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    Analysis-Trudeau foe attacks Bank of Canada in party leadership bid

    OTTAWA (Reuters) – The front-runner to head Canada’s Conservatives and likely challenger to Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is staging a rare series of attacks on the central bank as inflation soars, in a strategy to win party leadership that could hurt his chances in a general election.Since February, Pierre Poilievre, a bespectacled 42-year-old suburban Ottawa lawmaker dubbed “Skippy” for his youthful enthusiasm, has marched ahead in the Conservative leadership race by tapping into angst over pandemic restrictions and vaccine mandates.Instead of targeting any of his five opponents in the leadership race, Poilievre (poh-LEE-ev) has made his attack of the central bank a cornerstone of his campaign as inflation surges to a three-decade high.But his threat last week to fire Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem if he wins a national election drew criticism from both inside and outside the party.Former Bank of Canada Governor David Dodge said Poilievre’s onslaught may win him Conservative leadership but would not help him become prime minister.”Is (Poilievre) damaging the central bank? I don’t think so,” Dodge told Reuters. “Is he damaging himself as a potential prime minister? Absolutely.”A minister in former Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s government, Poilievre is tapping into Canada’s populist right by blaming “elites” and “gatekeepers” for high living costs while pledging to make Canada “the freest country on earth.”While economists credit Bank of Canada’s record-low interest rates and aggressive bond-buying program for keeping the economy afloat during pandemic lockdowns, Poilievre says the central bank has become “Trudeau’s ATM” and blames the policies for hot inflation.The bank has ended its bond-buying program and is in the process of raising rates to cool what it calls an “overheating” economy.Poilievre declined to be interviewed for this story. The party contest will end with a vote in September, and the next federal election is due in 2025.Among Conservative voters, 56.5% say they prefer Poilievre compared to 14% for centrist Jean Charest, his closest rival, according to an Ekos Research poll this month. TRUMP POPULISTS The attacks come at an awkward moment for the bank, and both Macklem and Senior Deputy Governor Carolyn Rogers (NYSE:ROG) have made rare concessions this month, saying high prices may be undermining public trust in the institution. Bank of Canada’s main mandate is to control inflation.Frank Graves, president of pollster Ekos Research, said Poilievre “is nurturing exactly the same forces that (former U.S. President Donald) Trump nurtured.” Graves calls this voter pool “ordered populists” and says they share the same values on both sides of the border, including a “deep institutional mistrust.”In February, when protesters railed against vaccine mandates and COVID-19 restrictions, paralyzing Ottawa for three weeks, Poilievre served them coffee and echoed their rage in parliament.Similar to U.S. Senator Rand Paul’s past push to audit the Federal Reserve Board, Poilievre wants the Bank of Canada bond-buying program to be audited.Derek Holt, head of capital markets economics at Scotiabank, said he viewed Poilievre’s attacks “as political rhetoric with low probability of policy changes.”Politicians have taken aim at the Bank of Canada in the past, once in the late 1950s and early 60s, which ended with the bank’s policy-setting independence being enshrined in law, and again in the 1990s by former Liberal Jean Chretien.Trudeau is defending the bank.”Canada has one of the most respected central banks in the world, and it is so because of its independence from political actors and political interference,” Trudeau told Reuters in an exclusive interview this month.Another Poilievre promise is to make Canada the “blockchain capital of the world,” saying alternative currencies like bitcoin will “let Canadians opt out of inflation.””That’s total nonsense,” Dodge said. “There is a global economic system … and you can’t sort of stand totally aside from that system.” More

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    German Chancellor Scholz's SPD party faces test in key state vote

