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    Investors dump global bond and equity funds in the week ended Sep.21

    Investors exited a net $7.32 billion of global bond funds, marking their biggest weekly net selling since Aug. 31, data from Refinitiv Lipper showed. GRAPHIC: Fund flows: Global equities bonds and money market https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/dwvkrxorjpm/Fund%20flows-%20Global%20equities%20bonds%20and%20money%20market.jpg The Federal Reserve raised its benchmark rate by 75 basis points on Wednesday, the third such rise in a row, and officials project rates hitting 4.4% this year, which was 100 bps higher than what the Fed had projected three months ago.”Sooner or later bond yields will peak, though timing this precisely is difficult. The market is currently expecting the terminal US fed funds rate to be reached by around March-June 2023,” said Bimal Patel, senior fund manager at Canada Life Asset Management.Global short- and medium-term bond funds saw their biggest weekly outflow in 11 weeks, amounting to a net $4.98 billion, while investors also exited a net $3.29 billion in high yield funds. GRAPHIC: Global bond fund flows in the week ended Sept. 21 https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/lbpgnkqgovq/Global%20bond%20fund%20flows%20in%20the%20week%20ended%20Sept%2021.jpg Meanwhile, global equity funds witnessed disposals worth $1.86 billion in a fifth straight week of net selling.Financials and consumer staples lost $1.55 billion and $687 million respectively in outflows, but utilities and tech both obtained about $300 million worth of inflows.”Energy, financials, and materials are still attractively valued when compared to the rest of the US equity market. Valuation multiples of these companies remains low, and they remain to be beneficiaries of the prolonged inflation and interest rate rising environment,” said Eugene Barbaneagra, portfolio manager at SEI. GRAPHIC: Fund flows: Global equity sector funds https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/zjpqkrxkopx/Fund%20flows-%20Global%20equity%20sector%20funds.jpg On the other hand, safer money market funds attracted investor interest as they obtained a net $28.23 billion, the biggest weekly inflow since July 6.Data for commodities funds showed precious metal funds remained out of favour for a 13th week with net disposals worth $474 million. Investors also exited energy funds of $60 million. An analysis of 24,559 emerging market funds showed investors sold $2.39 billion worth of equity funds, marking a 10th weekly outflow in a row, while also exiting $2.78 billion worth of bond funds. GRAPHIC: Fund flows: EM equities and bonds https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/xmpjoazoqvr/Fund%20flows-%20EM%20equities%20and%20bonds.jpg More

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    Hong Kong lowers buyer stress test requirement for mortgages

    The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) said it had told banks to lower the interest rate stress testing requirement to 200 basis points from 300 basis points, with immediate effect. Under the new requirement, the stress test aims to ensure borrowers have sufficient repayment capability if interest rates rise by 200 basis points. HKMA said in a statement that the new level is considered to be sufficiently prudent in terms of the effective risk management of banks’ property lending business.”At this stage, it has not been confirmed that the (Hong Kong) property market has entered a downward cycle,” an HKMA spokesperson said, adding that the decision is not related to countercyclical measures. The decision came after Hong Kong banks raised their best lending rate by 12.5 basis points on Thursday, the first rate hike in four years.”The relaxation is for supporting the market,” said Eric Tso, senior vice president of mReferral Mortgage Brokerage Services. “It will offset part of the impact from the interest rate hike yesterday and allow homebuyers to borrow more.” More

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    Gloomy business poll pushes euro to 20-year low against dollar

