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    U.S. business equipment borrowings grow 9% in December – ELFA

    (Reuters) – U.S. companies borrowed 9% more in December to finance equipment investments compared with a year earlier, industry body Equipment Leasing and Finance Association (ELFA) said on Tuesday.The companies signed up for $12.9 billion in new loans, leases and lines of credit last month, compared with $11.8 billion a year earlier, according to ELFA. Cumulative borrowings were up 6% from January 2022.ELFA, which reports economic activity for the $1 trillion equipment finance sector, said credit approvals totaled 76.6% in December, down from 77.7% in November.”Not knowing yet the full impact of the Fed’s series of rapid rate increases on the economy, I believe many companies will start the year with more focus on credit quality and spreads versus origination volume,” said AP Equipment Financing’s president, Chris Lerma. Washington-based ELFA’s leasing and finance index measures the volume of commercial equipment financed in the United States.The index is based on a survey of 25 members, including Bank of America Corp (NYSE:BAC), and financing affiliates or units of Caterpillar Inc (NYSE:CAT), Dell Technologies (NYSE:DELL) Inc, Siemens AG (OTC:SIEGY), Canon Inc and Volvo AB (OTC:VLVLY).The Equipment Leasing & Finance Foundation, ELFA’s non-profit affiliate, said its confidence index in January stood at 48.5, an increase from 45.9 in December. A reading above 50 indicates a positive business outlook. More

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    Indonesia to make exporters hold FX earnings onshore for 3 months -media

    The government was discussing the plan with the central bank and a review of requirements for export earnings was nearly complete, Airlangga Hartarto, the coordinating minister for economic affairs, was quoted as saying by mainstream media. His ministry’s spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.He earlier this month said Indonesia was considering revising a 2019 regulation that mandated exporters of natural resources keep earnings in a special account at domestic banks. He also said the revision included the possibility of setting a minimum holding period and might be expanded to cover exporters in the manufacturing sector. Separately on Wednesday, Bank Indonesia (BI) Governor Perry Warjiyo said the central bank would suggest to Airlangga and the finance minister the possibility of more attractive tax incentives for exporters’ special savings.”There are incentives already now, but how do we make them more attractive,” he told a forum with bankers.Amid tight U.S. dollar liquidity globally, Indonesian exporters had placed their earnings in local banks “for two seconds before running to move them offshore”, the governor said, blaming low domestic interest rates for FX term deposits.Warjiyo detailed BI’s plan to launch a new monetary policy instrument aimed at providing exporters with better returns for domestic FX deposits, which he previously said would be launched next month.BI’s new instrument will allow appointed banks to pass on exporters’ deposits to the central bank and BI would pay a competitive rate for the U.S. dollar for exporters. The banks would receive a fee, he said, giving examples of term deposit with tenors of one to three months.A major commodity exporter, Indonesia last year saw its shipments hit a record high of $291.98 billion as global prices of its top commodities such as coal and palm oil surged following the crisis in Ukraine. More

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    Bank of Canada set for one more rate hike in historic tightening campaign

    TORONTO (Reuters) – The Bank of Canada is expected to raise interest rates to a 15-year high on Wednesday in the face of a tight job market and above-target inflation, but economists say the move could be the last in the current tightening cycle.A Reuters poll of economists shows that Canada’s central bank will hike its benchmark rate by a quarter of a percentage point to 4.50%, its highest level since December 2007, when the decision is released at 10 a.m. EST (1500 GMT).This week’s meeting will be significant as the BoC will offer minutes from the policy-setting session for the first time. They will be published on Feb 8.Money markets see a roughly 70% chance of a 25-basis-point move and expect the policy rate to peak at 4.50%.”An unexpected surge in employment in December and a decline in the unemployment rate to a near record low of 5% is the main reason we expect the BoC to follow through with one final rate hike,” Royal Bank of Canada economists, including Nathan Janzen, said in a note.After raising rates at a record pace of 400 basis points in nine months, the central bank said in December that a decision to tighten further would be data-dependent.Economists expect the BoC to leave the door open to further tightening should upcoming data show price pressures persisting and push back against market expectations for interest rate cuts in the second half of the year.The BoC has said it wants to slow an overheated economy without causing a deep recession, but that taming inflation is still its priority.A blowout December employment report, released earlier this month, highlighted the upside risk to wage and price growth.Inflation cooled to an annual rate of 6.3% in December, its lowest since February, while economists’ estimates show that more timely, three-month rates of core inflation have eased in recent months but remain above the BoC’s 2% target.”The small improvements are an encouraging sign that peak inflation is behind us, but aren’t anywhere close to slow enough to have the BoC breathing easy,” Benjamin Reitzes, Canadian rates and macro strategist at BMO Capital Markets, said in a note.Economic projections on Wednesday are expected to show an upgrade to the central bank’s forecast of annualized growth of 0.5% in the fourth quarter of 2022, but not much change to its forecast of 0.9% growth for 2023. The economy is estimated to have grown at a 3.3% pace last year.The dilemma for the BoC is that realized data shows that the economy “remains remarkably resilient in the face of significantly tighter monetary policy, while the forward-looking survey data hints loudly at a slowdown to come,” TD Securities strategists, including Andrew Kelvin, said in a note.”If the prophesied recession never arrives, the BoC may quickly find itself behind the curve again, further damaging its efforts to bring inflation under control. Better to err on the side of too much tightening with a 25-basis-point hike.” More

