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    U.S. to spend $703 million on improving ports

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. Transportation Department announced on Friday it is awarding $703 million for 41 port infrastructure projects in 22 states and American Samoa, according to documents seen by Reuters.The funds will boost coastal, Great Lakes, and inland river ports. The awards seek to improve supply chain reliability, electrify equipment, improve or create new rail and highway connections, boost offshore wind projects and cut greenhouse gas emissions. The projects are funded by a $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure law signed into law by President Joe Biden in November 2021.”We’re awarding record levels of funding to improve our port infrastructure, strengthen our supply chains, and help cut costs for American families,” Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said.The state of Alaska is getting $112.5 million for four projects, including $68 million for an Anchorage port extension and for the Aleutian Islands $10.2 million to repair a key port and $5.4 million for a floating dock project.New York will get $48 million for the Arthur Kill Offshore Wind Terminal Project. The Staten Island project will fund dredging 740,000 cubic yards to create a 35-foot-deep ship basin.Salem, Massachusetts was awarded nearly $34 million to redevelop a vacant industrial facility for offshore wind energy projects, including construction of a 700-foot-long wharf.Massachusetts Democratic Senator Ed Markey said the “project will strengthen our grid by propelling clean energy infrastructure and helping to power thousands of homes across Massachusetts.”The port of Columbus, Mississippi is getting $6 million for a new rail spur with 10,000 linear feet of track and docks providing direct rail access for transloading cargo between barges and railcars, connecting the terminal to an existing railroad line operated by Kansas City Southern (NYSE:KSU).Detroit is getting $16 million to rehabilitate existing port infrastructure and build a new port/rail connection.Camden, New Jersey will receive $25 million to upgrade a functionally obsolete truck route to the port by reconstructing nearly three miles of key roadway infrastructure. Long Beach, California will get $30 million to replace diesel yard tractors with 60 electric yard tractors and other equipment.Grays Harbor Terminal in Aberdeen, Washington is getting $25.5 million to build an additional 50,000 feet of rail and repurpose a 50-acre brownfield site for cargo. More

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    Buoyant Wall Street boosts world, European stocks; oil drops

    WASHINGTON/LONDON (Reuters) – World and European shares turned higher on Friday as Wall Street extended gains amid hopes of a slowdown in some central banks’ rate hikes.Commodity prices took a hit from a stronger U.S. dollar. Oil prices slid after top crude importer China widened its COVID-19 curbs.MSCI’s main world index, which tracks 47 countries, rose 1.5%. It was up for a second straight weekly gain as investors navigated a mixed bag of earnings and economic data.The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 828.52 points, or 2.59%, to 32,861.8, the S&P 500 gained 93.76 points, or 2.46%, to 3,901.06 and the Nasdaq Composite added 309.78 points, or 2.87%, to 11,102.45.”This stock market clearly wants to go higher and is growing confident that next week’s Fed-driven fireworks will include the beginning of a deliberation to tighten at a slower pace,” said Edward Moya, senior market analyst at OANDA in New York.U.S. consumer spending increased more than expected in September, while underlying inflation pressures continued to bubble, keeping the Federal Reserve on track to hike interest rates by 75 basis points for the fourth time this year.”Wall Street is shrugging off both another hot inflation report and strong consumer spending data that should support the case for the Fed to remain aggressive with rate hikes until the New Year,” Moya said.Europe’s STOXX index recouped losses of more than 1% to close at a five-week high. Earlier, Thursday’s weak forecasts from Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) sent Europe’s tech sector down and the prospect of renewed COVID curbs in China hit mining and oil firms. [O/R] [MET/L] In bond markets, borrowing costs jumped as stronger than expected inflation data from France, Germany and Italy put rising prices back in focus. Still, what analysts had described as a dovish ECB meeting on Thursday meant Germany’s 10-year Bund yields were set for a weekly decline. [GVD/EUR]U.S. treasury yields rose and some investors took the recent data as an indication the Fed will continue its more aggressive path. [US/]The U.S. dollar was broadly higher against major currencies though it was down versus the yen. Earlier the yen weakened after Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said it did not “plan to raise interest rates or head for an exit (from ultra low interest rates) any time soon” despite raising inflation forecasts.Heavy falls in China meant Asia-Pacific shares closed 1.65% lower. MSCI’s index of EM stocks dropped for the first time in four sessions, down 1.61%. (Graphic: Record slump in U.S. tech giants, https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/byvrlomnwve/Pasted%20image%201666944209178.png) DOVES AND BLUEBIRDS The BOJ’s widely expected decision in Asian trading to keep its policy loose came less than 24 hours after the European Central Bank raised interest rates 75 bps but said “substantial” progress had already been made on fighting inflation.Investors are now turning their attention to the Fed meeting next week. Fed funds futures are pricing in a 98.4% probability that the Fed will raise rates by 75 basis points when policymakers meet Nov. 1-2. In the past week the market has cut expectations for an almost 5% target rate by March 2023 to 4.85% by May 2023.”I don’t think there will be any surprise here (in terms of rate hike), but it will be more on the message that the Fed will deliver,” said Frank Benzimra, head of Asia equity strategy at Societe Generale (OTC:SCGLY).The less hawkish comments from the ECB added to expectations that central banks are likely to slow the pace of monetary tightening, especially after the Bank of Canada delivered a smaller-than-anticipated rate hike on Wednesday.Markets have started to trade on expectations the Fed will slow its aggressive pace of rate hikes. “No Powell Pivot, No Santa?” Citi’s emerging economy analysts asked, referring to the so-called “Santa rally” that markets often see towards the end of the year. In China, the stock market fell 2.25%, with Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index down 3.6%, rounding up a rough week. Bleak industrial profit figures and widening COVID-19 outbreaks have all weighed on sentiment.The euro was below parity with the dollar again, although sterling gained against the greenback. [/FRX]The stronger dollar pressured dollar-traded commodities, making them more expensive to holders of other currencies.Brent crude futures fell $1.19, or 1.2%, to settle at $95.77 a barrel, and U.S. crude fell $1.18, or 1.3%, to $87.90. [O/R]Gold futures fell 1.25% to settle at $1,644.80 per ounce. Spot gold prices dropped 1.17% and spot silver fell 1.91%.[GOL/] More

