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    Want fries with that? Robot makes French fries faster, better than humans do

    Miso Robotics Inc in Pasadena has started rolling out its Flippy 2 robot, which automates the process of deep frying potatoes, onions and other foods.A big robotic arm like those in auto plants – directed by cameras and artificial intelligence – takes frozen French fries and other foods out of a freezer, dips them into hot oil, then deposits the ready-to-serve product into a tray.Flippy 2 can cook several meals with different recipes simultaneously, reducing the need for catering staff and, says Miso, speed up order delivery at drive-through windows.“When an order comes in through the restaurant system, it automatically spits out the instructions to Flippy,” Miso Chief Executive Mike Bell said in an interview.” … It does it faster or more accurately, more reliably and happier than most humans do it,” Bell added.Miso said it took five years to develop Flippy and recently made it commercially available.The robot’s name comes from Flippy, an earlier robot designed to flip burgers. But once Miso’s team finished that machine, they realized there was a much tighter bottleneck at the fry station, particularly late at night.Bell said Flippy 2 makes a splash – at first.“When we put a robot into a location, the customers that come up and order, they all take pictures, they take videos, they ask a bunch of questions. And then the second time they come in, they seem not to even notice it, just take it for granted,” he said.Miso engineers can watch Flippy 2 robots working in real time on a big screen, enabling them to help troubleshoot any problems that crop up. A number of restaurant chains have adopted the robotic fry cook, including Jack in the Box in San Diego, White Castle in the Midwest and CaliBurger on the West Coast, Bell said.Bell said three other big U.S. fast-food chains have put Flippy 2 to work, but says they’re hesitant to advertise because of sensitivities about perceptions that robots are taking jobs away from humans.“The task that the humans are most happy to offload are tasks like the fry station. … They’re delighted to have the help so they can do other things,” Bell said.Miso Robotics has around 90 engineers, who tinker with prototypes or work on computer code. One of its next projects is Sippy, a drink-making robot which will take an order from a customer, pour drinks, put lids on them, insert a straw and group them together.Bell said that some day, people will “walk into a restaurant and look at a robot and say, ‘Hey, remember the old days when humans used to do that kind of thing?’”And those days … it’s coming. … It’s just a matter of … how quick.” More

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    FirstFT: White House urges Congress to speed up crypto rules

    The Biden administration has called on Congress to pass laws to clarify how cryptocurrencies should be regulated, as officials warned that delays on Capitol Hill could put investors at risk.The US Financial Stability Oversight Council — a group of the country’s top financial regulators including the Treasury — issued a report yesterday urging politicians to come to agreement on a number of areas including how to regulate bitcoin and other crypto assets sold on the spot market.The report comes as members of Congress debate proposals covering the $140bn stablecoin industry to tax rules for crypto brokers.But while Biden administration officials worry about a repeat of the collapse of now-infamous stablecoin terraUSD, those close to the congressional negotiations said they were still months away from passing legislation.The FSOC’s report came as the crypto industry reels from a historic collapse in prices and with several prominent companies falling into bankruptcy, raising questions about who should carry out chief oversight of the volatile market.Regulatory agencies such as the Securities and Exchange Commission and Commodity Futures Trading Commission have pressed for jurisdiction over the industry. SEC chair Gary Gensler has argued that most cryptocurrencies — and the platforms where they are traded — should be regulated by the SEC because many of the tokens qualify as securities under US law.Yesterday reality TV star Kim Kardashian agreed to pay $1.26mn to settle SEC charges that she did not disclose a $250,000 payment she received to post about crypto security tokens sold by EthereumMax on her Instagram account, which has 331mn followers.Go deeper: Premium subscribers can sign up to our weekly Cryptofinance newsletter from digital assets correspondent Scott Chipolina, delivered to your inbox every Friday.Do you worry about the lack of regulation in the cryptocurrency industry? Email your thoughts to [email protected] or reply to this email. Here is the rest of today’s news — GordonFive more stories in the news1. North Korea fires ballistic missile over Japan Pyongyang fired a ballistic missile over Japan for the first time since 2017, sparking emergency public alerts and condemnation from the US and Japan. Fumio Kishida, Japan’s prime minister, condemned the launch as “barbaric”. Japan estimated the missile reached an altitude of 1,000km and travelled about 4,600km.2. Kwasi Kwarteng to bring forward debt-cutting plan The UK chancellor is to accelerate the publication of his medium-term fiscal plan in an attempt to reassure markets after he was forced to make a humbling U-turn on part of his “mini” Budget. The medium-term fiscal plan was due to be published on November 23 but is now expected this month, according to the Treasury. 3. Ukraine forces break through Kherson front line Ukrainian forces have broken through the front lines in Kherson, one of the four regions Russia’s president Vladimir Putin annexed last week. The breakthrough marks Ukraine’s biggest military advance in the south since Russia invaded the country in February. Follow the latest with our visual guide to the war.4. BlackRock reshapes top team BlackRock has chosen a new chief financial officer as part of a reshuffle that positions the world’s largest asset manager to fight back against criticism and promotes younger executives. In recent months, the group has come under fire from both the right and the left for its huge stakes in every large US company and its approach to environmental, social and governance investing.5. US considers first over-the-counter birth control pill More than 60 years after the US revolutionised the lives of women by approving the birth control pill regulators are considering allowing it to be sold over the counter in pharmacies for the first time amid a nationwide battle over reproductive rights.The day aheadMarkets outlook US markets are expected to open higher later today after recording their biggest daily increase since August yesterday. Wall Street’s benchmark S&P 500 share index closed up 2.6 per cent, while the technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite added 2.3 per cent. Shares in Asia and Europe have made gains today, fuelled by hopes that weakening US economic data would lead to a change in global central bank policy.Economic data Data from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics are expected to show job openings edged down to about 10.8mn in August from 11.2mn the previous month, according to a Refinitiv poll. Factory orders will give fresh insights into the health of the manufacturing sector. Total factory orders are expected to have remained flat in August from a 1 per cent decline in July, according to economists polled by Refinitiv. The Census Bureau will report a revision to its advance estimate of durable goods in August. It previously reported orders for long-lasting goods fell 0.2 per cent during that month.Monetary policy  Philip Jefferson will deliver his first speech today as a newly-appointed Federal Reserve governor, providing the keynote address at a session at the Technology-enable Disruption conference, an event jointly hosted by the Atlanta, Dallas and Richmond branches of the Fed. Elsewhere, Cleveland Fed president Loretta Mester will deliver remarks at the Chicago Payments Symposium and San Francisco Fed president Mary Daly is participating in a fireside chat at a Council on Foreign Relations event. Company earnings The frozen potato processor Lamb Weston is expected to report a 14.4 per cent revenue increase in the quarter that ended in August, as higher prices and restaurant demand for fries recovers from pandemic lows. Analysts polled by Refinitiv expect revenue to come in at $1.1bn and adjusted earnings are forecast to be 49 cents a share, up 29 cents from a year ago.Religious holiday Today marks the beginning of the Jewish holiday Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, the holiest day of the Jewish year.What else we’re readingWhich nuclear weapons could Putin use against Ukraine? It has been called the biggest nuclear threat to world safety since the 1962 Cuban missile crisis: as Vladimir Putin seeks to salvage his invasion of Ukraine, the Russian president has stepped up his threats to use nuclear weapons. This is what we know about the nuclear weapons Putin could be tempted to use.

