More stories

  • in

    How Is the Economy for Black Voters? A Complex Question Takes Center Stage.

    The 2024 election could be won or lost on the strength of the Black vote, which could in turn be won or lost based on the strength of the American economy. So it is no surprise that candidates are paying a lot of attention — and lip service — to which of the past two administrations did more to improve the lives of Black workers.Former President Donald J. Trump, the Republican candidate, makes big claims about the gains Black workers made under his watch, saying that he had the “lowest African American unemployment rate” and “the lowest African American poverty rate ever recorded.” But those measures improved even more under the Biden administration, with joblessness touching a record low and poverty falling even further.“Currently, Black workers are doing better than they were in 2019,” said Valerie Wilson, a labor economist whose work focuses on racial disparities at the liberal-leaning advocacy organization EPI Action.That may sound like an unambiguous victory for Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic nominee, especially when paired with a recent increase in homeownership rates for Black families and the fact that the Black unemployment rate dipped in September.But even with those notable wins, the economy has not been uniformly good for all Black Americans. Rapid inflation has been tough on many families, chipping away at solid wage growth. Although the labor market for Black workers was the strongest ever recorded for much of 2022 and 2023, the long shadow of big price increases may be keeping people from feeling like they are getting ahead.In fact, nearly three in four Black respondents rated the economy as fair or poor, a recent New York Times/Siena College poll of Black likely voters found. And that is notable, because Black voters do tend to prioritize economic issues — not just for themselves, but also for the overall welfare of Black people — when they are thinking about whether and how to vote.We are having trouble retrieving the article content.Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.Thank you for your patience while we verify access.Already a subscriber? Log in.Want all of The Times? Subscribe. More

  • in

    China’s economy grows 4.6% in third quarter

    Save over 65%$99 for your first yearFT newspaper delivered Monday-Saturday, plus FT Digital Edition delivered to your device Monday-Saturday.What’s included Weekday Print EditionFT WeekendFT Digital EditionGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionSpecial featuresExclusive FT analysis More

  • in

    Rising food inflation clouds the good news on headline rates

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.Inflation in September fell below target in the UK and the eurozone, and dropped to the lowest since early 2021 in the US, hurray!Yet, another common trend that matters a lot for households went largely unnoticed: food inflation ended its steady decline and ticked up.In the UK, inflation of food and non-alcoholic beverages rose to 1.9 per cent from 1.3 per cent in September, marking the first increase since March 2023, according to official data published this week. Eurozone food inflation for the same period increased 0.1 percentage point to 1.6 per cent, following no change in August and 16 months of almost uninterrupted decline, official data showed on Thursday.And in the US, annual food inflation in September rose to 2.3 per cent per cent from 2.1 per cent in the previous month, the largest increase since August 2022. Some content could not load. Check your internet connection or browser settings.This comes as wholesale food prices stopped declining at the start of the year and started rising again, according to the FAO index. Trends in food wholesale prices lag consumer prices by a few months as items flow through the supply chain, so what’s coming is not encouraging.In September, the FAO Food Price Index rose to 124.4 in September 2024, up 3 per cent from August, which marked the largest month-on-month increase since March 2022. Price quotations for all commodities included in the index strengthened, with the increases ranging from 0.4 per cent for the meat price index to 10.4 per cent for sugar, it explained.“The reasons that food prices are rising again are mainly climate related,” said Tomasz Wieladek, chief European economist at T Rowe Price.Some content could not load. Check your internet connection or browser settings.The FAO goes into more detail, quoting worsening crop prospects in Brazil following prolonged dry weather and fires that damaged sugarcane fields in late August, as the main drivers of the increase in global sugar prices. Concerns over lower-than-expected production in major Southeast Asian producing countries were behind the rise in international palm oil price increases. Excessively wet conditions in Canada and the EU caused wheat harvest delays and a sizeable cut to production, pushing up wheat prices.  For policymakers the rise in food inflation matters as “consumers form their inflation expectations based on food price inflation because this is a repeated transaction they face every week,” said Wieladek. This is in line with a paper published by the Bank of England last week that found “over 60 per cent of households report that their inflation perceptions are heavily influenced by food prices”. Inflation expectations matter for spending behaviour and wage demand. Higher food prices have a disproportionate effect on households because there is little scope to avoid buying groceries, and because what you spend on subsistence comes out of what you can spend on other things.Admittedly, September’s food inflation was small and barely visible in a chart where food inflation dropped from double-digit heights. However, it will add to much higher price levels than three years ago. In the UK, food prices are about one-third higher than at the start of 2021, they are nearly 30 per cent above that level in the eurozone and 23 per cent up in the US.Some content could not load. Check your internet connection or browser settings.A bottle of olive oil in the UK, for example, cost on average £3.50 in early 2021, but now costs £9.20, according to the ONS. These are increases that many people have not experienced before.And now the trend could be up. Claus Vistesen, economist at the consultancy Pantheon Macroeconomics thinks that eurozone food inflation “is now likely rising slightly consistent with a lagged response to surveyed selling price expectations.”“We think food inflation will rise gradually from here on, but slowly.” More