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    U.S. federal judge in New York criticizes SEC ‘gag orders’ policy

    (Reuters) – A U.S. federal judge in New York on Friday called it “troubling” that a Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) policy makes people who settle charges of fraud, insider trading or other allegations agree not to deny them later.Under the decades-old policy, defendants who settle without admitting to allegations must agree not to publicly deny them. The practice, a standard in SEC settlements, has been upheld in courts despite drawing ire from critics including former defendants, the libertarian Cato Institute and other groups that favor limiting government power.U.S. District Judge Ronnie Abrams took said in a ruling that requiring “gag orders” clashes with the constitutional protection of free speech. “What is the SEC so afraid of? Any criticism, apparently—or, rather, anything that may even ‘create the impression’ of criticism—of that governmental agency,” Abrams wrote.The judge nevertheless approved a settlement with a no-deny clause, following a ruling last year by the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals which said the practice was not unconstitutional.Critics say the rule, dating back to the 1970s, violates defendants’ rights to free speech. They have sought unsuccessfully to invalidate it in court in recent years. The SEC has defended the policy, saying that defendants are free to challenge allegations in court instead of settle.While two judges on the conservative 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals have criticized the policy, no court has ruled against the SEC. The U.S. Supreme Court in June rejected a petition on the issue that had received support from Elon Musk.That case was brought by former Xerox (NASDAQ:XRX) executive Barry Romeril. The 2nd Circuit ruled last year that Romeril freely waived his right to deny accounting fraud allegations when he settled with the SEC.One of the attorneys who represented Romeril in the appeal was Abrams’ father, she disclosed in her opinion. “Rare though it may be, occasionally we must acknowledge when our parents happen to get it right,” Abrams wrote.The case is SEC v, Moraes, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 22-cv-08343. More

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    Take Five: It’s rate-hike central