    How big is the capital hole at Credit Suisse? The cost of buying insurance against Credit Suisse defaulting on its debt soared to a record level yesterday, as analysts and investors questioned the strength of the Swiss bank’s balance sheet. Just how big is the capital hole at the bank? Our reporters investigate.When conspiracy theorists rule Conspiracy theorists have moved from the streets to the suites, and have become presidents of countries including Turkey and Brazil. In the US, Donald Trump is planning his political comeback. But the most dangerous of them all is Vladimir Putin, who is threatening the world with nuclear war, Gideon Rachman writes.Plus: Donald Trump sues CNN for $475mn over alleged Hitler comparisons.China’s property crash Contagion is spreading deep into China’s political economy. What began as a property crisis — with slumping apartment sales and developer debt defaults — is morphing into a financial crunch for local governments. Read the first part of a new series examining the impact of the crisis brewing in the world’s second-largest economy.Making the poor poorer is a false economy The UK government is discussing cutting welfare spending by not lifting benefits in line with inflation. Sarah O’Connor argues it is time to instead get tough on the causes of welfare spending: low pay, high housing costs and poor health.BeautyWhat are the best at-home beauty gadgets? Our skincare columnist Adeela Crown picks out the top performers in her tool kit. More

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    Mortgage mayhem sparks fears of a housing market crash in Britain

    There are growing fears of a housing market crash in the U.K., after a swathe of tax cuts announced by the government sent interest rate expectations soaring, driving up lending rates for homebuyers.
    A number of banks suspended mortgage deals for new customers, and many have now returned to the market with significantly higher rates.
    Oxford Economics estimates that if interest rates remain at the levels currently being offered, house prices are approximately “30% overvalued based on the affordability of mortgage payments.”

    U.K. mortgage rates have skyrocketed since Finance Minister Kwasi Kwarteng’s mini-budget on Sept. 23, prompting banks to pull mortgage products threatening a deepen an expected housing market downturn.
    Dan Kitwood | Getty Images

    LONDON — There are growing fears of a housing market crash in the U.K., after a swathe of tax cuts announced by the government sent interest rate expectations soaring, driving up lending rates for homebuyers.
    Finance Minister Kwasi Kwarteng’s so-called mini-budget on Sept. 23 spooked markets with £45 billion ($50.5 billion) of debt-funded tax cuts, triggering a massive spike in government bond yields. These are used by mortgage providers to price fixed-rate mortgages.

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    12 hours ago

    The Bank of England responded to the market mayhem with a temporary purchase program of long-dated bonds, which brought some fragile stability to the market. However, Oxford Economics Chief U.K. Economist Andrew Goodwin suggested that there could be more pain ahead — particularly when it comes to the housing market.