    The euro hit a fresh 20-year low against the dollar on Friday after a benchmark survey of companies in the eurozone showed business activity suffered its biggest contraction for 20 months, while price pressures rose at their sharpest pace since June. S&P Global’s flash eurozone composite purchasing managers’ index — a key gauge of business conditions — fell 0.7 points to 48.2, its lowest level since January 2021 and the third consecutive month below the crucial 50 mark that separates growth from contraction.The reading is the strongest evidence yet that the energy crisis caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has pushed the bloc into recession, along with sending inflation to record highs. Eurozone bond and share prices plunged while the euro fell 0.9 per cent against the dollar to 97.5 cents on Friday, its lowest level since October 2002. Germany’s benchmark 10-year yield rose above 2 per cent for the first time in 11 years, while the Dax-40 share index of blue-chip German companies fell 1.4 per cent to its lowest level for almost two years.The slowdown in activity underlines the challenge facing the region’s monetary policymakers, who are expected to continue raising borrowing costs to fight inflation in spite of the slowdown. “The stagflationary shock is real, and it is intensifying,” said Claus Vistesen, an economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics.European Central Bank has raised rates by 125 basis points to 0.75 per cent since the start of the summer and is expected to increase borrowing costs again at its October and December meetings. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is squeezing natural gas supplies to Europe, causing record eurozone inflation, eroding household spending and hitting industrial production. Deutsche Bank economists this week slashed their forecasts, saying the energy crisis had already caused the eurozone economy to start shrinking and predicting it would contract by a cumulative 3 per cent from the third quarter of this year to the second quarter of 2023.The PMI results were as expected by economists polled by Reuters — although Germany was weaker than France — underlining the challenges confronting the eurozone economy after businesses reported falling factory output, declining new orders, soaring energy prices and plummeting expectations.“The survey’s forward-looking indicators point to a steepening economic decline for the eurozone in the fourth quarter, adding to the likelihood of the region falling into recession,” said Chris Williamson, chief business economist at S&P Global. The 19-country bloc has done better than expected so far this year, growing 0.8 per cent in the second quarter thanks to a recovery in tourism. However, most economists think it is already slowing sharply with many of them warning of a recession this winter. The PMI survey painted a gloomy picture of business conditions at the end of the third quarter, with manufacturers reporting a fourth consecutive decline in factory output and “some evidence of energy market developments also limiting production capabilities”. Job growth was unchanged from August, when it slowed to a 17-month low.New orders for services business also fell at an increased rate as more consumers facing soaring energy and food costs stayed home to save money. Companies in all sectors reported the steepest increase in costs since June, which led to an acceleration in growth of prices charged for goods and services “as firms sought to protect margins”.“Services growth in the eurozone is now slowing markedly as well as inflation weighs further on consumer purchasing power,” said Katharina Koenz, an economist at Oxford Economics. “And although the risk of energy shortages over the winter has reduced somewhat, it remains a key risk to the outlook.”Supply chain constraints eased as delivery times lengthened at their slowest pace since October 2020. But Williamson said high inflation was “not only hitting demand but also limiting manufacturing production and service sector activity in some cases”. Some of Europe’s biggest energy users, from steel to chemical companies, are cutting back on production, and business leaders are warning that soaring prices risk eroding the region’s competitiveness.The PMI reading for Germany fell 1 point to 45.9, its lowest level since May 2020 shortly after the pandemic hit Europe, as a sharper than expected decline in the services index added to a continued fall in manufacturing. “Germany will suffer more than most over the coming quarters as high energy costs weigh on energy-intensive industry as well as household budgets,” said Jack Allen-Reynolds, an economist at Capital Economics.The French PMI reading rose 0.8 points to a two-month high of 51.2, confounding expectations for a decline, as activity was boosted by a rebound in services. More

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    FirstFT: US senators increase pressure on Apple

    Good morning. US senators have asked the intelligence community to examine the threat a potential deal between Apple and the Chinese chipmaker Yangtze Memory Technologies Co poses to national security, in an escalation of the political pressure being applied to the iPhone maker over the arrangement.Mark Warner, Democratic chair of the Senate intelligence committee, and the Republican vice-chair Marco Rubio wrote to director of national intelligence Avril Haines requesting a review just days after the Financial Times reported that Apple was considering buying memory chips from YMTC for the new iPhone 14.“We write to convey our extreme concern about the possibility that Apple Inc will soon procure 3D Nand memory chips from Yangtze Memory Technologies Co,” the senators said. “Such a decision would introduce significant privacy and security vulnerabilities to the global digital supply chain that Apple helps shape given YMTC’s extensive, but often opaque, ties to the Chinese Communist party.”Apple recently told the FT that it was “evaluating” sourcing from YMTC for some iPhones in China. The US tech company yesterday declined to comment on the letter to Haines, which was also signed by Democratic Senate majority leader Chuck Schumer and John Cornyn, a Texas Republican.Thanks for all the responses to yesterday’s question about the Federal Reserve’s interest rate rises. Please keep them coming and I may feature them in a future edition of FirstFT Americas. Here is the rest of the day’s news — GordonFive more stories in the news1. UK chancellor tax cuts in ‘growth’ budget In his first financial statement as chancellor, Kwasi Kwarteng cut the UK’s top rate of tax as part of a package of measures designed to boost economic growth. The cost of borrowing for the UK government soared following the announcement and the pound slid to a fresh 37-year low against the dollar. This is a developing story. For updates go to our live blog.