    Any signs that the pace of aggressive tightening among big developed economies could slow is key. That also puts the spotlight on the October U.S. jobs report and euro area inflation data. In emerging markets, all eyes are on the second round of Brazil’s election. Here’s a look at the week ahead in markets from Kevin Buckland in Tokyo, Lewis Krauskopf and Rodrigo Campos in New York, and William Schomberg and Dhara Ranasinghe in London. Graphics by Vincent Flasseur and Sumanta Sen. 1/ FOUR IN A ROWA fourth straight jumbo 75-basis point (bps) interest rate hike is widely expected when the Federal Reserve meets on Nov 1-2. Investors, instead are focused on whether the pace of future hikes will slow as the Fed weighs the risks to economic growth against its progress in curbing soaring inflation.    Wall Street’s latest rally is underpinned by some hopes the Fed will react to softer economic data by easing up on their aggressive rate hikes. Fed chair Jerome Powell has come under political pressure to be careful of putting U.S. jobs at risk by tightening policy too much.    A consequential week for markets also includes Friday’s October U.S. payrolls report, with economists polled by Reuters forecasting the economy created 200,000 new jobs. Graphic: Terminal velocity https://graphics.reuters.com/GLOBAL-MARKETS/zjpqjqyxnvx/chart.png 2/ MORE OF THE SAMEThe Bank of England looks set to raise rates by the most since 1989 on Thursday with a 75 bps increase baked into market expectations.That is down from near-100% bets on a full percentage-point leap in the Bank Rate which were doused last week by new finance minister Jeremy Hunt when he reversed almost all of former Prime Minister Liz Truss’s tax cuts. But the delay of the first budget plan of Hunt and new Prime Minister Rishi Sunak until Nov. 17 will make it harder for the BoE to spell out its economic forecasts. After delays caused by Britain’s recent market mayhem, the BoE is also due to start selling bonds from its stimulus stockpile on Tuesday. Graphic: BoE implied interest rate BoE implied interest rate https://graphics.reuters.com/GLOBAL-MARKETS/znpnbdxwgpl/chart.png 3/ PEAK, WHERE ART THOU?In the euro area, all eyes are on the October flash inflation estimate on Monday.Inflation in the bloc is running at almost 10% and the European Central Bank just delivered its second 75 bps rate increase to control price pressures.Like other big central banks, the ECB is hoping for signs that peak inflation is coming. That doesn’t mean the danger is over and policymakers and markets will wait to see if underlying price pressures are broadening out. Core inflation, which strips out volatile food and energy prices, was at 6% in September – well above the ECB’s 2% target. No wonder some ECB officials are keen to take monetary tightening further by winding down the bonds the ECB holds on its balance sheet. Graphic: Euro zone’s persisting inflation concerns https://graphics.reuters.com/GLOBAL-MARKET/byprlomoope/chart.png 4/ DOVISH TOO SOON?The Reserve Bank of Australia is under pressure ahead of Tuesday’s policy gathering.    Its decision to slow hikes to a quarter point clip earlier this month reverberated through global markets as investors began to consider peak rates might be near.    But data on Wednesday showing a shock jump in Aussie inflation to a 32-year peak suggests the RBA has thrown itself behind the curve, and beckons Governor Philip Lowe to perform an embarrassing about-face.    The Aussie dollar’s reaction has been fairly subdued so far, but a sudden shift back to a hawkish policy outlook should provide some welcome support to a currency that has been battered by global equity market angst and China growth worries. Graphic: Australian inflation hits 32-year high https://graphics.reuters.com/AUSTRALIA-ECONOMY/INFLATION/byprlokmepe/chart.png 5/ BRAZIL TAKE TWOBrazil’s presidential runoff takes place on Sunday and leftist former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva is striking above 50% in some polls. Right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro may have been hurt by a recent incident in which his ally Roberto Jefferson, a former lawmaker, shot at police as he resisted arrest. This was the wrong kind of harbinger for a Wall Street concerned about a contested result, and Brazil’s currency fell over 4% from Monday to Wednesday.Still, the real remains the best performing free-floating emerging market currency in Latin America versus the U.S. dollar so far this year. Graphic: Real performance in 2022 https://graphics.reuters.com/GLOBAL-THEMES/BRAZIL/mopakmqlgpa/chart.png More

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    Big Tech blues: investors turn sour over runaway costs