    “Though the BoE’s temporary bond buying programme triggered falls in swap rates, they remain high, and a number of banks have already responded by significantly increasing interest rates on their mortgage products,” Goodwin said in a note Friday.
    “A scenario whereby house prices crash, adding to the already-strong headwinds on consumer spending, is looking increasingly likely,” Goodwin added.

    ‘30% overvalued’

    Oxford Economics estimates that if interest rates remain at the levels currently being offered, house prices are approximately “30% overvalued based on the affordability of mortgage payments.”
    “The high prevalence of fixed rates deals will help to cushion the blow in terms of existing mortgagors, but it’s hard to see how a sharp drop in transactions and a marked correction in prices can be avoided,” Goodwin said.

    Kallum Pickering, senior economist at Berenberg, noted that the housing market had already begun a downturn in recent months, owing to a broad-based demand slowdown linked to rising borrowing costs and a hit to real incomes.
    “But following the panic selling in the gilt market and fears that the BoE could raise the bank rate to 6.0% by early next year, banks have started to pull mortgage deals in a rush,” Pickering said in a note Monday.
    A number of banks suspended mortgage deals for new customers, and many have now returned to the market with significantly higher rates.
    “Some banks have upped the rate offers on their five year fixed 75% loan-to-value mortgages to the 5.0-5.5% range, with close to 6% for new mortgages. That is almost 200bp above the August average for comparable mortgages,” Pickering added.

    Interest rate expectations

    Looking ahead, whether the fixed rates on mortgages remain elevated or begin to moderate will depend on the trajectory of interest rates expectations.
    These have come off previous highs of over 6% after the government U-turned on its plan to scrap the top rate of income tax, but analysts do not expect this to quell the market’s skittishness.

    The Bank of England has already hiked interest rates six times so far this year, from 0.25% at the end of 2021 to 2.25% currently. Markets are now pricing in an eventual rate of over 5% for most of 2023.
    This is likely to come as a shock to many households after years of low interest rates.
    DBRS Morningstar Senior Vice President Maria Rivas noted that given the combination of expected further interest rate rises and a slowing economy, banks will likely remain cautious when underwriting and pricing residential mortgages and other loan products in the months to come.
    “For U.K. borrowers in particular, we consider the challenges may become evident sooner rather than later, given the nature of the U.K. market, where the majority of mortgages are based on short-term fixed rates of 2 to 5 years,” Rivas said.
    Berenberg expects the eventual hike to average mortgage rates to be close to two percentage points. Pickering argued that this should not pose any “serious financial stability risks” to the U.K., given that British banks are well-capitalized and average household finances remain “solid” for now.
    “However, higher mortgage rates will amplify the housing downturn in the near term – hurting consumption via negative wealth effects – and drag on the recovery thereafter as households continue to pay a higher interest burden,” he said.

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    You will not see the next crisis coming