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    Climate Change May Bring New Era of Trade Wars, as E.U. and U.S. Spar

    Countries are pursuing new solutions to try to mitigate climate change. More trade fights are likely to come hand in hand.WASHINGTON — Efforts to mitigate climate change are prompting countries across the world to embrace dramatically different policies toward industry and trade, bringing governments into conflict.These new clashes over climate policy are straining international alliances and the global trading system, hinting at a future in which policies aimed at staving off environmental catastrophe could also result in more frequent cross-border trade wars.In recent months, the United States and Europe have proposed or introduced subsidies, tariffs and other policies aimed at speeding the green energy transition. Proponents of the measures say governments must move aggressively to expand sources of cleaner energy and penalize the biggest emitters of planet-warming gases if they hope to avert a global climate disaster.But critics say these policies often put foreign countries and companies at a disadvantage, as governments subsidize their own industries or charge new tariffs on foreign products. The policies depart from a decades-long status quo in trade, in which the United States and Europe often joined forces through the World Trade Organization to try to knock down trade barriers and encourage countries to treat one another’s products more equally to boost global commerce.Now, new policies are pitting close allies against one another and widening fractures in an already fragile system of global trade governance, as countries try to contend with the existential challenge of climate change.“The climate crisis requires economic transformation at a scale and speed humanity has never attempted in our 5,000 years of written history,” said Todd N. Tucker, the director of industrial policy and trade at the Roosevelt Institute, who is an advocate for some of the measures. “Unsurprisingly, a task of this magnitude will require a new policy tool kit.”The current system of global trade funnels tens of millions of shipping containers stuffed with couches, clothing and car parts from foreign factories to the United States each year, often at astonishingly low prices. But the prices that consumers pay for these goods do not take into account the environmental harm generated by the far-off factories that make them, or by the container ships and cargo planes that carry them across the ocean.A factory in Chengde, China. U.S. officials believe they must lessen a dangerous dependence on goods from China.Fred Dufour/Agence France-Presse — Getty ImagesAmerican and European officials argue that more needs to be done to discourage trade in products made with more pollution or carbon emissions. And U.S. officials believe they must lessen a dangerous dependence on China in particular for the materials needed to power the green energy transition, like solar panels and electric vehicle batteries.The Biden administration is putting in place generous subsidies to encourage the production of clean energy technology in the United States, such as tax credits for consumers who buy American-made clean cars and companies building new plants for solar and wind power equipment. Both the United States and Europe are introducing taxes and tariffs aimed at encouraging less environmentally harmful ways of producing goods.Biden administration officials have expressed hopes that the climate transition could be a new opportunity for cooperation with allies. But so far, their initiatives seem to have mainly stirred controversy when the United States is already under attack for its response to recent trade rulings.The administration has publicly flouted several decisions of World Trade Organization panels that ruled against the United States in trade disputes involving national security issues. In two separate announcements in December, the Office of the United States Trade Representative said it would not change its policies to abide by W.T.O. decisions.But the biggest source of contention has been new tax credits for clean energy equipment and vehicles made in North America that were part of a sweeping climate and health policy bill that President Biden signed into law last year. European officials have called the measure a “job killer” and expressed fears they will lose out to the United States on new investments in batteries, green hydrogen, steel and other industries. In response, European Union officials began outlining their own plan this month to subsidize green energy industries — a move that critics fear will plunge the world into a costly and inefficient “subsidy war.”The United States and European Union have been searching for changes that could be made to mollify both sides before the U.S. tax-credit rules are settled in March. But the Biden administration appears to have only limited ability to change some of the law’s provisions. Members of Congress say they intentionally worded the law to benefit American manufacturing.Biden administration is putting in place subsidies to encourage the production of clean energy technology in the United States, such as tax credits for consumers who buy American-made clean cars.Brittany Greeson for The New York TimesEuropean officials have suggested that they could bring a trade case at the World Trade Organization that might be a prelude to imposing tariffs on American products in retaliation.Valdis Dombrovskis, the European commissioner for trade, said that the European Union was committed to finding solutions but that negotiations needed to make progress or the European Union would face “even stronger calls” to respond.