    BERLIN (Reuters) -Germans went to the polls in Germany’s most populous state on Sunday in a vote that poses an early test for Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s Social Democrats five months after he took office with a domestic policy focus that was quickly eclipsed by the Ukraine conflict. The centre-left Social Democrats (SPD) have dominated North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW) — home to more than a fifth of Germany’s population and to the rust-belt Ruhr region — for most of the past half century.But the party lost to former Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservatives (CDU) in its worst state election in 2017, under attack for its failure to tackle traffic jams and a rising crime rate. A few months later, it also suffered a record defeat at the federal level.”North Rhine-Westphalia always sends an important signal for federal politics,” said Nico Siegel, the executive director of pollster Infratest dimap. Ahead of Sunday’s vote, the two parties were very close in the polls, with the CDU having a slight lead at 32% versus 28% for the SPD in a survey published by INSA on Thursday.”An election victory would radiate, in a positive sense, into discussions about the SPD’s strength in the federal government and Olaf Scholz’s popularity,” Siegel saidThe NRW election is also seen giving a boost to Germany’s environmentalist Greens party, which could become kingmaker.The CDU has governed the state in a coalition with business friendly FDP since 2017. But even with its slight lead over the SPD, it might not be able to secure a majority with just the FDP, which stood at 8% in the polls.The Greens most recently polled around 16%, which means either party is likely to need the Greens to form a state government.LOCAL ISSUESLast week, the CDU won by a landslide in the considerably smaller northern state of Schleswig-Holstein, but in NRW it will have a much harder time securing votes.Local issues such as affordable rents and public transport are usually what determines voters’ decisions in state elections.Siegel said there was no dominant topic determining voters’ behaviour across parties. In 2017, the CDU won the vote by focusing its campaign on traffic jams, rising crime and an underperforming education system.Manfred Guellner, head of pollster Forsa, told Reuters that job security and the impact of structural change from the dismantling of the coal-fired power plants were important issues on voters’ minds.The CDU’s win in Schleswig-Holstein was seen partly driven by the popularity of state premier Daniel Guenther. In NRW, its candidate Hendrik Wuest only just took office in October and has not had time to build a following.After casting his vote in a polling station in Rhede, a cheerful-looking Wuest said the good weather made it a great day to vote, asking his state’s citizens to take part in the ballot. Wuest is running against Thomas Kutschaty, the SPD candidate, who served as a minister of justice in the state from 2010 until 2017. Kutschaty voted in Essen in a classroom where he started school in 1974.”That was a moving moment for me right now,” Kutschaty told reporters.The fact that the state is the home turf of CDU leader Friedrich Merz is also not expected to help the party win the election. A Forsa survey published on Wednesday showed that only 13% of Germans believe that Merz would be a better candidate for chancellor than Scholz.”To put it bluntly, Merz does not help at all, on the contrary,” Forsa’s Guellner said. More

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    Shanghai aims to reopen more COVID-shut businesses, Beijing battles on

    SHANGHAI/BEIJING (Reuters) -Shanghai will gradually begin reopening businesses such as shopping malls and hair salons in China’s financial and manufacturing hub from Monday after weeks in strict COVID-19 lockdown, while Beijing battles a small but stubborn outbreak.All but shut down for more than six weeks, Shanghai is tightening curbs in some areas that it hopes marks a final push in its campaign against the virus, which has infuriated and exhausted residents of China’s largest and most cosmopolitan city.Shopping malls, department stores, and supermarkets will begin resuming in-store operations and allow customers to shop in “an orderly way”, while hair salons and vegetable markets will reopen with limited capacity, Vice Mayor Chen Tong told a media briefing on Sunday.He gave no specifics on the pace or extent of reopenings, and many residents in the city of 25 million reacted online with scepticism.”Who are you lying to? We can’t even go out of our compound. You can open up, no one can go,” said a user of China’s Twitter-like Weibo (NASDAQ:WB), whose IP showed as being from Shanghai.During Shanghai’s lockdown, residents have been mainly limited to buying necessities, with normal online shopping largely suspended due to a shortage of couriers. And while barbers and hairdressers have been giving haircuts on the street or in open areas of housing compounds, residents recently able to leave homes for brief outings to walk or buy groceries have generally appeared more dishevelled than usual.In one hopeful sign, Shanghai’s subway operator began testing trains on its vast network in preparation for reopening, a local government media outlet reported, but gave no indication of when it will do so.Shanghai residents have been frustrated by unclear or inconsistent rules as the city makes tentative steps towards easing curbs.In the Changning district on Sunday, a woman began walking her dog before being told by a policeman to go home.”The lockdown hasn’t lifted!”, the policeman shouted.OUTLIER APPROACHChina’s strict “dynamic zero” approach to COVID has put hundreds of millions of people in dozens of cities under curbs of varying degrees in an attempt to eliminate the spread of the disease. The curbs are wreaking havoc on the world’s second-largest economy and rattling global supply chains even as most countries try to return to normal life despite continued infections.New bank lending hit the lowest in nearly four and half years in April as the pandemic jolted the economy and weakened credit demand, central bank data showed on Friday.The Asian Football Confederation said on Saturday that China had pulled out of hosting the 2023 Asian Cup finals due to COVID, the latest in a wave of sporting event cancellations by China and prompting social media speculation that its zero-COVID policy could persist well into next year.China managed to keep COVID at bay after it was discovered in Wuhan in late 2019, but has struggled to contain the highly infectious Omicron variant. The World Health Organization said last week China’s approach was not “sustainable”.Still, China is widely expected to stick with its approach at least until the congress of the ruling Communist Party, which is historically in the autumn, where President Xi Jinping is poised to secure a precedent-breaking third leadership term.Despite the disruptions, no senior Chinese officials have spoken out publicly against a COVID-19 policy that Beijing defends as saving lives.Case numbers in Shanghai continued to improve, with 1,369 daily symptomatic and asymptomatic infections reported, down from 1,681 a day earlier. Importantly, the city reported no new cases outside of quarantined areas after finding one a day earlier. Consistently achieving zero cases outside quarantined areas is a key factor for officials determining when they can reopen the city.Shanghai has achieved its zero-COVID target in more thinly populated suburban districts and started easing curbs there first, such as allowing shoppers to enter supermarkets, but it continued to tighten restrictions in many areas over the past two weeks, curtailing deliveries and putting up more fencing.In Beijing, where restaurants have been shut for dining-in, several districts on Sunday extended work-from-home guidance and officials announced three more days of mass daily tests for most of the city’s residents.Beijing said it found 55 new cases in the 24 hours to 3 p.m. (0700 GMT) on Sunday, 10 of which were outside areas that are under quarantine. The city is scrambling to stamp out such community infections. More