    Today’s top storiesThe core personal consumption expenditures index, the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation metric, rose 0.5 per cent in September, taking the annualised rate to 5.1 per cent. It follows data yesterday showing the US economy bounced back in the third quarter by a more-than-expected 2.6 per cent.Japan announced a Y29.1tn ($197bn) stimulus to ease the impact of soaring commodity prices and a falling yen, just hours after the Bank of Japan ruled out any early rise in interest rates.Elon Musk completed his $44bn purchase of Twitter after months of legal wrangling. Here’s what he’s got planned and here’s the takeover saga in a timeline of tweets. And if you want a fun read for the weekend, see how the “Chief Twit” got on with editor Roula Khalaf in Lunch with the FT.For up-to-the-minute news updates, visit our live blogGood evening.“Remember what the bond market thought of Liz Truss’s plans for the UK? The stock market takes a similar view of Zuckerberg’s plans for Meta — only much, much less enthusiastic.”That was how commentator Robert Armstrong summed up the reaction to another quarter of declining revenues at Facebook’s parent company, but the sentiment could equally be applied to most of its Big Tech rivals in a week that saw $800bn wiped off their stock market value. In Meta’s case, investors were also a bit sniffy about the company’s big bets on the metaverse and artificial intelligence and the lack of evidence they were paying off. In any case, they will have to suck it up: the Meta boss has voting control of the company. “Happily for Zuckerberg, he can’t be fired. The right metaphor for him is not Liz Truss; it’s Xi Jinping,” Armstrong concludes in his Unhedged newsletter (for premium subscribers). The tech rout continued today with Amazon shares diving after the ecommerce and cloud computing group, often cited as a modern bellwether for the US economy, issued disappointing revenue forecasts for the fourth quarter, which includes the critical holiday selling season. And, as the Lex column points out, its position as the world’s biggest retailer means it is very exposed to shrinking consumer expenditure outside the US too.Apple was also gloomy about the December quarter, signalling “significant” problems from the surging dollar and supply issues with its latest iPhones, but it bucked the trend of falling shares on better revenues and earnings than expected.On Wednesday, Google parent Alphabet reported a severe slowdown in its core search ads business, sending jitters through the world of digital advertising and stoking wider fears of a US economic slowdown. Marketing budgets are often the first victims when companies cut costs.Microsoft was likewise pessimistic, particularly about its cloud computing business, knocking hopes this might offset a slump in the PC market. Rising energy costs in its giant cloud data centres were also a significant drag on profit margins.As well as disappointing growth in advertising, ecommerce and cloud computing — three of the main drivers of growth in the digital economy — the slump in Big Tech market values was also a reaction to profligate spending, writes West Coast editor Richard Waters.In the companies’ defence, there can often be a mismatch between the tech industry’s big investment cycles and Wall Street’s hunger for near-term profits, he points out.“If Mark Zuckerberg is right in arguing that Meta has the chance to become as central in the metaverse era of computing as Microsoft was in the PC era, then wasting the odd $10bn will seem inconsequential.” Need to know: UK and Europe economyUK prime minister Rishi Sunak and chancellor Jeremy Hunt are looking at tax increases and public spending cuts to fill a £50bn hole in the public finances in their autumn statement due on November 17. Economists say raised estimates of immigration could cut the gap by £5bn. After the adverse investor reaction to the recent “mini”-Budget, Sunak and Hunt will be hoping the “moron premium” demanded by the markets will be replaced by a “dullness dividend”.Even if the nation’s finances are less chaotic, political problems remain for the Sunak government. Northern Ireland will probably face fresh elections on December 15 after a deadline passed for the province’s political parties to form a power-sharing executive.Germany, the eurozone’s biggest economy, defied fears of recession with 0.3% growth in the third quarter, bringing GDP back to its pre-pandemic level. Inflation however has surged to 11.6% per cent. The European Central Bank yesterday raised its benchmark interest rate by 0.75 percentage points to 1.5 per cent but subtle changes in tone from ECB chief Christine Lagarde suggested a dovish pivot was coming. EU business sentiment hit its lowest level in two years in October.Need to know: global economyThe International Energy Agency said fossil fuel demand would peak around 2030, a date brought forward by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The US is exporting record volumes of oil as it takes on a bigger role in world markets.One of Brazil’s most bitterly fought elections climaxes on Sunday as veteran leftist Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva tries to replace Jair Bolsonaro as president. Polls suggest Lula has a narrow lead but underestimated Bolsanoro’s showing in the first-round vote. The US chamber of commerce in Shanghai, China’s financial capital, said companies were pulling back on investment, deterred by strict pandemic controls. The Foxconn iPhone factory in Zhengzhou is a prime example. Here’s an analysis of how President Xi Jinping’s tightening of his grip on power last week spooked global markets, and if you want more, have a listen to the latest Rachman Review podcast.These fears add to the feeling that a two-bloc deglobalisation process is under way. Tokyo bureau chief Leo Lewis writes on how Asian chip manufacturers and others are starting to recognise that straddling the Sino-American divide is no longer an option. You can read more about the “Tech cold war” over semiconductors in our new collection. Geopolitical tensions and rising competition mean German exporters are rethinking their “love affair” with China after years of surging sales.Australia on the other hand has reaped unexpected benefits from trade sanctions introduced on some of its goods by China in 2020. Figures out this week showed Australia was benefiting from exporting to alternative markets. China, however, is still dependent on Australian iron ore.Need to know: businessIn what looks like the oil and gas industry’s most profitable year ever, Exxon third-quarter profits tripled to $20bn, Chevron reported its second most profitable quarter ever and Shell profits doubled to $9.5bn, fuelling cries for more windfall taxes on the sector. Norway’s Equinor, Italy’s Eni and France’s Total also reported bumper earnings. Centrica reopened Rough, Britain’s largest gas storage facility, albeit at around 20 per cent of its previous capacity. Economics editor Chris Giles is optimistic that the falling price of gas heralds the end of Europe’s energy crisis.NatWest and Lloyds both reported an increase in provisions for bad debts in the third quarter. NatWest recorded pre-tax operating profits up 20 per cent to £1.1bn while Lloyds said profits had dropped 26 per cent to £1.5bn.Volkswagen, Europe’s biggest carmaker, followed Ford and Volvo in warning that supply chain hold-ups were becoming a permanent problem as it downgraded its delivery targets because of a lack of parts. Another big change in the European autos market is coming in the form of a new wave of electric cars from China.Science round-upThe world is on track for catastrophe, according to a UN report that said cuts in emissions were not enough to limit global warming to the agreed 1.5C target.The first analysis on theimpact of two massive meteorites that smashed into Mars last year suggest the planet may hold more subsurface ice than scientists thought. The World Health Organization reported the first global resurgence of drug-resistant tuberculosis in almost 20 years. Some 10.6mn people developed the disease last year and 1.6mn people died.Austerity and vaccine market failures threaten the fight against pandemics, while polio has returned to the US and infections from animals to humans are on the increase. But monkeypox is retreating and there is new evidence on viruses’ role in Alzheimer’s. Read more in our new special report: Communicable Diseases. Hong Kong scientists have developed a gut microbiome to reduce the risk of Covid-19 infections. The biome, SIM01, improves gut microbiota balance and boosts immunity.Stigma over using health services, underfunding and reduced use of condoms are contributing to an alarming rise in sexually transmitted infections, according to a US health agency. Get the latest worldwide picture with our vaccine trackerSome good newsAhead of World Toilet Day next month, an initiative to provide clean water, basic sanitation and hygiene education is raising money by “twinning toilets” around the globe. More