“We need to follow the same rules of the game,” he said.Anne Krueger, a former official at the International Monetary Fund and World Bank, said the potential pain of American subsidies on Japan, South Korea and allies in Europe was “enormous.”“When you discriminate in favor of American companies and against the rest of the world, you’re hurting yourself and hurting others at the same time,” said Ms. Krueger, now a senior fellow at the School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University.But in a letter last week, a collection of prominent labor unions and environmental groups urged Mr. Biden to move forward with the plans without delays, saying outdated trade rules should not be used to undermine support for a new clean energy economy.“It’s time to end this circular firing squad where countries threaten and, if successful, weaken or repeal one another’s climate measures through trade and investment agreements,” said Melinda St. Louis, the director of the Global Trade Watch for Public Citizen, one of the groups behind the letter.Valdis Dombrovskis, the European commissioner for trade, has pressed the United States to negotiate more on its climate-related subsidies for American manufacturing.Stephanie Lecocq/EPA, via ShutterstockOther recent climate policies have also spurred controversy. In mid-December, the European Union took a major step toward a new climate-focused trade policy as it reached a preliminary agreement to impose a new carbon tariff on certain imports. The so-called carbon border adjustment mechanism would apply to products from all countries that failed to take strict actions to cut their greenhouse gas emissions.The move is aimed at ensuring that European companies that must follow strict environmental regulations are not put at a disadvantage to competitors in countries where laxer environmental rules allow companies to produce and sell goods more cheaply. While European officials argue that their policy complies with global trade rules in a way that U.S. clean energy subsidies do not, it has still rankled countries like China and Turkey.The Biden administration has also been trying to create an international group that would impose tariffs on steel and aluminum from countries with laxer environmental policies. In December, it sent the European Union a brief initial proposal for such a trade arrangement.The idea still has a long way to go to be realized. But even as it would break new ground in addressing climate change, the approach may also end up aggravating allies like Canada, Mexico, Brazil and South Korea, which together provided more than half of America’s foreign steel last year.Under the initial proposal, these countries would theoretically have to produce steel as cleanly as the United States and Europe, or face tariffs on their products.A steel plant in Belgium. Under the initial proposal, countries would theoretically have to produce steel as cleanly as the United States and Europe, or face tariffs.Kevin Faingnaert for The New York TimesProponents of new climate-focused trade measures say discriminating against foreign products, and goods made with greater carbon emissions, is exactly what governments need to build up clean energy industries and address climate change.“You really do need to rethink some of the fundamentals of the system,” said Ilana Solomon, an independent trade consultant who previously worked with the Sierra Club.Ms. Solomon and others have proposed a “climate peace clause,” under which governments would commit to refrain from using the World Trade Organization and other trade agreements to challenge one another’s climate policies for 10 years.“The complete legitimacy of the global trading system has never been more in question,” she said.In the United States, support appears to be growing among both Republicans and Democrats for more nationalist policies that would encourage domestic production and discourage imports of dirtier goods — but that would also most likely violate World Trade Organization rules.Most Republicans do not support the idea of a national price on carbon. But they have shown more willingness to raise tariffs on foreign products that are made in environmentally damaging ways, which they see as a way to protect American jobs from foreign competition.Robert E. Lighthizer, a chief trade negotiator for the Trump administration, said there was “great overlap” between Republicans and Democrats on the idea of using trade tools to discourage imports of polluting products from abroad.“I’m coming at it to get more American employed and with higher wages,” he said. “You shouldn’t be able to get an economic advantage over some guy working in Detroit, trying to support his family, from pollution, by manufacturing overseas.” More

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    Sri Lanka central bank holds rates as it awaits crucial IMF deal