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    Have US retail sales been hit by stubbornly high inflation?

    Did US retail sales continue to grow in April?US retail sales are expected to have grown last month, in a sign that consumers have not yet been discouraged by stubbornly high levels of inflation.Economists polled by Reuters forecast that US retail sales rose 0.7 per cent month-on-month in April. Sales excluding motor vehicles and car parts are expected to have climbed 0.3 per cent, after rising 1.1 per cent in March. Higher prices and consumers’ willingness to spend were probably the main reason for the jump in sales last month, said Oren Klachkin, lead US economist at Oxford Economics.Although inflation moderated in April, the consumer price index still remained at a four-decade high as it jumped to an annual pace of 8.3 per cent in April from 8.5 per cent in March. Retail sales are not adjusted for inflation, which may have boosted some of the gains, Klachkin added. “While retail sales are up 27 per cent since the pandemic started, our estimates show that inflation-adjusted retail sales are up only 7 per cent over the same time,” said Klachkin. The categories to watch will be autos and petrol, according to James Knightley, chief international economist at ING. “Given new car prices were higher in the CPI report this component should post a decent rise in nominal sales,” said Knightley. “Gasoline will face a headwind since demand is pretty inelastic and according to the CPI report prices were down 6.1 per cent month-on-month.” Alexandra WhiteHas the new energy price cap lifted UK inflation even higher?UK inflation is expected to continue its steep upward trend in the coming months, staying well above the Bank of England’s target of 2 per cent.Annual consumer price growth hit a fresh 30-year high of 7 per cent in March, boosted by higher energy prices. However, ‘core’ inflation, which excludes energy, food and tobacco, also topped analysts’ estimates at 5.7 per cent.With the Ofgem energy price cap rising by 54 per cent in April, the reading for last month is expected to have jumped to the highest since comparable records began in 1989. Economists polled by Reuters forecast an overall CPI figure of 9.1 per cent, with core inflation up to 6.2 per cent.“A further substantial jump in inflation is virtually a given for April’s figures,” said Sandra Horsfield, economist at Investec. The increase in the energy cap will push up inflation by 1.6 percentage points, Horsfield calculated, but price pressures are intensifying from various sides — with VAT on the hospitality sector reverting from its temporarily reduced rate of 12.5 per cent to the full 20 per cent rate at the start of the month, a rise in telecoms and water bills and higher transport fuel.She expects annual inflation to climb to 9.1 per cent and core inflation to jump to 6.3 per cent when the data are released on Wednesday.Earlier in May, the BoE forecast that consumer inflation will peak in the autumn at about 10 per cent, possibly plunging the economy into a recession. Economists polled by Consensus Economics have consistently revised down their economic growth forecasts for this year after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine stoked price pressures even further. High inflation will be a “major concern to individuals and policymakers for some time,” said Horsfield. Valentina RomeiHow will recent crypto jitters impact retail investor sentiment?Retail investor sentiment towards speculative assets has soured this year as surging inflation, interest rate rises and geopolitical uncertainty collectively stoke fears over global growth. In a trading environment characterised by volatility, the air has hissed resoundingly out of high-growth stocks that were among the biggest winners of the early days of the pandemic — from interactive fitness company Peloton to streaming giant Netflix.But it is the $1.3tn cryptocurrency industry that has abruptly shaken financial markets in recent days. The price of bitcoin, perceived as a gauge of investor sentiment towards speculative assets, fell to just $25,390 on Thursday — more than 60 per cent below its peak of almost $70,000 in November. That drop came after crypto was hit by one of its biggest challenges to date, when stablecoin Tether — a critical tool in the digital token universe — briefly failed to maintain its pledged one-to-one link with the US dollar.The question now is whether the jitters sparked by Tether snapping its dollar peg will compound retail investors’ broader concerns about so-called risk assets. Tether’s tumble, which stemmed from a bout of intense selling pressure, came just days after the failure of smaller competitor TerraUSD.“The cryptocurrency market is feeling the shockwaves from stablecoins and is being tested to its very core,” said Saxo Bank’s head of equity strategy Peter Garnry, with “signs of panic and massive selling pressures.” Garnry added that there is a “huge overlap of people that invest in both Tesla, Ark Invest funds, and cryptocurrencies and that makes this risk cluster dangerous because it becomes a forceful negative feedback loop on the downside.”Analysts say contagion from recent crypto ructions could hit riskier assets in regions beyond the US and Europe. According to JPMorgan, “newer Japanese retail investors dating from Covid-19 hold not just equities but also speculative assets” and “the recent sell-off in cryptocurrencies is depressing the risk appetite of these mostly short-term investors.”The US bank added: “We think the deteriorating performance of retail investors’ cryptocurrency holdings could indirectly dampen their enthusiasm for Japanese stocks.” Harriet Clarfelt More

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    China further eases mortgage loan rate guidance to spur demand

    For purchases of first homes, commercial banks can reduce the lower limit of interest rates on home loans by 20 basis points, based on the corresponding tenor of benchmark Loan Prime Rates (LPRs), the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) and China’s Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission said in a statement.The cut aims to support demand and promote stable and healthy development of the real estate market, the statement said. In its monthly fixing in April, the PBOC kept its one-year LPR unchanged at 3.70% and the five-year LPR, typically used as a benchmark for mortgage loans, steady at 4.60%. Banks in many cities cut mortgage rates in the first quarter following calls from authorities to support buyer sentiment in a market rocked by a liquidity crunch and troubled developers last year, and now by nationwide COVID-19 outbreaks.”Policies including lowering down-payments, lowering mortgage interest rates, loosening restrictions on secondhand housing sales and loosening purchase restrictions will create better conditions for active market transactions in mid-to-late May,” said Yan Yuejin, research director of Shanghai-based E-house China and Development Institute.The latest loan guidance came after central bank data on Friday showed new bank loans plunged to their lowest in more than four years in April, as varying degrees of COVID lockdowns in dozens of cities curbed lending, with mortgage loans contracting.To free up more funds for lending, the PBOC on April 25 reduced the amount of cash that lenders must set aside as reserves. More modest easing measures are expected as authorities vow to roll out more policies to support the broader economy.But despite the easier mortgage loan guidance, much depends on the banks.”During lockdowns, banks tend to be more risk-averse,” said Iris Pang, senior Greater China economist at ING, wrote in a note on Friday after the central bank data. “They have been told to keep past-due loans on their books. Under these circumstances, banks have become unwilling to create new loans, as that would mean taking on more risk by getting new loans and then waiting for them to become past due if lockdowns continue.” More