    Good morning. The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development wants the world’s central banks to stop raising interest rates, on the grounds that further tightening risks a global recession, during which the world’s poorest would suffer most. We agree about who recessions hit hardest, but think global inflation would also be cruel to the vulnerable. Whoever’s right, it is worth remembering that the increases and declines in rich-world stock portfolios is one of the least important consequences of central banks’ terrible dilemma. Still, that’s what we’re paid to write about. Email us: [email protected] and [email protected] crises, pseudo-crises and seeing the future Does the fact that everyone is on the lookout for a financial crisis make a financial crisis more likely, or less so? The question is topical. Everyone in markets is waiting for some market or institution to break. In just the past week, we have had one crisis near-miss and one pseudo-crisis. The former was the vicious circle of liability-driven investing/UK gilt fire sale, which required the threat of a massive Bank of England bond-buying programme to extinguish. The latter appears to have been a self-reinforcing nonsense vortex, in which too much excitement about a big move in the thin market for single-name bank credit default swaps led to speculation that Credit Suisse was at risk of a 2008-style solvency crisis. Credit Suisse is covered in deep, self-inflicted wounds, but its capital and liquidity ratios suggest it is not on the brink.The view that fear of crises encourages them to happen is grounded in bank-run dynamics. A weakened company’s liabilities get called or its counterparties take flight as speculation, some or all of it groundless, swirls. The view that hyper-vigilance makes crises less likely is grounded in the fact that for crises to be serious, they must be surprising. People have forgotten how shocking the great financial crisis was, lulled by years of reading books and watching movies about the tiny minority of clever people who saw it coming. Most of us were utterly blindsided by the amount that US house prices could fall, how much housing exposure could be accumulated by global banks, and how reckless the men running those banks could be.The long-held consensus is that the next crisis will centre on a non-bank financial institution. A fintech, a leveraged ETF, a big risk-parity hedge fund — all good guesses. But given how familiar these and similar guesses are, which big counterparty is going to be caught with their trousers down? That’s the crucial point about the LDI mess. Even most of us who think about markets for a living had never heard of liability driven investing. General ignorance is a crucial precondition for a truly ugly blow-up.We know that central banks are tightening into a slowing economy, after a long bull market has crested. Recession is likely, and on the road to recession there will be accidents. But for most of us, trying to anticipate which cars will crash is pointless.The big JGB shortMonday’s letter with Matt Klein on Japan was so much fun to write that we wrote too much of it. Instead of dropping a 3,000-word treatise on our readers, here’s a segment we couldn’t squeeze in yesterday:Unhedged: The most talked-about Japan trade is shorting Japanese government bonds. The idea is that the Bank of Japan’s “yield curve control” policy — buying an unlimited number of long-term bonds to keep interest rates low — will prove unsustainable as the yen continues to plummet, leading to instability, lower living standards, and serious inflation. One YCC sceptic is Naruhisa Nakagawa of Caygan Capital, who says the BoJ is tantalisingly close to winning the war against deflation and will soon lift YCC, opening the way for higher yields and lower prices on Japanese bonds. Though Japan’s 3 per cent inflation is largely a product of the global commodity shock — that is, food and energy prices — Nakagawa sees a path for inflation to finally become entrenched. He notes consumers’ rising expectations for higher prices:Perceived inflation is really accelerating right now, and there is a strong statistical relationship between perceived inflation by consumers and consumption growth . . . [The BoJ wants] to stimulate consumption and the [output] gap will accelerate wage growth and inflation.Many other observers think higher Japanese inflation is a blip and that, for reasons economic and cultural, wages will never follow more volatile food and energy prices. They note also that tighter monetary policy has not stopped the euro or pound from weakening. “The BoJ will not change the policy and has no reason to change it; they do not believe inflation will stay above 2 per cent for the next year,” says Masa Adachi, chief Japan economist at UBS.Russel Matthews of BlueBay Asset Management, which is short Japanese bonds, rejects the suggestion that the falls in the pound and euro show that Japan’s declining currency is not a direct result of a monetary policy that out of step with the rest of the world. He told Unhedged:Both the euro and sterling have huge challenges outside of monetary policy. What is the counterfactual of where sterling would be, or where the euro would be, if they had not tightened policy? The BoE has more inflation, an open economy, a current account deficit, a leveraged economy, terrible energy sector infrastructure, Brexit challenges . . . For Matthews and many other investors we spoke with, the appeal of the short-JGB trade lies not in a high probability of a BoJ reversal, but in its asymmetric upside, profiting from a potentially massive shock to global rates markets, should the BoJ fold. Matthews calls it an “optionality trade”, noting that the BoJ, if it ends YCC, will do so abruptly to head off speculators. Or as Ruffer’s Alex Lennard puts it: “It’s not the certainty of whether or not yield curve control breaks. It’s the certainty of the damage it will cause if it does.”Your thoughts, Matt?Matt Klein: I may regret saying this, but I really don’t see why the BoJ would need to abandon YCC. The policy does two big things for Japan: it keeps rates low across the curve, and it guarantees that domestic lenders can make money from the spread between the short end and the long end. The argument for abandoning YCC is that it’s bad for the yen. The yen decline is bad for Japan insofar as it makes imports more expensive and hits domestic consumption. But some perspective is in order. The yen has been mostly flat vs the Korean won over the past year even though the Bank of Korea was one of the first rich countries to raise interest rates and has since kept pace with the Federal Reserve. The yen has also been relatively stable against the euro and sterling. Yet Japan has continued to experience far less inflation than Korea, Europe or the US.The *level* of the Japanese consumer price index is up less than 2 per cent since the eve of the pandemic. Rents haven’t budged at all. Japanese consumer energy prices are up only 18 per cent since the end of 2019, compared to roughly 50 per cent in the US and Europe. Japanese grocery prices are up just 5 per cent, compared to 20 per cent in the US and 15 per cent in Europe. Exclude fresh food and energy and the price level has been flat. Motor vehicle prices are up just 2 per cent, while the prices of all durable goods are up just 5 per cent. In Europe, durable goods prices are up 9 per cent while durables prices in the US are up by 13 per cent. Meanwhile, the Japanese government believes that the economy is still operating far below its underlying potential, with an “output gap” worth about 3 per cent as of second quarter 2022. For perspective, they also estimate that Japan was running about 1 per cent above potential in 2017-19. Employment may be hitting new highs, but this is occurring in the context of rising labour force participation, fewer job openings than in 2019, and relatively tame wage growth.Given all this, it’s not at all clear why the BoJ would want to change course, especially when reopening Japan’s borders to tourists should help support the yen without any negative side-effects for domestic savers.One good readOne consequence of running a university like a business: the customer is always right, even about organic chemistry. More

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    China’s property crash: ‘a slow-motion financial crisis’