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    The Fed’s dilemma: how long to ‘keep at it’ on inflation

    In an eight-minute speech delivered at the foothills of Wyoming’s Rocky Mountains in late August, Jay Powell sought to stamp out lingering doubt about the US central bank’s commitment to fighting the worst inflation in decades.Invoking the legacy of Paul Volcker — his predecessor who vanquished inflation in the 1980s — the sitting chair vowed the Federal Reserve would “keep at it” until it got price pressures under control.But two months on, what exactly “it” will take is still far from obvious. There remain colossal unknowns about just how quickly inflation will moderate, the extent of the job losses as the central bank cools the economy, and whether the financial system can digest such a rapid surge in borrowing costs. For the Fed, this lack of certainty has kicked off a fulsome debate about its tactics and how it will know when it has done enough.“We definitely are moving into a new phase, and the messaging is a lot trickier,” says Julia Coronado, a former Fed economist who now runs MacroPolicy Perspectives. “It’s one thing to be starting from zero and playing catch-up . . . it’s another to be in the territory where you’re clearly closer to a restrictive stance and the economy and global markets are responding.”Fed chair Jay Powell, right, in Wyoming. The central bank has embarked on one of the most aggressive campaigns to tighten monetary policy in its 109-year history © David Paul Morris/BloombergSo far this year, the Federal Open Market Committee has ratcheted up its policy rate from near zero to 3 per cent, hastily moving in 0.75 percentage point increments at its past three meetings in what has become one of the most aggressive campaigns to tighten monetary policy in its 109-year history. To augment its efforts, it has also begun shrinking its nearly $9tn balance sheet.The FOMC is set to implement its fourth straight jumbo rate rise next week and signal further increases to come, six days before elections that risk fracturing Democrats’ control of the legislative branch and fundamentally reshaping the scope of what Joe Biden can accomplish in the second half of his presidential term. His popularity pummelled by rising prices and recession fears, Biden has encouraged the Fed to use its tools as his administration affirms inflation is its “top economic priority”.But as the spectre of a severe economic contraction looms, the Fed’s detractors have sharpened their criticism. Democrats are warning the central bank risks jeopardising millions of Americans as it tips the economy into recession. A growing cohort of economists warn against an overcorrection, highlighting the risk of moving too quickly and breaking something. The Fed’s strategic direction has enormous global repercussions, not just for the range of central banks who take their cues from the US on fighting inflation, but also for the indebted developing economies staring at potential defaults as the US dollar surges.“[The Federal Reserve is] in an incredibly difficult spot,” says Daleep Singh, who previously led the markets group at the New York Fed before serving as deputy director of Biden’s National Economic Council. “Really every central banker all over the world is feeling nervous, anxious and fearful that they might lose decades of hard-earned inflation-fighting credibility.”Under the hood of the economyOn the surface, the US economy shows some signs of strength. But with relentless inflation and high borrowing costs starting to bite, cracks have emerged.The labour market continues to make notable gains. Thus far in 2022, 420,000 positions have been added on average each month, down from 562,000 last year but still well above what economists consider sustainable. The unemployment rate, meanwhile, stands at the pre-pandemic low of 3.5 per cent.