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    Australia PM, trailing in election polls, announces housing policy

    Australians will vote for a government on Saturday, with recent polls showing Morrison’s Liberal-National coalition on track to lose to centre-left Labor, which would end nine years of conservative government.Morrison’s Liberal Party formally launched its campaign in Brisbane on Sunday, with Morrison detailing the housing policy at the event in a last-ditch appeal to voters.“This will increase the opportunity for people to downsize, and increase the supply of family housing stock in the market,” Morrison said.The policy aims to encourage older Australians to sell the family property, Morrison said. It would enable those aged over 55 to sell a home and invest up to A$300,000 ($200,000) in a superannuation fund outside existing caps.The policy is an effort to put downward pressure on high house prices in an election campaign that has been dominated by cost-of-living concerns, national security and climate change.Morrison said a re-elected coalition government would allow first home buyers to use a “responsible portion” of their superannuation savings to buy a house, calling it a “a game changer” for thousands of families.The campaign launch comes after Morrison vowed on Saturday to be more empathetic if he wins re-election, after conceding he could be a “bulldozer” and promising to change.Labor leader Anthony Albanese backed the housing initiative for older Australians, describing it as a “modest announcement”.But the opposition criticised the first home buyer proposal, with Labor campaign spokesperson Jason Clare saying it would lead to even higher house prices. Labor said that if it won government it would spend A$1 billion on advanced manufacturing to boost jobs and diversify the country’s industrial base. More

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    Shanghai lockdown exposes global supply chain strains

    In early March truck drivers at Suto Logistics were ferrying 1,000 tonnes of goods every day in and out of Shanghai, China’s most important economic hub and the world’s busiest port. By the end of April, five weeks after local authorities had forced factories to close and residents to isolate in their homes, just one or two trucks were being dispatched daily, according to the company. And even they were no longer delivering their usual cargo of industrial materials, but “livelihood supplies” — groceries to sustain the city’s 26mn residents in their enforced isolation. Suto is not alone in feeling the shock of Shanghai’s sudden lockdown, as authorities raced to contain an outbreak of the highly infectious coronavirus variant Omicron. The repercussions have rippled across the globe, with multinationals from Apple, Tesla and General Electric, to Amazon, Adidas and Estée Lauder warning of disruption to their supply chains due to the lockdown of a city that handles 20 per cent of China’s international trade.Those warnings are likely to intensify if China digs its heels in and continues to pursue a zero-Covid policy that has left millions of workers across the country confined to their homes. President Xi Jinping, architect of the controversial policy, has vowed to crack down on criticism of it despite signs that the zero-Covid approach is damaging the economy. Concern has been building since the port city of Shenzhen was closed briefly in March and Shanghai went into lockdown at the end of that month. Authorities have now imposed restrictions on Beijing, while the central Chinese city of Zhengzhou, a gateway for air freight, also limited the movement of people in May. The rolling lockdowns are raising alarm bells at businesses that rely on raw materials, goods and components from China — home to seven of the world’s 10 biggest container ports, including Ningbo, Shenzhen and Guangzhou.Near-empty roads during a lockdown due to Covid-19 in Shanghai in April. The city has lost roughly 45 per cent of its trucking capacity since the end of March © Bloomberg“In 2022 China is closing down again,” says Marie-Christine Lombard, chief executive of Geodis, the global transport and logistics provider owned by SNCF of France. “Our customers’ plants [in China] cannot work, their products cannot be produced. So it is pretty bad [ . . . ] first Shenzhen, then Shanghai and now Beijing. That creates anxiety in the minds of our customers.” Joerg Wuttke, president of the EU Chamber of Commerce in China that represents about 1,000 businesses in the country, recently warned of “shortages on shelves in Europe at some stage [ . . .] we never had this kind of uncertainty before,” he said in early May. “It gets worse week by week. We don’t know [ . . .] where [restrictions] will pop up.”Such disruptions to the global supply chain threaten to stoke the inflationary pressures exacerbated by Russia’s war on Ukraine. At the height of the upheaval caused by Covid-19 in 2020/2021, the rates paid for ocean and air freight soared to new highs. For example, rates for 40ft containers on routes from Shanghai to the west coast of the US nearly doubled during 2021 from $4,018 to $7,681, according to Shipping Intelligence Network. The IMF estimates that global freight increases alone added 1.5 percentage points to this year’s inflation forecasts.