    Lucy Wang finds herself at the sharp end of a crisis seeping through China’s property market. She once dreamt that buying an under-construction apartment in the northern city of Zhengzhou would be her ticket to a new life.For a young woman from a farming village, the Rmb250,000 ($34,839) down payment she used to secure the property represented a big outlay. Half of the money had come from her parents, who had put aside years of meagre savings from selling the potatoes and wheat they grew on the family plot.Everything seemed set fair until October last year, when building activity on her block of flats suddenly stopped. At first, she said, the developer of the Meiling International House was evasive on when construction might resume. Then its representatives started spouting reams of unlikely excuses.In July Wang’s hope died. The local housing bureau told her and other buyers that their money had been “misused”. “I have lost faith in the developer,” she said. “This has ruined my life.”Wang is a victim of China’s gathering economic gloom. A property market that has contributed around one quarter of GDP has over the past decade turned sour, triggering a series of secondary effects that are smothering growth in the world’s second-largest economy. Logan Wright, a Hong Kong-based partner at consultancy Rhodium Group, calls the situation a “slow-motion financial crisis”. Contagion is spreading into the deep tissue of China’s political economy. What began as a property crisis — characterised by slumping apartment sales and a rash of debt defaults by developers — is now morphing into a financial crunch at the local government level. A new world of difficult choices looms before Chinese policymakers as a crucial congress of the ruling Communist party this month looks set to award another term in office to Xi Jinping, China’s authoritarian ruler. With the market slump, thousands of local government financing vehicles (LGFVs), which since the financial crisis have provided the main impetus behind China’s investment-driven growth, are either running short of funds or teetering on the brink of unprecedented defaults, analysts say. Local governments have long depended on land sales to property developers to balance their books. Taken together, the slumping property market, the sputtering investment engines of local governments and a hefty burden of national debt signals the end for a model of growth that has not only transformed China but also been the biggest generator of global economic expansion for well over a decade.A woman pushes a cart of water bottles towards her unfinished flat in Guangxi where she is living © ReutersDan Wang, chief economist at Hang Seng Bank, a Hong Kong-headquartered bank with significant operations in mainland China, says the economy has arrived at an inflection point. “The old model of relying on infrastructure and housing has essentially finished,” she says. One of the next twists, according to Wright, is likely to be unprecedented defaults by LGFVs on the domestic bonds they issue. If LGFVs do default, it will signal the crossing of a “Rubicon”, he says.This is partly because these bonds — which have financed the construction of roads, railways, power plants, airports, theme parks and hundreds of other pieces of infrastructure — have been assumed to enjoy an implicit government guarantee. More materially, such defaults could also destabilise a $7.8tn mountain of debts built up by such LGFVs, sending chills through an already cooling economy. To put it in context, that figure for LGFV debt is the equivalent of nearly half of China’s total GDP in 2021 — or, for example, about twice the size of Germany’s economy. In the free markets of the west, financial crises can erupt suddenly, taking governments and investors by surprise. But in China’s state-driven economy, infirmities metastasise more slowly as Beijing deploys political and financial capital to battle against the turning tide. This gives proceedings a more stately aura, but it does not mean that underlying problems are any less severe, analysts say.

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    The global implications of a Chinese economic slowdown are stark. The country’s contribution to the world’s economy, already hit by a sharply slowing GDP growth rate this year, would be further enfeebled. Multinationals that derive much of their revenue growth from China may be forced to trim earnings projections. “China’s growth model has run its course,” says Chen Zhiwu, professor of finance at the University of Hong Kong. He adds that in the past few years, Beijing has tried to stretch the booms in property and infrastructure in order to prolong investment-led growth.“But now, all these drivers have little space left, if any at all.”Three red linesWang’s travails reveal a crucial aspect of what is ailing the property market. She had bought a “presale property”, a type of investment that worked satisfactorily when apartment sales were buoyant and real estate prices were almost perpetually on the rise.Under this model, buyers would hand over a down payment of typically 30 per cent of the value of an apartment. They would then start paying monthly mortgage instalments as the developer built the apartments from the ground up. If everything worked out, the buyer would take delivery of a new apartment on a certain date, happy in the expectation that it would be worth more than when construction began.But several factors have conspired to undermine this cosy arrangement. In August 2020, the Chinese government — spooked over the spectre of a debt-fuelled property bubble — imposed “three red lines” on developers to restrict their capacity to add to already giddy levels of debt. This, in turn, left some overleveraged developers without the means to finish apartment blocks they had already pre-sold.