    COLOMBO (Reuters) – Sri Lanka’s central bank held interest rates steady for a third straight meeting on Wednesday, as widely expected, saying the prevailing tight monetary stance is crucial to taming still-high inflation and restoring economic stability.The island nation of 22 million people, which is trying to clinch a $2.9 billion IMF funding package, is in the grip of its worst economic crisis since independence from Britain in 1948. The Standing Lending Facility rate was held steady at 15.50% while the Standing Deposit Facility Rate was kept unchanged at 14.50%, remaining at their highest levels since August, 2001.”The Board … was of the view that the maintenance of the prevailing tight monetary policy stance is imperative to ensure that monetary conditions remain sufficiently tight to rein in inflationary pressures,” the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) said in a statement.”Market rates are adjusting as expected, so there was no need to touch policy rate,” said Udeeshan Jonas, chief strategist at CAL Group.The CBSL had increased rates by a massive 950 basis points between August 2021 to July 2022 to fight runaway inflation. Policymakers are still grappling with challenges on several fronts including a shortage of foreign currency, a collapse in the rupee, a steep recession and slowing global growth. CBSL Governor P. Nandlal Weerasinghe said there was little room to cut rates until the foreign exchange reserves position stabilises.However, the situation has improved and the market can support around $1 billion in imports, he said.Tight monetary and fiscal policies will help bring down inflation to desired levels by the end of 2023 and restore price and economic stability over the medium term, CBSL said in the statement.After hitting an annual peak of 68.9% in September, consumer inflation moderated to 57.2% in December.IMF DEAL CRITICALSri Lanka is committed to meeting all its debt repayments and is hoping to complete debt restructuring negotiations in the next six months, Weerasinghe said in a speech to the private sector on Tuesday and expressed optimism about talks with creditors at today’s news conference.”If IMF gets assurances, then expect the program to be unlocked in the first quarter of this year,” he told reporters.India told the IMF last week that it strongly supports Sri Lanka’s debt restructuring plan, a crucial endorsement for Colombo as it tries to secure the four-year $2.9 billion programme with the global lender.”It is important CBSL is clear in their communications about domestic debt restructuring, whatever the eventual decision, since that’s the big driver of the risk premia attached to market rates,” said Thilina Panduwawala, head of research at Colombo-based Frontier Research.Weerasinghe said it was too early to discuss domestic debt restructuring. MARKET RATES FALLINGMarket interest rates have begun to move down and are expected to ease further, the central bank said.Interest rates on three-month government securities have eased to about 30% from a peak of around 32% earlier this month.”They may only start looking at policy rate revisions once inflation makes a substantial turn and the IMF deal is through,” said CAL Group’s Jonas. More

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    ASML chief says chip demand expected to bounce back by mid-2023

    The head of Europe’s largest chip company ASML said he expects demand for semiconductors to recover in the second half of the year as the company reported a record order backlog of over €40bn and forecast sales to increase by 25 per cent this year.“The expectation of the duration of a potential recession in the minds of our customers is much shorter than the average lead time of our machines,” said Peter Wennink, chief executive of ASML. “They want to prepare — because of the strategic nature of our machines — for an upturn in the second half of the year and 2024.”The Dutch chip tool supplier plays a critical role in the global semiconductor industry. It is the only company in the world capable of producing the complex extreme lithography (EUV) machines that are essential for manufacturing advanced semiconductors used in electronics.Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, Intel and Samsung all rely on ASML’s machines and services for the EUV tools to build cutting-edge chips.Demand for chips used in smartphones, computers and data centres fell significantly last year driven by fears of a recession, high inflation, soaring interest rates and the Covid-19 crisis in China, one of the biggest markets for semiconductors.The company, which has a market capitalisation of €248bn, has been entangled in the trade war between Washington and Beijing since 2019, when a shipment of one of its EUV machines to China was blocked.The US has introduced increasingly tough restrictions preventing its companies from supplying tools, equipment and personnel that could support the advancement of China’s advanced chipmaking. Japan and the Netherlands, two of the most important countries in the global chip supply chain, are poised to adopt similar restrictions in the coming weeks after months of lobbying from Washington.“We’re business people. We’re not politicians,” Wennink said on Wednesday. “We just have to wait for the governments and the politicians to keep talking and come to a reasonable solution.”In October, Wennink said that the US sanctions could impact up to 5 per cent of ASML’s order backlog, though he noted that the company’s main business in China depended on less advanced technologies that did not fall under the remit of the latest restrictions.

    Wennink said on Wednesday that nothing had “really changed” since October, when Washington unveiled new export restrictions. He said ASML was still unable to ship EUV machines to China but it could ship less sophisticated DUV systems as well as other tools. The Veldhoven-headquartered company also makes deep lithography (DUV) machines to etch circuits into silicon wafers, in a process that is usually used for simpler chips.ASML expects to make 60 EUV machines and 375 DUV machines in the current financial year. More

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    Australian inflation hits 33-year high on energy costs and tourism rebound