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    Many in the transport and logistics sector remain hopeful that the worst can be avoided. But they are also aware that when China’s factories return to normal and sea freight starts moving again there is a risk that some European and US ports, plus infrastructure including land transport and warehousing, could be overwhelmed, adding more pressure to an already stretched global supply chain.“We definitely see cargo still finding its way to Rotterdam,” says Hans Nagtegaal, director of containers at Europe’s biggest port. But “it’s becoming a little more complicated than normal. It tells me we are not out of the storm.” ‘We cannot find lorry drivers’ Chinese authorities, conscious of the country’s key role in the supply chain, have kept ports open, requiring workers to live on site in a so-called “closed-loop system”. Additionally, some cargo is being diverted to other Chinese ports such as Ningbo, 200km south of Shanghai, to allow shipments to continue.Gene Seroka, executive director of the Port of Los Angeles, said at the start of May that those initiatives had helped to keep goods flowing. “Although conditions could change. I don’t see a bust coming anytime soon,” he told reporters. “The authorities in China, the port director himself, [are] making sure that transpacific trade and cargo specifically coming here to Southern California [are] prioritised.”During the pandemic, soaring consumer appetite created serious disruption for a logistics chain based on just-in-time delivery, with little elasticity for unexpected demand. The Asia-to-US trade lane was all of a sudden “growing at double-digit volumes”, says Lombard of Geodis, “but there are only so many vessels.” Technicians make microchips for export at a workshop in Sihong Economic Development Zone in Jiangsu province. Not only have factories shut, but China’s patchwork system of regulations governing movement between towns and cities is making collection and delivery of cargo almost impossible © CFOTO/Future Publishing/Getty ImagesOn the surface the current crisis might look like a rerun of the upheavals of 2020, which left the world short of everything from cars to bicycles. But in 2022 the situation is different, say experts, with China’s strict zero-Covid approach being the exception in Asia. Two years ago, many countries in Asia introduced tight Covid restrictions that hit production. But this time round “manufacturing in most Asian countries has restarted,” says Siew Loong Wong, president of Asia-Pacific at Kuehne+Nagel. “We should keep this in mind when assessing the overall impact on the global supply chain.”Today, the logistics problem lies beyond the ports and airports, in inland China. Not only have factories shut, but the country’s patchwork system of regulations governing movement between towns and cities is making collection and delivery of cargo almost impossible.“It is very hard for trucks to come into the city and leave without the right permit,” says one Shanghai-based shipping executive, who asked not to be named. “The problem is that permits issued by one place are not accepted universally.”Drivers may be required to take Covid tests in one province that are not valid at the destination, so more testing is required. Permits to travel may not be recognised from one municipality to another, so containers have to be dropped off at borders — to be collected by a driver from another province. Or “drivers do not want to deliver to a restricted area because they worry they will not be able to come out again”, says Danny Lau, who owns an aluminium factory in Dongguan, near Shenzhen. His plant is struggling to deliver to customers. “We cannot find lorry drivers.” A container ship sails towards the dock of Shanghai’s Yangshan port. Shanghai has pledged to ease restrictions by mid-May and there is evidence from Yantian port that recovery can come quickly © Chen Jianli/Xinhua/APFreightos, which operates an online freight marketplace, estimates that Shanghai has lost roughly 45 per cent of its trucking capacity since the end of March. With no drivers to collect the goods, those factories that are still running are scrambling to get products to customers and costs are soaring. “We only have 20-30 per cent of [normal] transport capacity remaining,” says the manager of one Shanghai chemical plant. “Fees have increased almost fivefold. Prices fluctuate every day.”The absence of drivers is also creating congestion at ports. With 90 per cent of global trade volumes moved by sea, terminals have to work smoothly to get goods to their destinations on time. But without drivers to collect containers, goods arriving at Chinese ports are sitting in terminals for much longer than normal. In Shanghai, the average waiting time for import containers was 12.9 days on May 12, a 174 per cent increase on March 28, according to Project 44, the shipment tracker. Across the rest of China, the waiting time for export