a fireside chat on Taming Inflation before the hybrid Credibility of Government Policies conferenceResults: Lloyds FY; Nvidia FY; Stellantis FY; Baidu Q4; Danone FY; Ebay Q4; Garmin FY; Etsy FY; Domino’s Pizza Q4; Rio Tinto FYThursdayUK, Keynote speech at the Resolution Foundation in London by Catherine L Mann: ‘The result of rising rates: Expectations, lags and the result of rising rates’.UK, Bank of England deputy governor Jon Cunliffe speaks on cross-border payments at a meeting of G20 officialsUS, unemployment claims US, Q4 Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) index Results: Alibaba Group Q3; Deutsche Telekom Q4; Intuit Q2; American Tower Q4; Dr Pepper Snapple Group Q4; Budweiser Q4; CBRE FY; Warner Bros Discovery Q4; BAE Systems FY; Telefónica FY; Coterra Q4; Live Nation FY; Serco FY; Drax FY; Rolls-Royce FY; Spectris FY; Greencoat UK FY; Morgan Sindall FY; Qantas Q2; Anglo American FY; Newmont FYFridayFrance, Q4 GDP dataGermany, Q4 GDP dataJapan, January consumer price index (CPI) inflation dataUK, April-June 2022 housebuilding data released UK, Cost of living and higher education students, England (Scolis) data: January 30 to February 13US, data on new home salesResults: Jupiter Asset Management FY; International Consolidated Airlines Group FY; OCBC FY; CIBC Q1; Endesa FY; Holcim Group FY; Amadeus FY; PKN Orlen FYWorld eventsFinally, here is a rundown of other events and milestones this week. MondayIsrael, the Knesset holds the first reading of a contentious legal reform billSpain, the International Renewable Energy Conference begins in MadridUN World Day of Social JusticeUS, George Washington’s birthday marks Presidents’ Day where a federal holiday is observedTuesdayBelgium, meeting of the EU General Affairs Council in BrusselsItaly, Venice Carnival ends Sweden, EU energy ministers meet until Wednesday in StockholmUK, London Fashion Week endsUnesco International Mother Language Day promoting linguistic and cultural diversityUS, Mardi Gras parade and celebrations in New Orleans, LouisianaUS, Supreme Court releases orders and hears oral arguments WednesdayIndia, Finance ministers of G20 countries and their central bank chiefs begin a summit in Bengaluru until SaturdayIndonesia, China’s foreign minister Qin Gang visits Jakarta Japan, the Emperor’s Birthday (Naruhito) is marked with a public holidaySouth Africa, finance minister Enoch Godongwana presents the 2023 budgetUS, UN Security Council to meet on Somalia US, First Lady Jill Biden begins a trip to Africa with stops in Namibia and KenyaThursdaySpain, energy minister Teresa Ribera to speak at economy forum in MadridUS, UN Security Council to meet on co-operation between the UN and EUFridayMalaysia, national budgetSaturdayNigeria, elections to the Nigerian presidency, Senate and House of Representatives US, the 2023 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) Finance and Central Bank Deputies’ meetingSundaySouth Africa, ICC Women’s T20 Cricket World Cup final in Cape TownUK, Manchester United play Newcastle United in the Carabao Cup Final at Wembley Stadium More

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    Airbus’ defence arm says Berlin delaying exports worth billions

    MUNICH (Reuters) – Slow German government export approvals are holding up Airbus Defence & Space defence exports worth several billions of euros, the company’s chief executive said on Sunday, urging Berlin to speed up the process.”Several countries are interested in the (military transport plane) A400M. Unfortunately we are having difficulties to get the German export licences on time,” Michael Schoellhorn told Reuters in an interview at the Munich Security Conference.”Our problem is that we haven’t received any contracts yet from the Zeitenwende and important exports are not being approved. This puts us in a very unsatisfactory situation,” Schoellhorn said.He was referring to a 100-billion-euro ($107 billion) special fund set up last year to bring the military back up to scratch after Chancellor Olaf Scholz announced a “Zeitenwende” or sea change in security policy days into Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.”We cannot put up with the constant delays (in export procedures). Planning security is essential,” Schoellhorn said.He said orders for several products, not only the A400M, were stuck with the government in Berlin but declined to give details – although he offered a rough estimate of the financial volume.”In total, we are talking about several billion euros,” he said.On the loss-making A400M, Schoellhorn said he expected no further significant charges due to industrial problems in future if developments continued as they had in the past years, after Airbus results showed another 500-million-euro charge on Thursday.He added that the company should eventually receive partial payments that customers held back.Asked whether in future space developments Europe will have to fall back on Elon Musk’s SpaceX company following Airbus Defence & Space’s loss of two satellites on a Vega C rocket, Schoellhorn said any such solution would be temporary.”Depending on the mission, we will have to temporarily use other launchers, whether they will come from SpaceX or somewhere else we will have to see,” he said. “But we don’t want to do this over the long haul.” (This story has been refiled to add dropped name in paragraph 2) More