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    As developer funds dried up, building activity on some apartment blocks petered out. In protest, hundreds of thousands of would-be apartment owners this year boycotted the mortgages they had pledged to pay on more than 300 developments in nearly 100 cities. Wang was one such protester. She says she stopped paying the Rmb3,800 monthly mortgage instalment in June. In any case, it would have been difficult for her to afford the payments because her job as a sales agent for “baijiu”, an alcoholic drink, has been hit by China’s broader economic slowdown.“I am not optimistic about the project,” Wang says. “I heard an executive at the developer has recently been arrested.” Economic contagionPersonal misfortunes such as Wang’s reveal the human cost from a contagion that is starting to course through the main arteries of the Chinese economy. “The next stage of the property crisis is the transmission of losses from property developers to China’s financial system,” says Wright, tracing a clear line of cause and effect from the current stalled real estate projects to local government debt distress, lower investment levels and finally to the possibility of emergency state bailouts. Such transmission mechanisms are already in play.Protesters demand repayment of loans at a property developer in Shenzhen. Hundreds of thousands of would-be apartment owners have boycotted the mortgages for stalled building projects © David Kirton/ReutersThe “three red lines” policy that mothballed the Meiling International House project has clobbered the finances of real estate developers, which together missed payments on a record $31.4bn in offshore dollar bonds by August. Developers are also being hit by collapsing business revenues: official figures show home sales in China fell nearly 30 per cent in the first half of the year to about Rmb6.6tn.But it is the next link in the chain that is really crucial. As developers ran short of income, they had to slash their land purchases for new projects. Such land sales have long been a lifeline to local governments, accounting for roughly 40 per cent of their recent annual revenues, according to Moody’s, a rating agency. This, in turn, rendered local governments much less able either to drive growth through infrastructure investments or to repay their huge piles of debt.The potential size of this problem is brought home by the numbers. The decline in local government land sales revenues in the eight months to August was 28.5 per cent year on year or, in monetary terms, down Rmb1.4tn from the same period last year, according to official figures. If that trend is annualised, it will produce a full-year decline of Rmb2.5tn, notes Wright. Such a shortfall represents more than half of the Rmb4.5tn in LGFV debt that is set to come due before the end of June 2023, according to Wind, a database provider. The upshot is that — absent a big bailout from Beijing — local governments will struggle to honour the debts of at least some of the thousands of LGFVs that they own. If defaults do occur, analysts say, they risk destabilising the whole stack of LGFV debt, which stood at about Rmb54tn (US$7.8tn) at the end of 2021, according to Wind, a database provider. Following defaults, a flight to safety would probably take hold, driving Chinese financial institutions to shun the bonds of LGFVs from those provinces with weaker financial performances, according to experts.Moody’s estimates that regional and local governments will this year suffer a total funding gap — the shortfall between revenues and expenditures from all sources — of Rmb7.5tn (US$1.05tn). Again, the shortfall is unevenly spread, with provinces such as Guangxi, Fujian, Yunnan and Sichuan seen as particularly vulnerable.

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    Anne Stevenson-Yang, co-founder of US-based activist investor J Capital, sees the woes afflicting LGFVs as a product of the inefficiency of Chinese state-owned actors.“The LGFVs took on debt at around 6 per cent and get returns on equity of maybe 1 per cent,” says Stevenson-Yang. “Most of them rely on subsidies from local governments. But now that local government revenue from land sales are down, a lot of the subsidies are just stopping.”The big question, she says, is “how are the LGFVs going to pay?”A fateful irony in China’s LGFV narrative is that it was these funding platforms that were seen as the country’s saviour just over a decade ago. In the aftermath of the 2008 global financial crisis, Beijing looked to local governments to reverse a precipitous slump in GDP growth. The LGFVs responded by launching an investment boom funded by the issuance of bonds that floated China’s economy off the rocks. Now, by contrast, it is the excesses of LGFVs — which are estimated to number around 10,000 across the whole country — that threaten to damage the economy. Global falloutAlthough the origins of China’s LGFV meltdown lie within the opaque recesses of China’s political economy, the fallout is likely to be of global significance.Local government frailties are combining with other structural headwinds to hobble the country’s dynamism. This year the country’s economic output will lag behind the rest of Asia for the first time since 1990, according to World Bank forecasts last month.The World Bank revised down its forecast for China’s gross domestic product growth to 2.8 per cent, compared with 8.1 per cent last year. By contrast, the outlook for the rest of east Asia and the Pacific is to grow at 5.3 per cent this year, up from 2.6 per cent last year.

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    The new reality for China represents a seismic shift in the contours of the global economy. In the decade from 2000 to 2009, China’s GDP growth averaged 10.4 per cent a year. This extraordinary performance abated during the decade from 2010 to 2019, but annual GDP still grew by an average of 7.7 per cent.If the anaemic performance forecast for China this year persists, the world will miss its most powerful locomotive for prosperity. In the years between 2013 and 2018, according to a study by the IMF, China contributed some 28 per cent of GDP growth worldwide — more than twice the share of the US. The biggest fall in Chinese cement production in at least two decades has dragged global output of the construction material into decline, demonstrating how a crisis in the country’s vast property sector is hitting other industries that rely on it for growth. According to data provided by the World Cement Association, global cement output fell 8 per cent year on year to 1.9bn tonnes in the first six months of 2022.Several structural impediments beyond the debt crisis are conspiring to reduce the country’s potential. A peaking population, twinned with a rapidly ageing society, are two among several other trends that look set to sap economic vigour over the medium term.A sense of how deeply such concerns are being felt within China is evident from the pessimism that is starting to infect multinational companies operating in the country and investors — both foreign and domestic — in its stock markets.The European Chamber of Commerce in China this month put out its “most dark [position] paper ever”, according to Jörg Wuttke, chamber president. The chamber warned that “European firms’ engagement [in China] can no longer be taken for granted” and added that China was quickly losing “its allure as an investment destination”.Authorities have made a series of announcements intended to support the property sector, but analysts say they do not represent a solution to China’s structural slowdown © Costfoto/Future Publishing/Getty ImagesThe chamber, which counts more than 1,700 corporate members, noted that Beijing’s “zero-Covid” policies, the country’s “debt crisis”, the unravelling of the real estate sector, demographic headwinds and stalling consumer spending were all contributing to a tougher operating environment for European companies.“The growing list of challenges is pushing many to reduce, localise and silo their China operations,” the EU position paper said. Among foreign portfolio investors, the enthusiasm for the Chinese stock market of a few years back has turned to dust. “I would say Chinese holdings will probably for an international money manager be at the lowest level in a decade,” says Andy Maynard, a trader at investment bank Chinese Renaissance in Hong Kong. “What was a darling from 2018 to 2021 has become the basket case, and the prices have reflected that,” he adds. “You can speak to big US-based hedge funds that are prolific in this part of the world and they don’t have a single position in China.”Structural slowdownOverall though, analysts say that Beijing retains considerable potential for policy responses to its economic problems. In recent days, authorities have unveiled a series of announcements intended to support the property sector, sparking a mini-rally for the shares of Hong Kong-listed Chinese real estate companies.Similarly, policymakers have issued a slew of special-project bonds this year to boost investment in infrastructure, using up an initial quota by June. Since then a total of Rmb2.2tn in extra infrastructure investment spending has been approved, according to Gavekal Dragonomics, a consultancy.But while such stimulus measures are helping to manage the property shock, says Thomas Gatley of Gavekal Dragonomics, they do not represent a solution to China’s structural slowdown. “The current state of the economy is not a stable equilibrium,” he says.Indeed, several analysts say, returning to the go-go growth of a decade ago no longer appears a priority for China. The leadership of Xi appears much more concerned with security and control than it does with wealth creation and economic growth, analysts say. As Diana Choyleva, chief economist at Enodo Economics, a consultancy, puts it: “Both the Chinese Communist party and the wider world need to come to terms with all the profound changes that flow from a Chinese economy growing at best at half the level of 5 per cent.”Additional reporting by Nian Liu and Maiqi Ding in Beijing