containers had increased 22 per cent by early May compared with March 12, says FourKites, another freight tracker.As containers stack up, it is harder to load and unload vessels, which are then forced to wait in port for longer. By mid-April, the number of container ships waiting to unload at Chinese ports had doubled in less than two months, according to Windward, the maritime tracking platform. The situation has eased somewhat, thanks to lower volumes coming in, but roughly 24 per cent of all container vessels queueing to unload globally were waiting outside Chinese ports at the end of last Thursday, says Windward. On average they were waiting 3.58 days, or 86 hours, against 115 hours in the first 12 days of April.These delays have knock-on effects, meaning that vessels arrive late at ports in Rotterdam and Los Angeles, which have still not fully recovered from the disruptions of 2020/21. “When China [lockdowns] happened supply chains were [already] very backed up,” says Zvi Schreiber, chief executive of Freightos. “Two years ago only about 20 per cent of vessels were being delayed,” says Rotterdam’s Nagtegaal. “Today that number is about 80 per cent.”‘The quayside is only so large’ This volatility and uncertainty have become a way of life for many reliant on China for goods. Susanne Waidzunas, global supply chain operations manager for furniture retailer Ikea, says it now takes “50 per cent longer for us to send goods from our suppliers in China to our logistic units in the US and Europe”, due to port congestion and other supply chain bottlenecks. Shanghai’s lockdown “is just another disruption”, adds Waidzunas. “We have set ourselves up for it.”Ikea is diverting goods from Shanghai to other ports, including Ningbo, using rail freight rather than trucks, and ordering earlier, she says. “We are operating in a volatile situation when it comes to demand and supply. We have learnt a lot in the past two years.”Pete Buttigieg, US transportation secretary, at the Port of Long Beach in January as part of a task force studying supply chain disruptions © Mario Tama/Getty ImagesThat caution is echoed by Adam Lewis of digital customs broker Clear-It. “When we see an ETA for a ship coming in on May 2, we know that boat is probably not going to arrive for another two to three weeks. That’s been the name of the game for two years.”Yet Nick Vyas, who runs the Kendrick Global Supply Chain Institute at the University of Southern California Marshall School of Business, warns that those two years of disruptions have “desensitised” western companies to the impact of China’s zero-Covid policy. Even if many order goods earlier than previously, sooner or later “we will be running out of things”, argues Vyas. “Ultimately the system has a finite capacity.”That finite capacity could run into its limits when factories in China begin turning again. The worry is that the return to normal will coincide with peak season demand in the third quarter, and before current problems of port congestion and a scarcity of truck drivers are resolved.“We expect an armada of vessels moving towards Europe again and that will have a bigger effect [than the Shanghai lockdown],” says Nagtegaal of Rotterdam port. “The quayside is only so large. It will move the logistical challenges from China towards Europe.”Permits, pay talks and a return to ‘normal’The decline in volumes from China could actually be a blessing in disguise, argue several industry executives. Data from FourKites shows that the 14-day average of shipment volumes travelling from China to the US was down 24 per cent as of May 6, having dipped as much as 36 per cent three weeks earlier. Roughly a third of deliveries to US customers have been delayed, down from 39 per cent at the end of April.Mario Cordero, executive director of the Port of Long Beach, says the “chaos” caused to supply chains by the lockdowns has helped cut the backlog of container ships waiting to enter his port and the neighbouring Port of Los Angeles from more than 100 in January to 35 now. Officials at the Port of Los Angeles are monitoring data from China on energy consumption, traffic patterns and pollution, to understand how busy the country’s factories are so they can prepare for the volumes of cargo to come © Mario Tama/Getty ImagesWest coast ports are waiting to see whether the slowdown in imports is followed by a surge in the coming months, once restrictions lift, he adds.Seroka of the Port of Los Angeles, for example, is monitoring data from China on energy consumption, traffic patterns and pollution, to understand how busy the country’s factories are so it can prepare for the volumes of cargo to come. “I’m on the phone most evenings with friends . . . in Shanghai telling me what’s happening on the ground,” Seroka said.Others fear that recently-launched contract talks between ports on the west coast of the US and unionised dockworkers could disrupt activity, as has happened in previous years, just as imports surge.