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    Ukraine war expected to cost Germany 160 billion euros by year-end

    That means GDP per capita in Europe’s largest economy will be 2,000 euros lower it would otherwise have been, DIHK chief Peter Adrian told the “Rheinische Post”. Industry makes up a higher share of the economy in Germany than in many other countries, and the sector is for the most part energy-intensive, meaning German companies have been especially hard hit by a surge in energy prices, which last year hit record highs in Europe.German industry is set to pay about 40% more for energy in 2023 than in 2021, before the crisis triggered by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24 last year, a study by Allianz (ETR:ALVG) Trade said last month.”The growth outlook for 2023 and 2024 is therefore also lower than in many other countries,” Adrian said, adding that was also the case last year.Germany, which for decades relied on relatively cheap Russian pipeline gas, now has especially high energy prices compared with the United States that has its own natural gas reserves, while France has abundant nuclear power.”The gas price is around three-five times higher than in the United States,” he said, adding electricity was four times as expensive as in France.($1 = 0.9351 euros) More

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    The old arguments for debt cancellation in Africa no longer apply

    The author is a policy analyst affiliated with Imani, a think-tank based in AccraTwo decades ago, the world was in the grip of a great debate over debt and debt cancellation in Africa. Total public debt stock had climbed to nearly $300bn by 2002 from $40bn in the two decades prior. Jubilee Debt Campaigners insisted on immediate cancellation. The Pope concurred.Today, Africa’s external debt alone exceeds $700bn. Campaigners are back asking for cancellation. And the Pope again concurs. It would seem as if nothing at all happened in the intervening 20 years. Yet quite a bit did. After intense criticism of earlier designs and subsequent brainstorming, additional resources were injected into the Highly Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) and Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative (MDRI) set up by the Bretton Woods institutions and their rich country partners in 2005. Nearly $125bn, to be precise. Between 2000 and 2015, 31 African countries (out of 36 beneficiary countries) had substantial portions of their total debt wiped out. For example, both Malawi and Liberia saw 90 per cent of their external debt cancelled. Sierra Leone received about 95 per cent relief. Bigger economies like Ghana experienced a lower, but still impressive, decline in debt stock of about 70 per cent.It is surprising, in view of these facts, to see a brand new debt cancellation campaign ignore lessons learnt from previous rounds of debt relief and their impact on economic growth and transformation.Some African countries — including Kenya, Angola and Nigeria — were considered ineligible for HIPC for various reasons. None of them are among the countries, all big HIPC beneficiaries, that have been compelled to seek debt restructuring recently. Unmissable in this fuzzy picture, however, are the major shifts that have occurred in global development financing. Three decades ago, sub-Saharan African countries owed roughly 80 per cent of their debt to the so called official creditors — rich countries and multilateral finance institutions. Today, I estimate the countries with the biggest debt burdens tend to owe more than 70 per cent of their obligations to domestic private investors, international bondholders and not-so-rich countries such as China, India and Turkey.Consequently, whatever the merits of the debt cancellation campaigns, yesterday’s arguments seem ill-fitting today. Ghana’s dramatic debt restructuring effort of recent weeks began on the domestic front last December. It has involved pensioners and trade unions adamant that not a penny from their bond holdings will go to support the government’s debt relief efforts. Seventy-five per cent of Ghana’s debt servicing expenses cater for domestic creditors. What would be the point of debt cancellation that failed to address this reality?Now that Paris Club and Bretton Woods creditors are responsible for a significantly lower proportion of the debt, some campaigners are focusing more on commercial creditors in the west. While it is true that rich banks do hold some African sovereign bonds, quite a lot are also held by institutional funds whose money comes from ordinary pensioners and workers. It is safe to say that a cancellation campaign in the current circumstances will have to do more than suggest that the creditors won’t miss the money. The humanitarian argument about how high debt servicing takes away money from social services remains compelling, especially in countries such as Ghana and Nigeria where debt service costs are approaching 70 per cent of domestic tax revenues. But questions do arise about where the returns on the borrowed billions have gone.Ghana’s leaders, for instance, have faced widespread criticism for prioritising a “national cathedral”, complete with a “Bible museum” and “biblical gardens”, that could cost upwards of $1bn, in the middle of a struggling debt restructuring exercise. Despite repeated assurances to the IMF, which has provided a bailout to the country roughly every four years since independence, to pass all public spending through a national accounting platform, nearly 90 per cent of Covid-19 expenditures bypassed it. In 2003, Ghanaian-born economist Elizabeth Asiedu published a paper in which she predicted that debt relief would have minimal impact on the HIPCs due to weak institutions. That prediction now looks prophetic.However emotionally appealing it may sound, debt cancellation alone will not encourage or enhance efforts, already under way in many African countries despite everything, to demand stronger accountability and force much-needed institutional reform. More