    Kwasi Kwarteng delivers his mini-Budget © Parliament TV

    2. Hong Kong scraps quarantine measures Hong Kong is to ditch its stringent hotel quarantine measures for incoming travellers which have been in place for two and a half years and eroded the city’s status as a financial hub. John Lee, the city’s chief executive, said the quarantine requirement would be eliminated from Monday, but travellers would be subject to testing and monitoring for three days after landing.3. Sergei Lavrov trades barbs with western officials at UN Security Council Russia’s foreign minister faced off against western powers at the UN Security Council yesterday, defending the invasion of Ukraine after his US counterpart said Moscow had “shredded” international norms. Meanwhile, hawkish EU states such as Poland and the Baltic countries are pushing for tougher sanctions on Moscow in response to this week’s escalation of tensions by Vladimir Putin.‘Everyone will get snatched off the street’: The Financial Times spoke with people who had been called up to the Russian army, feared they soon would be or had close relatives facing conscription. 4. Boeing to pay $200mn penalty over misleading investors about 737 Max The aerospace manufacturer and its former chief executive Dennis Muilenburg agreed to pay millions of dollars to settle charges from the US Securities and Exchange Commission of misleading investors about two deadly crashes of its 737 Max aircraft.5. Death toll rises to 26 as Iran cracks down on protests The number of people who have died in protests in Iran following the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini has risen to 26, according to AP which cited Iranian state television. Amini died a week ago after being arrested by the morality police for allegedly violating the country’s Islamic dress code. Yesterday the US Treasury imposed sanctions on the morality police, saying it was responsible for Amini’s death.Did you keep up with the news this week? Take our quiz. The days aheadUS manufacturing and services Readings on activity in the US manufacturing and services sectors are expected to remain at relatively subdued levels, according to reports due from S&P Global. The “flash” purchasing managers’ index for the manufacturing sector is forecast to drop to 51.1 in September from a final reading of 51.5 in August. Readings above 50 mean the sector is expanding. S&P Global’s “flash” PMI for the services sector is expected to rise to 45 in September from 43.7 last month.Canada retail sales Further clues about the domestic economy and the health of the Canadian consumer should be on show in the latest retail sales data. Sales are expected to have declined in July for the first time in seven months, with economists polled by Refinitiv predicting a 2 per cent fall on a monthly basis. Federal Reserve The US Federal Reserve board will consider the real economic impact of its decisions during its latest “Fed listens” session. The event will host a variety of stakeholders and explore how the economy has been changed by the Covid-19 pandemic and what challenges lie ahead as the country transitions to a post-pandemic economy. Russian-occupied Ukraine referendums Voting in what Nato has decried as “sham referendums” begins in four eastern and southern regions of Ukraine. The Moscow-controlled regions of the Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republics as well as Kherson and parts of Zaporizhzhia province will vote on whether to join Russia in the hastily arranged votes that begin today and finish on Tuesday.Italy general election Italy’s would-be prime minister Giorgia Meloni pledged to restore Italians’ “pride” and deliver five years of strong government in a rare shared appearance last night with her rightwing partners before Sunday’s general election. Subscribers can sign up to a virtual briefing to be held on Tuesday with FT journalists on the election result. Join the Financial Times, in collaboration with Ignites and FundFire, on September 28-29 for our Future of Asset Management North America summit at the Westin Times Square and online. Connect and network with North America’s leading asset and wealth management firms including Oaktree Capital Management, Russell Investments, JPMorgan, and more to discover the strategies that will differentiate the asset managers of tomorrow. Reserve your pass today.What else we’re reading Why business leaders should not become cult figures We are fascinated by corporate leadership. But does that obsession come at the expense of corporate governance, ensuring checks on any individual’s power and different opinions around the boardroom table? Adulated chief executives risk getting caught up in money, fame and power.

    Andrew Edgecliffe-Johnson: ‘Structures are needed that prevent CEOs from believing the sycophants or staying too long’ © FT montage/Dreamstime/AFP/Getty Images

    How JPMorgan’s plan to kill credit cards split the bank JPMorgan is developing a new challenge to credit cards. But the “pay-by-bank” project has divided powerful interest groups within the bank, forcing chief executive Jamie Dimon to issue a diktat to his squabbling executives.How much money will actually make you happy? We all have fantasies about how much we would need to make ourselves satisfied — but it doesn’t have to be a fortune. The real problem is that being a multibillionaire would change your relationship with every other human being. Tim Harford considers how much anyone truly needs.Why trade couldn’t buy peace In recent decades, the near-consensus of policymakers and business leaders has been that peace was the natural condition of the developed world and that globalisation was immune from geopolitical risk. But as the war in Ukraine and tensions over Taiwan have shown, John Plender writes, they were wrong. The five things the tech bubble got right As the tech entrepreneur Paul Graham wrote in the aftermath of the first dotcom crash, stock market investors were right about the direction of travel even if they were wrong about the speed of the journey. John Thornhill revisits that idea as investors survey the wreckage of special purpose acquisition companies.BooksThe six titles up for the FT’s 2022 Business Book of the Year Award tackle “some of the toughest and most important issues facing global capitalism”, said Roula Khalaf, FT editor and chair of judges. See which titles made the shortlist. More

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    Italian expats report irregularities with mail-in ballots