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    Ferguson bets on windfall from new US chip factories

    Plumbing and heating equipment supplier Ferguson is betting on a big windfall from new semiconductor factories in the US, as Washington unleashes grants for chipmakers in an effort to counter China’s influence.The Anglo-American group’s chief executive Kevin Murphy said demand for its products from chipmakers would compensate for declining sales to the residential sector as rising interest rates hit homebuilding activity.“The onshoring of chip manufacturing . . . those are large projects for us in everything from underground water transmission [to] fire protection,” he said. “There’s a good amount of megaprojects . . . that are good for the country, good for our business.”Ferguson is a major distributor of heating, ventilation, air conditioning equipment and industrial products and services.

    Kevin Murphy, Ferguson chief executive

    Murphy’s comments underline hopes that a drive to bring semiconductor manufacturing back to the US will provide broad benefits to the national economy. In recent decades, US companies became increasingly reliant on chipmakers in countries such as Taiwan, before supply chain disruptions during the Covid-19 pandemic led to severe shortages of the vital electronic components used in everything from cars to smartphones.In July, Congress passed a $280bn Chips and Science Act that included billions in grants for semiconductor manufacturers in the US after concerns mounted over China’s rise as a technology power and its aggression towards Taiwan.“The projects that we’re engaged in right now are multiyear projects that will provide good business opportunities for us as we go through the next several fiscal years,” said Murphy, whose company is based in the UK but generates about 95 per cent of its revenues in the US. Murphy pointed to a plant planned in Ohio by Intel and another in Texas being developed by Samsung as some of the major developments in the US that could benefit his company.Despite the expected boost from chipmakers, Murphy acknowledged that Ferguson could suffer a hit to income from the residential market, which is responsible for just over half of its revenue.“As you can imagine, with interest rates rising, there’s concern as to what new house construction might look like,” he said.

    But “we think that can be largely offset as we think about the non-residential side of our business”, he added, pointing to US investment in electric car and natural gas facilities as well as new semiconductor plants.Ferguson, a former FTSE 100 company, has increasingly shifted its focus to the US in recent years. In 2021, the group spun off its UK business before switching its primary listing from London to the New York Stock Exchange in May this year.The company reported a jump in revenues during the 12 months to July, buoyed by a string of acquisitions of US companies. Sales grew 25 per cent over the previous year to $28bn, while operating profits rose 44 per cent to $2.8bn. More

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    Russian oil price cap would save emerging markets billions, US says