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    Britain can learn from Singapore on savings

    The UK invests too little. This is now widely agreed. Naturally, this has led to a discussion of how to induce more investment. Yet how would the extra investment be funded by a country that is even more strikingly short of savings than it is of investment?According to IMF data, gross investment averaged a mere 17.1 per cent of UK gross domestic product from 2010 to 2022. This was lower than Italy’s 18.6 per cent, and the US’s 20.6 per cent. It was even further behind Germany’s 21.1 per cent and France’s 23.3 per cent. Korea’s 31.4 per cent seems from a different planet. The UK unquestionably lags behind on investment.Jonathan Haskel, a member of the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee, also noted in a recent interview that the growth in real investment has lagged well behind that in France, Germany and the US since the Brexit referendum. Haskel estimates the productivity penalty from this post-Brexit investment slump at about 1.3 per cent of GDP, some £1,000 per household. Yet the UK’s share of investment in GDP was consistently lower than in peer countries well before the referendum. This is a chronic weakness. The fake pre-2008 productivity boom in financial services masked this longstanding problem.

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    It is essential, then, to raise public and private investment if the country is to attain faster growth. This will require a higher share of investment in GDP than its historically low levels. But investment is financed by savings. The striking fact about UK investment is that it is also heavily dependent on foreign savings. That is because its savings are even weaker than investment. This, too, is a chronic condition, not a recent one.Between 2010 and 2022, UK gross national savings averaged a mere 13.3 per cent of GDP. The US average was 19.0 per cent and Italy’s was 19.8 per cent. Still further ahead were France, with 22.6 per cent and Germany, with 28.2 per cent. Korea’s averaged 35.7 per cent.The UK’s low rate of national savings makes it significantly dependent on foreign savings to finance its investment. This is revealed in the current account deficit. On average, that deficit was 3.8 per cent of GDP from 2010 to 2022. That financed roughly a fifth of UK gross investment over that period. If investment rose without an equivalent rise in domestic saving, the external deficit would become still bigger.

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    This makes sustaining foreign confidence in the UK vital, something Liz Truss failed to understand. It means that a big part of the returns on investment go to foreigners. It means, too, that the investment rate is a worse indicator of the future standards of living of British people than their even lower savings rate. Some of the benefits of investment do indeed accrue to the British even if it is owned by foreigners. But not all do. Otherwise there would not be the inward investment. If the country saved more it could not only afford a higher rate of investment, but its people could accumulate a nest egg of foreign assets as well. In brief, savings matter.We heard a ridiculous discussion of “Singapore on Thames” during the referendum campaign. As a low-tax base for multinationals inside the EU, Ireland seems a better analogy: “Singapore on the Liffey.” Yet the UK can learn things from Singapore. Even if one removes the huge profits of foreign multinationals from savings, one is left with a savings rate of 30 per cent of GDP there. This is the result of forced savings through the “central provident fund”, which compels workers and employers to contribute 37 per cent of their wages and salaries up to the age of 55. As a result, Singapore finances a huge domestic investment rate as well as accumulations of foreign assets: between 2010 and 2022, the current account surplus averaged an astounding 17.5 per cent of GDP.