    Good morning and welcome to Europe Express.Estonia may be leading the way in terms of allowing its citizens to vote online but Italy is still firmly anchored in the 20th century and using postal services to mail ballots for its expats to fill in ahead of the Sunday election. We’ll explore some of the issues and how significant they may turn out to be. Meanwhile in Brussels, the European Commission is set to start its first round of so-called confessionals today, consulting EU ambassadors on the next round of Russia sanctions before tabling the latest draft legal text. But don’t expect a series of Catholic-style one-on-ones, these meetings will be held in groups of 4-5 ambassadors and commission officials, throughout the weekend.The EU-Canada trade deal is now five years old (though not all member states have ratified it) and we’ll bring you up to speed with the effects of the pact.And a bit of housekeeping: Tony Barber is off this week, leaving tomorrow’s Europe Express Weekend in the competent hands of FT Brussels bureau chief Sam Fleming.Postal vote irregularitiesMany of Italy’s 5mn citizens living abroad have reported serious issues with the postal vote system ahead of Sunday’s election, writes Marianna Giusti in London.Missing mail-in ballots, attempted voter fraud, unresponsive consulates and even postal votes received with wrong instructions are among the most frequent complaints about the system, which was introduced in 2001 and is available in 200 countries across five continents but which hasn’t been upgraded to the digital age.The UK alone is home to more than 400,000 Italians. Jamil De Dominicis, 32, from Trieste, never received his ballot in the post, and had to queue for one-and-a-half hours at the Italian consulate in London on Wednesday in order to get his duplicate ballot and cast it. “There must have been at least 50 people in the queue who had the same problem as me,” he told Europe Express. Adding to the difficulties was the timetable for picking up the duplicates at the consulate, with appointments available only when expats were at work. “Voting is a democratic process which should be facilitated,” De Dominicis says of his experience, “it shouldn’t be so hard.”In Spain, postal ballots were delivered with the wrong instructions, referring to a June referendum, and the correct instructions never arrived. Votes with wrong instructions were also reported in Washington, where the Italian consulate issued a formal apology in a letter, inviting voters to follow online instructions instead.If some found it hard to cast their ballot abroad, others were offered opportunities to post more than one. In Brazil, home to more than half-a-million Italians, a Belo Horizonte-based teacher was offered eight postal votes by fellow Brazilian-Italians who acquired their citizenship through ancestry and were not interested in participating in the election. “If I wanted, I could obtain dozens of postal votes,” the teacher told Italian newspaper La Repubblica. “All I need to do is ask.” Ying Zhang, 28, from Veneto, says she received two ballots at her London home that were addressed to former tenants. “Nobody has contacted us to claim them,” she says, “anyone could cast those.”In the 2018 elections, postal votes received from South America in favour of the centre-left PD Democratic party candidate Adriano Cario were reported to carry the same calligraphy. In December 2021, Cario lost his senate seat after handwriting analysis revealed the votes had been cast by the same person.While concerns about the integrity of postal votes abroad have been raised by candidates across the political spectrum, who have deemed them unconstitutional, major players such as Giorgia Meloni, Enrico Letta and Silvio Berlusconi have remained focused on their campaigns. But the so-called fuorisede votes, a category which includes both residents abroad and Italian citizens who cast their vote in a different jurisdiction than their domicile, make up roughly 10 per cent of total electors — a significant proportion which could undermine the authenticity of Sunday’s result.Chart du jour: Counterintuitive bankingThe Turkish lira plummeted yesterday after the country’s central bank cut interest rates for the second month running despite rampant inflation that exceeded 80 per cent in August, writes Laura Pitel in Ankara.Canadian love-festThe EU-Canada Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (Ceta) — one of the few deals the EU has been able to implement recently — came into force provisionally five years ago this week, writes Andy Bounds in Brussels.Most of its trade elements apply even though 11 of the 27 member states have not yet ratified it because of food safety and environmental concerns. The Walloon regional parliament in Belgium held up Ceta’s signing for several months and the country has still yet to ratify. The European Commission has therefore been keen to trumpet its benefits, even staging a glitzy anniversary event at a central Brussels hotel on Wednesday with Canadian ambassador to the EU, Ailish Campbell. Meanwhile commission president Ursula von der Leyen and Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau found time to celebrate it together at the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York. Businesses had saved a combined €890mn in tariffs since Ceta took effect and bilateral trade has hit €60bn, commission officials said.Comparing the four years before Ceta with the first four years after, EU exports to Canada grew 22 per cent, double the rate with the rest of the world. They sustain 700,000 jobs — an increase of 75,000. Given the agriculture sector’s concerns about the deal, commission officials were keen to talk up its successes: the EU exports more beef to Canada than its vast prairies send to the EU. Brussels has banned meat from hormone-fed animals in Canada and cheese producers, especially in Italy and France, have also done well. (Neither Rome nor Paris has ratified the deal.)Sabine Weyand, director-general of the trade directorate-general, told the event that NGOs and others attacking the deal had not read the safeguards it contained. “If you criticise something, criticise what is there.”She said the geopolitical situation had changed the debate somewhat. The Netherlands recently ratified Ceta after legislators there said the EU needed allies and resilient supply chains following the war in Ukraine. “We are seeing a new dynamism [in ratifying],” she said. Canada’s wheat crop would more than make up for the deficit in Ukraine this year, said Michael Scannell, deputy director-general at the commission’s agriculture department. And Canada had sold the EU fertiliser ingredients such as potash to replace lost supplies from Belarus and Russia.A deal with democratic, high-income Canada is one thing. The next deals the EU wants to submit for ratification, however, apart from New Zealand, are with Mexico and Chile — and they have already been held up by concerns over cheap agricultural imports.“They are frustrated with us. They will be the true test of whether we are serious about global trade,” said an EU diplomat. What to watch today So-called referendums start in Ukraine’s regions occupied by RussiaCommission meets EU ambassadors for consultations on Russia sanctionsGerman Chancellor Olaf Scholz receives Moldovan President Maia Sandu in BerlinSmart readsEPC, what? With invitations sent out yesterday to 17 non-EU countries to come to Prague for the inaugural European Political Community summit, Bruegel think-tank looks at what could give substance to this new format, if it aspires to be more than a one-off gathering. Caucasus tensions: Marie Dumoulin from the European Council on Foreign Relations looks at the renewed hostilities between Armenia and Azerbaijan and the EU’s shortcomings in brokering a peace deal both sides adhere to. More