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    Despite nascent signs of loosening, the jobs market is still among the tightest in history. For every unemployed person, there are still nearly two vacancies. In many states across the country, there are three. To overcome this, employers have had to rapidly boost pay, with the pace only recently starting to ebb.But wage bumps have largely been outpaced by inflation, which is now running at an annual rate of 8.2 per cent. Worryingly, “core” measures, which strip out volatile items like food and energy and include categories like services and housing-related costs, keep accelerating, suggesting price pressures are becoming harder to root out. Any residual optimism about the economy has been overshadowed by the intensity of the price shocks. While gross domestic product growth rebounded in the third quarter after shrinking in the first half of the year, there are clear signs that consumer demand is weakening.US business activity has also already taken a hit, contracting in October for a fourth-straight month as manufacturers and services providers became increasingly downbeat. That has helped to ease supply logjams, pushing shipping costs lower.Centre stage is the housing market, which is buckling as 30-year mortgage rates this week eclipsed 7 per cent, the highest since 2002. Prices nationwide have collapsed, but the declines have been largest in cities that experienced the biggest booms since the start of the pandemic.Economists expect fractures to become even more apparent as the effects of the Fed’s tightening campaign start to amplify. Policy adjustments take time to filter through the economy, and show up in the data long after the damage has been done.This lag means that the bulk of the Fed’s actions to date — which have triggered a substantial appreciation of the dollar and damped demand for risky assets — have yet to fully materialise. It also highlights the costs of the Fed’s slow reaction to inflation it initially thought was “transitory”. “The Fed greatly complicated its task by waiting to begin interest rate increases until March,” says Randal Quarles, the Fed’s former vice-chair for supervision who left in late 2021 and supported rates rising last fall. “Had we done that, given the lags of monetary policy, we’d already be able to see what the effects were of those interest rate increases.”The case for slowing down Many now believe inflation has peaked and that a recession is likely next year, igniting a discussion both internally at the Fed and externally about how much more it should squeeze the economy. Top officials have indicated greater concern about doing too little rather than too much, harkening back to errors made in the 1970s that sowed the seeds for rampant inflation. To ward off a redux, the Fed has said it will wait for substantive signs that inflation is falling back towards its 2 per cent target before pausing rate increases.

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    But the pace at which it is moving makes some queasy. “Every additional 75 [basis point increase] makes me feel like the plane is going to crash rather than land smoothly,” says Ellen Meade, a senior adviser to the central bank’s board of governors until 2021. “There’s a reason for going a little bit more slowly, and that’s to watch and to react to the effects your policy is having. At this rapid clip, they aren’t doing themselves any favours.”Some Fed officials have already begun to lay the groundwork for smaller rate rises, as Canada’s central bank did this week and Australia’s did earlier this month. “The time is now to start planning for stepping down”, San Francisco Fed president Mary Daly said last week.December could mark a downshift to half-point increments, but that depends on jobs and inflation data due beforehand. There is also not yet a clear consensus among policymakers, with some worrying about being wrongfooted by faulty forecasts that inflation is moderating. If they did scale back, officials might move to lift next year’s projection for the benchmark rate beyond the 4.6 per cent median level previously pencilled in, to guard against investors again prematurely pricing in a pivot away from tight policy. Fed funds futures markets now point to it peaking at about 5 per cent.As the Fed ploughs ahead, heavy-handed political pressure is only set to intensify. Senate Democrats have already stepped up their rebukes, with Sherrod Brown, chair of the Senate banking committee, and John Hickenlooper of Colorado this week joining Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Vermont’s Bernie Sanders in urging the central bank to reconsider its plans.Their concern is jobs. Most Fed officials project the unemployment rate to rise to 4.4 per cent, but many Wall Street and academic economists believe that forecast is far too optimistic.Construction workers in New York. This year, 420,000 jobs in the US have been added on average each month, down from 562,000 last year, while the unemployment rate stands at the pre-pandemic low of 3.5% © Jeenah Moon/BloombergDeutsche Bank reckons getting inflation back to target will require unemployment breaching 5.5 per cent. Laurence Ball at Johns Hopkins University argues a more realistic estimate is upwards of 7 per cent. Such substantive job losses, and the recession they would bring, would cause most pain to those least able to weather it, reversing most if not all of the gains accrued in the post-pandemic recovery.“One of the very unfortunate truths of the current situation is that the people who are really suffering right now from high inflation — low-income households — are also the people who are going to bear the brunt of the tightening,” says Stephanie Aaronson, a former Fed staffer now at the Brookings Institution. “This is a no-win situation.”