  • in

    Bondholders could make $14bn from emerging market restructurings, says Debt Justice

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.Bondholders stand to make profits of $14bn on resolutions of sovereign debt crises that broke out from Ukraine to Zambia in recent years, according to calculations by a UK debt campaigner.Restructurings under way or recently concluded in Ghana, Sri Lanka, Suriname, Ukraine and Zambia will provide more than $30bn in debt relief for the countries in the years ahead. They will also deliver sizeable gains to investors over time, if governments avoid further defaults, Debt Justice said.These profits could be worth more than a third of bondholders’ original outlay and are a sign that troubled economies are not being granted sufficient reductions in their borrowing, according to the campaign group.“Debtors, for whatever reason, do not have enough power in negotiations, and are not getting enough relief to avoid restructurings in future,” said Tim Jones, policy director at Debt Justice.The calculations will add to the debate on the success of initiatives in the past year to end a logjam in resolving a spate of sovereign defaults and Ukraine’s war financing in response to Russia’s invasion.In recent months Ghana and Zambia have exited lengthy bond defaults, and Ukraine replaced a wartime payment suspension, after holders of Kyiv’s US dollar debt agreed to cuts in the value of their holdings.Sri Lanka is also close to completing a long-delayed bond restructuring, while Suriname resolved a default last year.These countries have also been doing deals with official creditors and other private lenders, but unlike bondholders the terms have generally not been fully disclosed, making it difficult to assess what returns they will make.To arrive at the $14bn figure, Debt Justice assumed that investors bought half of their bonds when they were originally sold by governments, usually at face value, and half at market prices, which collapsed as defaults loomed and then in some cases took years to be resolved.The profits are compared to the returns investors would have made buying US government debt over the same period, as a safe asset, and reflect both high interest payments on bonds before defaults, and the benefit of buying defaulted debt at low prices, Debt Justice said.Theoretical profits would be as low as $1.9bn if all bonds were bought at face value and none of the upside payments were triggered, and as high as $26bn if all bonds were instead bought at low prices and attracted the maximum possible upside, according to the estimates.“The caveat is that the calculations assume that the restructured debt will be repaid. It’s not that they’ve realised the profit yet. We think there are dangers of countries having to restructure again in the future,” Jones said.The Debt Justice calculations underscore that “bondholders have got substantial upside” from Sri Lanka’s proposed restructuring and Zambia’s deal, said Brad Setser, senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.Several of the recent restructurings outside Ghana contain provisions that will reward bondholders with higher payouts if their economies outperform targets in the years ahead.Triggers for these payments will typically be assessed at the point the countries are due to exit IMF bailouts in the next few years. That risks “debt levels that ironically create very real risks of distress, immediately after the programme periods”, Setser said. While some of the restructurings such as Sri Lanka’s also have downside provisions to reduce payments in the event of future economic trouble, they do not go far enough, he added.Investors and advisers to governments have nevertheless said that these so-called “contingent” payments have been needed in order to bridge deep disagreements over official projections of the post-default path of countries, and get negotiations over the line. More