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    Energy crisis leaves Germany’s toilet paper makers struggling to clean up

    Making a single 2-metre-wide “mother roll” of toilet paper at Germany’s Essity plant in Mainz-Kostheim, where the Main river meets the Rhine, uses 700 kilowatt-hours of natural gas — enough to heat a family home for several weeks during the winter. With energy costs surging and fears of power shortages mounting, Essity has had to raise prices and switch to other sources of fuel. Germany’s energy crisis has placed producers of toilet paper under intense pressure. Some have already gone under or cut production, and economists fear the broader impact on industry and growth.“From what we hear, this crisis is likely to be more severe for manufacturing industries than Covid was,” said Carsten Rolle, head of energy and climate policy at the BDI business association. The war in Ukraine has led Russia to close Nord Stream 1, a pipeline that runs under the Baltic Sea to the country and is one of the main sources of Europe’s gas. Since the invasion began, prices have soared, sending eurozone inflation to a record high. Fears of rationing abound, particularly if this winter is a cold one. “The lifeline of industry is energy, and if energy costs are not sustainable, companies and people cannot afford it anymore,” said Henrik Follmann, chief executive of Follmann Chemie, his family’s chemicals company that supplies paper manufacturers. “At [the current] price level, it will mean an automatic deindustrialisation for Germany,” he said, adding that his company’s main factory in Minden had already stopped manufacturing at weekends, after doing so for 40 years, because it was no longer economically viable.

    Hakle, one of Germany’s best-known toilet paper brands, has already filed for insolvency © picture alliance/dpa

    A survey conducted by the German Chambers of Industry and Commerce, the DIHK, in July found that 16 per cent of the 3,500 companies polled were scaling back production or pausing operations. Reinhold von Eben-Worlée, president of Die Familienunternehmer, an association representing German family businesses, said: “It is hitting companies of all sizes from the smallest bakery on the street corner to the biggest companies like BASF.”The impact of the energy crisis on industry has added to fears that what was once the eurozone’s economic powerhouse will soon enter a recession. Economists have slashed their forecasts for Europe’s largest economy; Deutsche Bank now predicts it will shrink 3.5 per cent next year.Earlier this month, chancellor Olaf Scholz announced a €65bn relief package funded by a windfall tax on electricity producers to help soften the blow. The package includes one-off payments to help households with energy bills, as well as an extension of the €5bn aid package for energy-intensive companies, first introduced in July. In August, Scholz also announced a cut in value added tax on gas sales from 19 per cent to 7 per cent.But those in the paper industry say even with the support, plants will struggle. One of Germany’s best-known toilet paper brands, the Düsseldorf-based Hakle, has already filed for insolvency, blaming soaring energy prices, high pulp prices, transport costs and the strength of the dollar. By the time Hakle had negotiated a new price with its retail partners to absorb its higher overheads, prices had risen again. “It pressed us too much and we were losing too much money,” said Volker Jung, managing director of Hakle. “I don’t think the wave of insolvencies can be stopped unless we have an [energy price] cap.”Energy costs have risen to the extent that Essity believed it had no alternative but to raise the cost of products such as Lotus toilet roll, Libero nappies and Bodyform sanitary towels by as much as 18 per cent. Essity had already secured cheaper prices for 70 per cent of its natural gas and electricity, its chief executive Magnus Groth said. Essity is also rethinking its reliance on natural gas and has received permits to adapt its plants to alternative fuels. In Mainz-Kostheim, pulp is squeezed and rolled before being placed in a giant, natural gas-guzzling heating cylinder and then stretched. By early next year, the cylinder, known as the Yankee dryer — supposedly after a Dutchman called Yonke who helped design it — could run with liquefied natural gas, which can be imported from the US and Qatar.

    An unloading station and new pipes that can accommodate LNG as well as hydrogen, which has a volume three times larger than natural gas, have already been laid and will feed both the paper machine and the site’s power plant. The hydrogen for the factory will be sourced from a plant in Mainz, powered by wind turbines.Even with the shift to alternative energy sources, the industry remains concerned that rationing could force companies to pick which production lines are system critical. Gregor Geiger, spokesperson for Die Papierindustrie, said: “It might not be necessary to produce chocolate cookie packaging, but it will be necessary to produce toilet paper.”