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    Straight talkYet another fear is a financial accident that threatens the stability of the broader system.“We are still the 800-pound gorilla in the international economy, and in the financial part of that, we are the 8,000-pound gorilla,” says Alan Blinder, who served as the Fed’s vice-chair in the 1990s.Most vulnerable are highly-indebted emerging and developing economies being hammered by the strength of the dollar and rapidly rising borrowing costs. With 60 per cent of low-income countries at or near debt distress, there “inevitably” will be defaults, the head of the IMF warned last month. Angst is also growing in Europe, which is staring down an acute energy crisis linked to the Ukraine war. Even as the economy teeters on the brink of recession, the European Central Bank again this week followed in the Fed’s footsteps and raised rates by 0.75 percentage points to combat soaring costs. The blowback to the US from events abroad is small, Blinder notes, but he acknowledges it is “not zero”. The turmoil in the UK financial markets last month, while stemming from political missteps, offered a cautionary tale about how unforeseen events can quickly spiral and demand costly interventions. “You don’t want to be in the Bank of England’s shoes,” says Coronado.Amplifying concerns is the fragility of the $24tn market for US government debt, the foundation of the global financial system. Trading conditions have rarely been choppier and liquidity now hovers at levels last seen during the March 2020 meltdown. Back then, the Fed stepped in to ensure dislocations there did not set off a full-blown crisis. This time, the Treasury is discussing buying back some of its bonds to improve liquidity, despite maintaining that the market on the whole is functioning.Such a policy would require clear communication that these interventions are purely about the health of the market and do not convey “any signal about the appropriate stance of [the Fed’s] policy”, says Singh, now at PGIM Fixed Income.Straight talk from the Fed will also be crucial in the coming months, other former officials say, especially as views splinter internally. Quarles warns that the biggest challenge for the Fed, probably arising in the first quarter of 2023, will be overcoming a potential “fracturing of the message” as the data become less clear-cut.For Andrew Levin, a two-decade Fed veteran, what is most critical at this stage is for the central bank to be upfront about the pain forthcoming.“It owes it to the public to explain like a team of physicians and say, ‘this is a very serious illness, we’re going to have to take you into surgery and it’s going to be a slow recovery, but we think that this is essential to restore your health’,,” he says.Additional reporting by Caitlin Gilbert in New York More

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    Welcome to the world of the polycrisis

    The writer is an FT contributing editor and teaches history at Columbia UniversityPandemic, drought, floods, mega storms and wildfires, threats of a third world war — how rapidly we have become inured to the list of shocks. So much so that, from time to time, it is worth standing back to consider the sheer strangeness of our situation. As former US Treasury secretary Lawrence Summers recently remarked: “This is the most complex, disparate and cross-cutting set of challenges that I can remember in the 40 years that I have been paying attention to such things.” Of course, familiar economic mechanisms still have huge power. A bond market panic felled an incompetent British government. It was, you might say, a textbook case of market discipline. But why were the gilt markets so jumpy to begin with? The backdrop was the mammoth energy subsidy bill and the Bank of England’s determination to unwind the huge portfolio of bonds that it had piled up fighting the Covid-19 pandemic. With economic and non-economic shocks entangled all the way down, it is little wonder that an unfamiliar term is gaining currency — the polycrisis.A problem becomes a crisis when it challenges our ability to cope and thus threatens our identity. In the polycrisis the shocks are disparate, but they interact so that the whole is even more overwhelming than the sum of the parts. At times one feels as if one is losing one’s sense of reality. Is the mighty Mississippi really running dry and threatening to cut off the farms of the Midwest from the world economy? Did the January 6 riots really threaten the US Capitol? Are we really on the point of uncoupling the economies of the west from China? Things that would once have seemed fanciful are now facts. This comes as a shock. But how new is it really? Think back to 2008-2009. Vladimir Putin invaded Georgia. John McCain chose Sarah Palin as his running mate. The banks were toppling. The Doha World Trade Organization round came to grief, as did the climate talks in Copenhagen the following year. And, to top it all, swine flu was on the loose. Former European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker, to whom we owe the currency of the term polycrisis, borrowed it in 2016 from the French theorist of complexity Edgar Morin, who first used it in the 1990s. As Morin himself insisted, it was with the ecological alert of the early 1970s that a new sense of overarching global risk entered public consciousness. So have we been living in a polycrisis all along? We should beware complacency. In the 1970s, whether you were a Eurocommunist, an ecologist or an angst-ridden conservative, you could still attribute your worries to a single cause — late capitalism, too much or too little economic growth, or an excess of entitlement. A single cause also meant that one could imagine a sweeping solution, be it social revolution or neoliberalism. What makes the crises of the past 15 years so disorientating is that it no longer seems plausible to point to a single cause and, by implication, a single fix. Whereas in the 1980s you might still have believed that “the market” would efficiently steer the economy, deliver growth, defuse contentious political issues and win the cold war, who would make the same claim today? It turns out that democracy is fragile. Sustainable development will require contentious industrial policy. And the new cold war between Beijing and Washington is only just getting going. Meanwhile, the diversity of problems is compounded by the growing anxiety that economic and social development are hurtling us towards catastrophic ecological tipping points. The pace of change is staggering. In the early 1970s the global population was less than half what it is today, and China and India were desperately poor. Today the world is organised for the most part into powerful states that have gone a long way towards abolishing absolute poverty, generates total global gross domestic product of $90tn and maintains a combined arsenal of 12,705 nuclear weapons, while depleting the carbon budget at the rate of 35bn metric tonnes of CO₂ a year. To imagine that our future problems will be those of 50 years ago is to fail to grasp the speed and scale of historical transformation. So, what is the outlook? In a world that one could envisage being dominated by a single fundamental source of tension, you could imagine a climactic crisis from which resolution might emerge. But that kind of Wagnerian scenario no longer seems plausible. Modern history appears as a tale of progress by way of improvisation, innovation, reform and crisis-management. We have dodged several great depressions, devised vaccines to stop disease and avoided nuclear war. Perhaps innovation will also allow us to master the environmental crises looming ahead. Perhaps. But it is an unrelenting foot race, because what crisis-fighting and technological fixes all too rarely do is address the underlying trends. The more successful we are at coping, the more the tension builds. If you have found the past few years stressful and disorientating, if your life has already been disrupted, it is time to brace. Our tightrope walk with no end is only going to become more precarious and nerve-racking.  More