    Australia’s inflation rate hit a 33-year high in the final quarter of 2022, pushed higher by rising costs of energy and new homes and a rebound in tourism, but the government said it hoped that price growth had peaked. Official data on Wednesday showed that inflation rose 7.8 per cent year on year in the October to December quarter, the highest rate since 1990. The reading will dash hopes of a pause in rising interest rates, which have climbed 3 per cent since May, putting pressure on household finances. Jim Chalmers, Australia’s Treasurer, noted that the 1.9 per cent quarter-on-quarter rise was lower than the 2.1 per cent recorded in the three months to March, but added that price growth was nonetheless “unacceptably high”. He said that grappling with inflation had been the government’s “defining challenge” in 2022 and would be so again this year. “Our expectation and hope is that inflation has peaked,” Chalmers said.Adelaide Timbrell, senior economist at the ANZ bank, said the reading, which came in higher than forecasts, would cement the chances of a 0.25 per cent interest rate rise from 3.1 per cent next month, with a similar increase probable in March as consumers spend more on recreation.Gareth Aird, economist with the Commonwealth Bank of Australia, said inflation data would be a “smoking gun” for further rate rises, even as steadily increasing rates over the past seven months had done very little to drive down prices. The central Reserve Bank of Australia has sought to engineer a “softer landing” than in other global economies grappling with inflation because of its high levels of household debt and weaker wage growth.“There are no two ways about it — inflation was red hot in Australia over 2022, as it was in many parts of the world,” Aird said. Australia’s inflation has been driven by energy bills, new housing and food over the course of the year as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and flooding in the country’s agricultural areas sent the cost of fuel and fruit and vegetables soaring.

    The government has intervened in the energy sector to try to reduce a projected 56 per cent surge in electricity costs this year. Chalmers said there were early signs that the move had “taken the sting out of” energy prices, which rose 8.6 per cent in the quarter on an annual basis.Housing prices rose 10.7 per cent year on year in the fourth quarter, while those of food and non-alcoholic beverages jumped 9.2 per cent.Entertainment and recreation was another big factor in price rises in the December quarter, gaining 9 per cent year on year on the back of increasing flight and accommodation prices as the tourism sector rebounded from Covid-19 pandemic lockdowns put in place in 2021.Inflation has become a political issue across the Tasman Sea, where Chris Hipkins, who was sworn as New Zealand’s prime minister on Wednesday following Jacinda Ardern’s abrupt departure as leader, has reset his government’s priorities on inflation and the cost of living. New Zealand announced on Wednesday that annual inflation was 7.2 per cent in the fourth quarter. While this figure was lower than in countries including Australia and the UK, Hipkins said his new government needed to do “whatever it takes” to alleviate the impact of higher prices on household budgets. More

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    Australia inflation surges further in Q4, more rate hikes loom

    SYDNEY (Reuters) -Australian inflation shot to a 33-year high last quarter as the cost of travel and electricity jumped, a shock result that adds to the case for the country’s central bank to raise interest rates again next month.Investors sharply narrowed the odds on the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) lifting its cash rate by a quarter point to 3.35% when it meets on Feb. 7, sending the local dollar up to a five-month high of $0.7085.Analysts had thought there was some chance the RBA might even pause its tightening campaign, but the sheer pace of inflation put paid to that.”While this is expected to be the peak in inflation in this cycle, the RBA’s hawkish communications lead us to expect another rate rise in February, with another increase likely to follow in March,” said Sean Langcake, head of macroeconomic forecasting for BIS Oxford Economics.Data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics on Wednesday showed the consumer price index (CPI) surged 1.9% in the December quarter, outpacing market forecasts of 1.6%.The annual rate climbed to 7.8%, from 7.3%, the highest since 1990 and more than twice the pace of wages growth. For December alone, the CPI rose a startling 8.4% compared to the same month a year ago, up from 7.3% in November.Price rises were broad-based with a closely watched measure of core inflation, the trimmed mean, rising 1.7% in the December quarter. The annual pace accelerated to 6.9%, well above forecasts of 6.5%.Costs pressures were also building in the service sector which recorded its largest annual rise since 2008, driven by holiday travel, meals out and takeaway food.Travel was one of the main cost culprits in the December quarter with prices for domestic holidays up 13% and overseas jaunts almost 8%.”Strong demand, particularly over the Christmas holiday period, contributed to price rises for domestic holiday travel and international air fares,” said Michelle Marquardt, ABS head of prices statistics.”The rises seen for domestic and international travel were notably higher than historical December quarter movements.”With inflation pressures broadening yet further, markets moved to price in the risk of at least two more rate hikes from the RBA with swaps implying a peak above 3.60%.Futures for three-year bonds sharply reversed course to be down 3 ticks at 96.910, having been up as high as 97.090 before the CPI data. More