    The US Treasury has estimated the G7’s plan to cap the price of Russian oil exports could yield $160bn in annual savings for the 50 largest emerging markets, as Washington insists the scheme it has championed will keep a lid on energy costs around the world. The analysis was developed ahead of the IMF and World Bank’s annual meetings next week, where high energy costs triggered by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine will take centre stage as one of the heaviest burdens on the global economy. At the same time, the Opec+ oil producers’ cartel is planning new cuts in supply at its meeting this week. The G7 approved plans for a price cap on purchases of Russian oil last month with an aim of cutting revenue for the Kremlin to wage war in Ukraine. Starting in December, it would allow western companies to service and insure Russian oil cargoes around the world, exempting them from EU and other western embargoes, as long as sales are made below the cap. Western allies still have to agree on the level at which the cap will be set. Wally Adeyemo, the deputy Treasury secretary, told CNBC last week it would be “well above” Russia’s cost of production in an effort to punish Moscow without spurring Russian oil companies to scale back supplies. However, there are still doubts and uncertainty in the oil market about the extent to which one of the most novel international economic policymaking experiments ever attempted will work in practice, what its effect will be on the market and how Russia will react. The US Treasury’s study — expected to be shared with external partners in the coming weeks — compares the impact on the global oil market of a functioning price cap plan for Russian oil with a scenario in which embargoes were in place without exemptions for shipments under a price cap. The Treasury declined to specify which price level would lead to $160bn in savings. “While there is significant uncertainty, a Treasury analysis finds that in aggregate, the price cap exception could save the 50 largest emerging market (EM) and low-income countries (LIC) about $160bn annually in spending on oil imports,” a Treasury official said. “This means that countries have a significant incentive to benefit from the price cap, including purchasers like China and India, and that all net oil importing EMs would benefit from lower oil prices,” the official added. According to a Treasury official, the Europe and Central Asia region is the most dependent on net oil and oil product imports, which account for 4.7 per cent of gross domestic product, or $55bn. In 16 emerging markets, ranging from Mali to Turkey, El Salvador and Thailand, net oil imports account for more than 5 per cent of GDP, the Treasury said. Washington is counting more on carrots than on sticks to convince governments and companies around the world to embrace the G7 plan, even if they do not formally sign to the coalition adopting the price cap. To date, a decline in Russian oil exports to Europe has been largely offset by shipments rerouted to customers such as China, India and Turkey. However, the International Energy Agency has forecast that Russian oil production will fall sharply once the EU embargo comes into full force — a risk that could drive up energy prices without a price cap, US officials say. “[The price cap] would stabilise world energy prices and from that aspect we [in the US] benefit, but we’re a net exporter of energy. The impact is far greater under any reasonable assumptions for emerging markets, which are just getting hammered right now,” a Treasury official said. “So from a geopolitical perspective, we just wanted to make some really just straightforward points about who wins and who loses from a massive shut-in in Russian oil,” the official added.

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    Making the poor poorer is a false economy

    When former US Treasury secretary Larry Summers likened the UK to a “submerging market” last week, I thought he was laying it on a bit thick. But in a busy food bank in south London on Friday, “submerging” felt like the right word.A queue of people stretched across the car park of a church to collect a parcel of free food and a hot meal. Once, the visitors here would have been mostly single men. But last week, there were toddlers running around and mums jiggling babies on their hips. “We’ve had people recently saying ‘can I have food that I don’t have to put in the fridge because I’ve turned the fridge off?’” says Kate Lott, project manager at the Living Well Bromley food bank. Others ask for food they don’t have to cook because they have turned the gas off, she says.The number of visits to this food bank has climbed from 530 adults with 183 dependants in August last year to 843 adults with 372 dependants this August. About 1,000 people came for hot meals in September, nearly double the number from a year ago. Many of these new visitors have never used a food bank before. According to Tamara Cooper, a volunteer, many are working people who can’t pay the rising cost of food and energy. She understands: she sometimes sits with the lights off to save money on her prepayment meter.Kwasi Kwarteng, the UK’s new chancellor, U-turned on Monday on his decision to cut the 45p rate of tax for the rich. But he still has a fiscal hole to fill. One option under discussion is to cut welfare spending by not lifting benefits in line with inflation. According to the Resolution Foundation think-tank, uprating working-age benefits by earnings rather than inflation next year would cost a typical low-income working family with two children more than £500 a year and save the Treasury £5bn. The UK does spend a lot on benefits for non-pensioners: the bill came to about 4.6 per cent of GDP in 2019/20, up from about 3 per cent in the 1970s. But spending has already been cut from about 5.7 per cent during the decade of austerity that followed the financial crisis. There comes a point where making the poor poorer becomes a false economy — and I think we have reached it.Families who become homeless have to be put up in expensive bed and breakfasts. People who become mentally or physically unwell add to the healthcare bill and drop out of the workforce. More than 640,000 or so working-age people have already left the labour market since the start of the pandemic. In a survey of the leaders of NHS trusts last week, 72 per cent said they had seen an increase in people presenting with mental health problems due to stress, debt and poverty. More than a quarter of trust leaders said they had set up food banks for their own staff.The better way to get tough on welfare spending would be to get tough on the causes of welfare spending. Roughly three-quarters of working-age benefits are spent in one of three ways: income top-ups for workers with low earnings; housing benefit to help people pay the rent; and disability, sickness and incapacity benefits for people who are unwell. In other words, the size of the welfare bill is the consequence of Britain’s deep-rooted problems with low pay, high housing costs and poor health. The dysfunctional housing market, in particular, stands out. The UK spends less on unemployment benefits than most other OECD countries, but more than any other OECD country on housing benefits-in-kind.These problems are not insurmountable. They require better community-based and preventive health services, more building of social housing, and higher business investment in workforce skills and productivity. The alternative is to cut benefit spending again and leave it to people to try to help each other through. But this is an economic shock that is reverberating far up the income ladder. People who are usually comfortably enough off to donate to others are now worried about their own energy bills and mortgage payments. The Living Well Bromley food bank has a shipping container in the car park which is usually full of donations. Now it is half empty. Two other local food banks in the area have warned they might have to close. Still, people give what they can. And Lott says it’s the people who have the least who give the most. “People will come in and say, ‘can I give you three pounds? I used to be a guest and I want to help.”[email protected] More