    “If China kicks loose and starts sending those ships [ . . .] back at us we’re going see a really big surge,” Jim McKenna, chief executive of the Pacific Maritime Association, told reporters. There are already signs that the blockages are beginning to ease. FourKites data shows that volumes were recovering and delays decreasing in the first week of May. Shanghai has pledged to ease restrictions by mid-May and there is evidence elsewhere that recovery can come quickly. Shenzhen’s Yantian port returned to normal within a month after coming out of lockdown in 2021, says Josh Brazil, vice-president of Project 44. There are also indications that lessons have been learnt from the problems encountered in Shanghai. The government is urging local authorities to collaborate on permitting schemes to resolve the trucking crisis, says the Shanghai-based shipping executive.Yet a return to normal will take time, says Rico Luman, senior economist on transport, logistics and automotive at ING Research. With more than 11 per cent of global container capacity stuck in ports, “stabilisation of the supply chain will take at least a couple of months after the end of the lockdowns. It takes time because everything is connected.” Container capacity is not expected to expand in a significant way before next year, he adds.In Shanghai, some 2,000 factories have been authorised to resume production in recent weeks. But the conditions for a return to work remain complicated and difficult. “We still have to see if the workers are able to get to the factories,” says the Chinese shipping executive, who has spent nearly two months in some form of lockdown. “Public transport has stopped and a lot people don’t have cars.” “I don’t think the situation will be dramatically changed until late May or early June,” the executive adds. “Shanghai can keep telling the world what it wants to accomplish, but others will have to play ball.”Additional reporting by Wang Xueqiao in Shanghai More