    Video: How Putin held Europe hostage over energy | FT Energy Source More

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    Why trade couldn’t buy peace

    “The story of the human race is war,” said Winston Churchill. “Except for brief and precarious interludes, there has never been peace in the world; and before history began, murderous strife was universal and unending.” In recent decades, policymakers and business leaders who attended gatherings at Davos and had the ears of western leaders were inclined to think otherwise. After the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, a near-consensus prevailed among them that peace was the natural condition of the developed world and that globalisation was immune from geopolitical risk.This confidence extended to a belief that generating prosperity through trade was conducive to democracy in developing countries — a notion that played an important part in the west’s decision to welcome China into the global economy and grant it membership of the World Trade Organization in 2001. There is, of course, a superficial plausibility in a logic that echoes Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar, who declared “Let me have men about me that are fat” because he feared the “lean and hungry look” of the murderous Cassius. The extraordinary post-cold war climate of optimistic liberal internationalism was accompanied by notable complacency among central bankers and mainstream economists, who trumpeted a decline in macroeconomic volatility that they dubbed the “Great Moderation”. There followed the great financial crisis of 2007-09.Now war in Ukraine and strategic competition over Taiwan with an enduringly undemocratic China have given a new edge to Churchill’s Hobbesian observation — all the more so since Vladimir Putin’s announcement this week of a partial mobilisation of reserves, together with hints that Russia might now deploy nuclear weapons. And then there is the possibility that Xi Jinping’s increasingly assertive China could inflict further damage on western industrialists and investors. The question is: how did the developed world sleepwalk into this mercantile trap?

    The remains of a missile on a roadside near Balakliia, a town in Kharkiv province that was recently recaptured by Ukrainian forces following the retreat of Russian troops © AFP via Getty Images

    Taiwanese tech billionaire Robert Tsao, who recently pledged $100mn to strengthen Taiwan’s defences © Reuters

    John Maynard Keynes famously remarked, in his General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money: “The ideas of economists and political philosophers, both when they are right and when they are wrong, are more powerful than is commonly understood. Indeed the world is ruled by little else.” The big idea behind western capitalism’s growing economic interdependence with authoritarian, nuclear-armed bedfellows is one usually attributed to the French enlightenment thinker Montesquieu, best known for his advocacy of the separation of powers incorporated in the US constitution. In De l’Esprit des Lois, published in 1748, he claimed: “The natural effect of commerce is to bring peace. Two nations that negotiate between themselves become reciprocally dependent, if one has an interest in buying and the other in selling.”This economic brand of liberal internationalism, which was shared by such thinkers as Adam Smith, Voltaire and Spinoza, reached its apogee in the first great period of globalisation that lasted from the 19th into the early 20th century. John Stuart Mill believed commerce was making war obsolete, while the pacifist and anti-imperialist Richard Cobden, campaigner for the repeal of the Corn Laws, declared: “I see in the free-trade principle that which shall act on the moral world as the principle of gravitation in the universe — drawing men together, thrusting aside the antagonism of race and creed and language, and uniting us in the bonds of eternal peace.”

    The seminal text of this idealist, liberal tendency was a book published in 1910 called The Great Illusion, by the British journalist and politician Norman Angell. Its theme was the futility of war in conditions of economic interdependence. Angell argued that the gains of victory were always outweighed by the costs. Then came the assassination in 1914 of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria by the Bosnian Serb student Gavrilo Princip. This and the ensuing great war dealt a catastrophic blow to liberal economic internationalism. It demonstrated precisely that nationalism and tribal instinct can trump economic interest.The war also exposed the failure of such thinkers to understand the European balance-of-power system. This was inherently unstable because war was the ultimate mechanism for addressing any power disequilibrium. In the first half of the 20th century, disequilibrium occurred because Germany, after unification in 1871, was too big and assertive to be contained by balance-of-power coalitions within Europe. It took interventions by the US and the Soviet Union to put an end to its hegemonic ambitions.