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    Needless to say, Singapore’s forced savings have not been discussed as a model by Brexiters. Yet it would greatly help the prosperity of the UK if savings were raised, alongside policies to promote higher investment. Greater public savings would help. But household savings could also be raised by increasing the minimum rate of contribution to defined contribution pension schemes under the “auto-enrolment, with an opt out” now in place. The current rate of 8 per cent is far too low to achieve an adequate pension in retirement. This could be steadily raised in the years ahead, perhaps to 20 per cent. That would also surely increase the country’s ultra-low savings rate.If the aim of policy is to raise the incomes of British people in the decades ahead, the focus cannot only be on investment. The British need to accumulate more real wealth. That depends on productive investment of higher savings. The debate on improving the economic prospects has to focus on [email protected] Follow Martin Wolf with myFT and on Twitter More

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    What is the level of dissent within the Federal Reserve?

    What is the level of dissent within the Federal Reserve?Investors will watch the release on Wednesday of the Federal Reserve’s minutes from its February meeting for insight into how much dissent there was over the latest decision to slow the pace of interest rate increases. At its meeting ending February 1, the US central bank chose to slow the pace of its interest rate increases again, lifting its key policy rate by 0.25 percentage points after a series of 0.75 and 0.5 percentage points rises last year. At the time, the decisions made sense because inflation, and the US economy more broadly, had been cooling. But since the February meeting, the US has reported that employers hired 500,000 people in January, nearly three times the forecast; that consumer prices slowed less than expected; and that retails sales showed the US consumer remained resilient. All that suggests the Fed’s rate-rising job is not yet done and might even require more aggressive action than its members had forecast.Dissent within the Fed should therefore indicate members’ willingness to once again take up the mantle of aggressive policymaking. Two Fed officials — Cleveland Fed president Loretta Mester and St Louis Fed president James Bullard — last week said they would have supported a larger 0.5 percentage point increase at the February meeting. Evidence of more widespread dissent could persuade the market that the Fed might be open to raising rates higher and for longer than was indicated in the central bank’s last survey of officials — the so-called “dot plot” from December. Kate DuguidWill China cut rates?China’s government has made a point of prioritising growth this year, and on Monday markets will be focused on the next potential flashpoint: the so-called loan prime rates, which serve as the country’s benchmark interest rates.Economists are expecting the People’s Bank of China to keep the one-year LPR, the main short-term lending rate, and the five-year LPR, which underpins mortgage lending, unchanged at 3.65 per cent and 4.3 per cent respectively.That is mainly because the PBoC this month did not tweak the medium-term lending facility rates, which serve as floors for the two benchmarks.The banks can, and have, changed these rates before without any earlier action by the PBoC. But economists think that is unlikely this time around, since local governments are already rolling out measures to support the country’s beleaguered property sector. In January, banks across almost 20 major cities cut their minimum mortgage rates for first-time buyers on government orders, easing pressure on the central bank to cut rates.Iris Pang, chief China economist at ING, said such government directives “would result in banks not having enough room to squeeze net interest margins”, making any surprise moves on the LPRs even less likely. Hudson LockettWill European business sentiment improve?The fall in wholesale gas prices and the easing of inflation are expected to result in improving business sentiment across Europe this month.The flash S&P purchasing managers’ index, a measure of activity compared with the previous month, is expected to show that business growth accelerated in the eurozone in February after registering expansion for the first time in seven months in January.Economists polled by Reuters forecast that the eurozone composite PMI, released on Tuesday, will rise to 50.5 in February from 50.3 the previous month, boosted by stronger activity in the services sector.Ellie Henderson, economist at Investec, said that “the optimism seen at the start of this year extended through into this month”.In contrast with expectations of a deep downturn forecast only a few months ago, many economists now think that the eurozone economy will dodge a recession this winter, helped by lower gas prices and cooling inflation. Preliminary data calculated without figures for Germany showed that eurozone inflation fell more than expected to 8.5 per cent in January from 9.2 per cent in December. Analysts calculated that final figures, to be released on Thursday, would be revised up to 8.7 per cent, but that would still be the lowest in seven months.The PMI figures for the UK are also expected to show an improvement, with the Composite index forecast to rise to 49 this month from 48.5 in the previous month. This would still be below the 50 mark which indicates a majority of businesses reporting a contraction in activity, driven by continued weakness in manufacturing.“Although the operating environment will no doubt be challenging over the course of 2023, continued faith in an economic recovery in 2024 should continue to support UK business sentiment,” said Henderson. Valentina Romei More