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    Russia’s central bank warns Putin’s military draft will push up inflation

    Russia’s central bank has warned that the country’s large-scale military draft could lead to higher inflation, as it opted to keep its key interest rate unchanged for the first time after months of successive cuts.The Russian economy could face labour shortages and more inflationary pressure after Moscow launched a “partial mobilisation” for its armed forces last month. Since then, hundreds of thousands of men have been drafted, and similar numbers have fled the country.“A new factor influencing price trends is partial mobilisation. In the coming months, it will have a disinflationary effect because of lower consumer demand,” central bank governor Elvira Nabiullina said on Friday. “Nonetheless, later on, it might start to have a pro-inflationary impact due to changes in the structure of the labour market and a shortage of some specialists.”She noted, however, that it remained “difficult to assess all economic consequences of the shift in the structure of employment”.“They will manifest themselves gradually through the adjustment in wages and a possible intensification of the transfer of labour force across industries and regions,” Nabiullina said.The central bank chose to keep its benchmark rate unchanged at 7.5 per cent. The rate hold follows six consecutive cuts, which lowered rates from the emergency 20 per cent level set after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February.Inflationary pressures weakened over the summer, offering policymakers the space to cut rates drastically. Nabiullina had indicated that the cycle of loosening was coming to an end after last month’s rate cut. At 13.7 per cent, Russian inflation remains high. In the short term, the bank expects the factors pushing up prices to be outweighed by a dampening of consumer demand due to what it described as a “rise in overall uncertainty”.

    In September, Russia began suffering significant losses of territory on the battlefield after a major Ukrainian counteroffensive. On September 30, Moscow raised the stakes in the war substantially by claiming to annex four regions of Ukraine as its own territory. It also brought the war home to Russians by launching a draft, described by the Kremlin as a “partial mobilisation”. The central bank said its current forecast was for inflation to reach between 12 and 13 per cent by the end of 2022. It wants inflation to fall to 4 per cent by 2024.Sanctions on Russia over its invasion of Ukraine could also dent exports and the rouble in turn, the central bank said, adding to the longer-term inflationary pressures. Nabiullina was hit with sanctions in late September by the US as part of a package of measures intended to stiffen financial punishment of Moscow in the wake of its war in Ukraine. “A further escalation of external trade and financial restrictions, fragmentation of the global economy and the financial system could lead to a sharper decline in the Russian economy’s potential,” the bank said in a statement. “Specifically, supply-side constraints may increase due to problems with the supply of equipment, slowly replenishing stocks of finished products, raw materials and components.”Looking ahead, Nabiullina said the current signal given by the central bank was “neutral” and that “the further trajectory of the key rate, the direction of our monetary policy will depend on future data on the economy, inflation, [and] inflation expectations”. The central bank also upgraded its forecast of Russia’s gross domestic product, expecting the economy to contract by between 3 and 3.5 per cent this year. Previously, it had forecast a decline of up to 6 per cent. More