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    The curious thing is that the devastation wrought in two world wars did not prove fatal for Montesquieu’s nostrum. In proposing the establishment of the European Coal and Steel Community in 1950, French foreign minister Robert Schuman declared that he wanted a process of European economic integration to “make war not only unthinkable but materially impossible”. That process, aimed at preventing further war between France and Germany and cementing a broader peace across Europe, paved the way for the EU.Today, Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, and fellow members of the Brussels elite like to refer to the EU as a peace project. This is the great half-truth of the postwar settlement. The reason peace has prevailed in Europe — the Balkans apart — is, first, that after losing two catastrophic world wars Germany was never going to adopt a third-time-lucky stance and send the tanks rolling outwards. France and Germany were anyway united after 1945 by a common enemy in the shape of the Soviet Union. Nuclear weapons added a further constraint on military aggression. And if Europe was protected from external threats it was thanks to the US security guarantee embodied in Nato, not the EU. A more fundamental point is that wealth in modern economies, which relates more to people than natural endowments, is much harder to steal through force than was the case with agricultural and early industrial societies. The decline in the value of disputed territory relative to technological innovation means that the proceeds of resource theft via conquest are increasingly threadbare — a point indicating that Angell’s thinking was not entirely without substance, even if its predictive power was nugatory. It also highlights that hacking government computer systems and stealing corporate intellectual property are low-cost alternatives to warfare.Indeed, globalisation itself may have reduced the spoils of territorial conquest by making it easier to acquire resources via markets rather than the use of force. Had there been a global energy market in 1941, Japan might not have felt a need to attack Pearl Harbor in a preventive action designed to secure access to energy and natural resources in the Pacific region.

    Big European powers no longer want to fight for territory, still less to bear the costs of acquiring subject populations. Resource-based conflict is now largely confined to developing or downright poor countries. As for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, it looks like an anachronistic throwback. Putin’s motivation appears primarily concerned with destroying an independent Ukrainian state and rebuilding a Russian empire, not economic plunder. The success of the Ukrainian counter-offensive has highlighted the unexpectedly high cost of his imperial ambitions.The genius of Schuman and the founding fathers of what became the EU was rather that they established a reconciliation process in a continent where history provided grounds for extreme mistrust. That mistrust has been ameliorated by institutional checks and balances together with international co-operation and shared sovereignty.Yet Europe remains a continent in which it can be convenient to believe in commerce as a substitute for foreign policy, particularly in the case of Germany. The country makes a striking case study on the trade and peace thesis, given its chronic export dependency and extensive overseas investments. Understandably, in the light of history, postwar German politicians have not wished to play a foreign policy role commensurate with Germany’s size in the world economy. They have cloaked themselves in the mantle of the EU. Under chancellors Gerhard Schröder and Angela Merkel, the country pursued a policy of Wandel durch Handel, or “change through trade”. This led to extreme energy dependence on Russia. It was, in effect, an outgrowth of Ostpolitik, the policy of engagement with the Soviet Union pursued by chancellor Willy Brandt in the 1960s and 1970s. The snag is that trade brought the wrong sort of change. By waving a green flag to the Nord Stream 2 Russia-to-Germany gas pipeline after Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014, Germany sent a signal to Putin that he could probably invade Ukraine with impunity. It pursued a similar “change through trade” policy towards China, sharing the US assumption that integrating China into the global economy would make it more politically liberal. Yet China failed to oblige western expectations. The two states now find themselves at odds over Hong Kong, Taiwan and the South China Sea. This sits uncomfortably with German industry’s huge investment in China, especially in the motor industry. More than a third of total sales of Volkswagen, BMW and Mercedes-Benz take place there. VW is estimated to rely on the country for at least half of its annual net profits.This entails a marked geopolitical vulnerability. And as VW’s recently fired chief executive Herbert Diess remarked last year: “China probably doesn’t need VW but VW needs China a lot.” Rafał Ulatowski, a foreign policy specialist at the University of Warsaw, argues that Germany’s Indo-Pacific strategy in recent years shows that economic ties do not determine the behaviour of states. While in the short term, close economic relationships may have a moderating effect on a state’s behaviour, he adds, in the long run strategic interests prevail.Another point overlooked by liberal internationalists is one made by Keynes in the interwar period as he retreated from his earlier liberalism. He worried that economic interdependence could increase the scope for friction between countries, even to the point of provoking war. Interestingly, economic relations within the eurozone often resemble war by other means. Germany looks to its eurozone partners (and other foreigners) to bridge the huge gap between what it produces and what it consumes, which is reflected in an astonishing current account surplus that was running at 7 per cent of gross domestic product at the start of the pandemic. This surplus is the counterpart of an excess of German savings over investment. Those savings were channelled into financing balance of payments deficits in southern Europe before the eurozone debt crisis of 2009-12.