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    G7 to continue economic pressure on Russia, tackle 'wheat war'

    WEISSENHAUS, Germany (Reuters) -Group of Seven foreign ministers vowed on Saturday to reinforce Russia’s economic and political isolation, continue supplying weapons to Ukraine and tackle what Germany’s foreign minister described as a “wheat war” being waged by Moscow.After meeting in the Baltic Sea resort of Weissenhaus, senior diplomats from Britain, Canada, Germany, France, Italy, Japan, the United States and the European Union also pledged to continue their military and defence assistance for “as long as necessary”. They would also tackle what they called Russian misinformation aimed at blaming the West for food supply issues around the world due to economic sanctions on Moscow and urged China not to assist Moscow or justify Russia’s war, according to a joint statement.”Have we done enough to mitigate the consequences of this war? It is not our war. It’s a war by the president of Russia, but we have global responsibility,” Germany’s Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock told reporters.Former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, a close ally of Vladimir Putin, dismissed the meeting, especially the group’s insistence that the integrity of Ukraine’s internationally recognised borders be recognised.”Let’s put it mildly: our country does not care at all about the G7 not recognising the new borders. What is important is the true will of the people living there,” he said in an online post. Russian forces control large parts of eastern Ukraine.Key to putting more pressure on Russia is to ban or phase out buying Russian oil with EU member states expected next week to reach an agreement on the issue even if it remains at this stage opposed by Hungary.The ministers said they would add further sanctions on Russian elites, including economic actors, central government institutions and the military, which enable Putin “to lead his war of choice.” The meeting, which the foreign ministers of Ukraine and Moldova attended, also spotlighted food security concerns and fears that the war could spill over into its smaller neighbour Moldova.”People will be dying in Africa and the Middle East and we are faced with an urgent question: how can people be fed around the world? People are asking themselves what will happen if we don’t have the grain we need that we used to get from Russia and Ukraine,” Baerbock said. She added that the G7 would work on finding logistical solutions to get vital commodities out of Ukraine storage before the next harvests.Attention now turns to Berlin as ministers meet later on Saturday with Sweden and Finland gearing up to apply for membership of the transatlantic alliance, drawing threats of retaliation from Moscow and objections from NATO member Turkey.”It is important that we have a consensus,” Canada’s Foreign Minister Melanie Joly told reporters.Putin calls the invasion a “special military operation” to disarm Ukraine and rid it of anti-Russian nationalism fomented by the West. Ukraine and its allies say Russia launched an unprovoked war.”More of the same,” EU Foreign Policy chief Josep Borrell told reporters. “The one thing that is missing is pushing for a diplomatic engagement to get a ceasefire. It is missing because Vladimir Putin has been saying to everybody that he doesn’t want to stop the war.” More