    German export dependency has often been a drag on the eurozone economy but, far from being grateful to the countries running counterpart deficits, Germany berated them in the eurozone debt crisis for supposedly profligate fiscal policies, while helping inflict savage shrinkage on the Greek economy and austerity more generally. In effect, argues Michael Pettis of Peking university, these peripheral countries absorbed the shortfall in German demand by increasing their unemployment and relaying excess German savings into investment booms that resulted in serious misallocations of capital.What was striking about the second great period of globalisation was its much greater intensity than in the first episode before 1914. This was reflected in the larger number of countries participating in the global trading system, very complex cross-border industrial supply chains and the frenetic internationalisation of finance. It was all hugely successful in increasing global welfare. In a recent blog, the IMF’s Kristalina Georgieva, Gita Gopinath and Ceyla Pazarbasioglu say the forces of integration “boosted productivity and living standards, tripling the size of the global economy and lifting 1.3bn people out of extreme poverty”.But these successes, they add, came at the cost of widening inequalities and social dislocation in many countries. By creating losers as well as winners, globalisation thus made for a backlash. Populist politicians, most notably Donald Trump, sought an answer in welfare-reducing trade wars with China, among others.The second great globalisation also tended to confirm Keynes’s misgivings about trade because its sheer intensity increased the potential for weaponising trade and financial relations. The western sanctions in response to Putin’s invasion of Ukraine were unprecedented in their ferocity, covering not only companies, banks and Putin’s crony oligarchs, but also squeezing Russia out of the dollar-based global financial system. This was done by freezing much of Russia’s war chest of $600bn of reserves. Several Russian commercial banks have been excluded from the Swift messaging system for cross-border payments.Russian vulnerability is apparent in the World Bank’s mid-year forecast that by the end of 2022 Russia’s real gross domestic product will be 8.9 per cent lower. What does this all mean for the world? The Russian economy is not globally significant, though individual sectors such as oil and gas do matter. The big worry is simply that we face what the IMF authors quoted earlier call a potential “confluence of calamities”, including Ukraine and the pandemic, which pose a sharply increased risk of geoeconomic fragmentation. Since the war started, IMF monitoring indicates that about 30 countries have restricted trade in food, energy and other key commodities. At another level, the risk is that strategic competition between the US and China could lead to the division of the world into US-centric and China-centric blocs. Eddy Bekkers, a research economist at the World Trade Organization, and Carlos Góes of the University of California, San Diego, estimate that the projected welfare losses for the global economy of such a decoupling could be drastic — as large as 12 per cent in some regions — and would be largest in lower-income regions as they would benefit less from technology spillovers from richer areas.This is a world in which the need for resilience in the face of hard geopolitical realities will impose heavy costs on business, especially in relation to supply chains. Multinationals’ manufacturing operations around the world are being shifted from potentially hostile to more friendly but more expensive countries. Economic efficiency will be impaired. People and businesses will also face new transaction costs if countries develop parallel, disconnected payments systems to mitigate the risk of economic sanctions.George Magnus, an associate at Oxford university’s China Centre, has long warned of the risks of closer western engagement with China and argues that encouraging its economic rise has manifestly not made it less threatening. “The upshot of all this,” he says, “will not be so much a collapse in world trade but a significant stall in growth — beyond what’s been going on anyway — and, importantly, a shift in patterns. While China’s overall size and role in world trade is unlikely to change soon and some things cannot change quickly, I suspect all the rhetoric about China being the engine of global exports and growth is pretty much over.” What is clear is that the high tide of the second great globalisation has passed. While the prospect might not be quite as bleak as in Churchill’s Hobbesian vision, the world is undoubtedly a more dangerous place than it was before the confluence of calamities. There can be no denying that economically liberal internationalism has, at least in aggregate, enhanced global welfare. But it has once again delivered a very disappointing political outcome.John Plender is an FT columnist. Illustrations by Bill Butcher. Data visualisation by Keith FrayFollow @ftweekend on Twitter to find out about our latest stories first More

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    Poorer nations face rising debt servicing costs in 2024 – report

    The Vulnerable Group of Twenty (V20) – a group of 55 economies exposed to the fallout from climate change – expect debt service payments to rise to $69 billion by 2024 – the highest level in the current decade, according to calculations from the V20 and the Boston University Global Development Policy Centre. Debt service payments in 2022 are at $61.5 billion and are set to be a touch above that in 2023, the authors said.Emerging market and developing countries (EMDs) are struggling with the COVID-19 pandemic, Russia’s war in Ukraine, the climate crisis and interest rate increases in advanced economies, wrote Luma Ramos in the report published on Friday. A number of debt relief schemes for the world’s poorest nations were launched after the pandemic roiled global financial markets and hammered economies around the world.However, progress has been slow and some of the schemes – such as the Debt Service Suspension Initiative (DSSI) – have expired. “Without debt relief and other complementary measures such as grants, V20 countries will postpone their ability to reap the benefits of climate investments, such as improved resilience and enhanced power generation through renewables,” the report added.Adding to the complexity was a change in creditor structure across the $686.3 billion in external public debt owed by V20 nations. Private creditors were now the biggest group, holding over a third of the debt while the World Bank and other multilateral institutions held a fifth each, the report found. V20 nations owed 7% of the total to China, while 13% was owed to Paris Club wealthy creditor nations.The authors also urged the International Monetary Fund to upgrade its Debt Sustainability Analysis to account for climate risks faced by vulnerable nations.”Given that climate impacts are increasing the cost of capital increase for vulnerable countries, the close association between climate change and debt sustainability needs to be captured and should inform the discussion on the countries needing debt relief,” the report found.The V20 economies include Barbados, Cambodia, Costa Rica, Ethiopia, Honduras, Lebanon, Morocco, Nepal, the Philippines, Rwanda, Senegal, Sudan, Tanzania, Tunisia, Tuvalu and Vietnam. More