  • in

    China urges swift implementation of expansive financial policies

    The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) said in a statement on its website on Friday that it urged participants to boost credit support for the real economy, and maintain reasonable growth in the total amount of money and credit.It also urged solid implementation of interest rate adjustments, as well as two funding schemes created to support the stock market.China’s banking and securities regulators also chaired the meeting, and participants included banks, brokerages and fund companies. More

  • in

    Japan top FX diplomat says recent yen moves “one-sided” in fresh warning

    TOKYO (Reuters) – Japan’s top currency diplomat, Atsushi Mimura, said on Friday that recent currency moves are “somewhat one-sided and rapid,” in a fresh warning against speculative trading as the yen fell past the key 150 line against the dollar. “We as Japanese authorities are closely watching foreign exchange moves, including speculative ones, with a high sense of urgency,” Mimura told reporters.The dollar touched 150 yen for the first time since Aug. 1 after solid U.S. retail sales data reinforced expectations that the Federal Reserve will pursue modest interest rate cuts over the next year-and-a-half as the world’s largest economy remained resilient. More

  • in

    Dollar rides ‘Trump trade’ toward third weekly rise

    SINGAPORE (Reuters) – The dollar headed for a third weekly gain in a row on Friday, helped by a dovish European Central Bank and strong U.S. data that is pushing out expectations for how fast U.S. rates can fall, particularly if Donald Trump wins the presidency.The euro is down almost 1% for the week so far, has fallen through its 200-day moving average, and at $1.0828 in early Asia trade is parked near a 2-1/2 month low.On a rolling basis, the dollar’s 3.1% three-week gain on the euro is the sharpest rally since the middle of 2022, and it has forged to the strong side of 150 yen for the first time since early August. It last bought 150.24 yen.On Thursday, data showed U.S. retail sales growth was higher than expected and the ECB cut interest rates by 25 basis points.Four sources close to the matter told Reuters the ECB was likely to cut again in December unless economic data suggests otherwise.Meanwhile, markets have been disappointed at the lack of detail offered by Chinese authorities on plans to revive the slowing economy, and the yuan is headed for its largest weekly fall in more than 13 months. [CNY/]”All of that has played in to a stronger dollar,” said Jason Wong, senior strategist at BNZ in Wellington.”There’s also been a Trump trade going on in the background,” he said, with the dollar tracking Trump’s newfound lead in election prediction markets, since his tariff and tax policies are seen as likely to keep U.S. interest rates high.Trump’s prospects have also set bitcoin rallying since his administration is seen as taking a softer line on cryptocurrency regulation. It was last at $67,335, up 13% since Oct. 10. The U.S. goes to the polls on Nov. 5.Later on Friday, Chinese growth and activity data is due and is likely to show a slowdown that puts this year’s economic growth target of around 5% at risk.The Australian dollar, sensitive to China’s outlook owing to commodity exports, steadied at $0.6697 on Friday for a fall of around 0.8% on the week. [AUD/]It had received a boost on Thursday when stronger-than-expected jobs data reduced bets on interest rates cuts. The New Zealand dollar is also down 0.8% on the week and was a fraction lower at $0.6055 early in the Asia session.Israel said it had killed Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar in Gaza, a mastermind of the Oct. 7, 2023, attack that triggered war.Israel’s shekel rose and touched a two-week high after the news, though Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said fighting would go on and broader markets had little immediate reaction.Sterling regained the $1.30 level overnight but is also headed for a weekly loss after a bigger-than-expected drop in British inflation raised bets the Bank of England might cut interest rates twice before the end of the year. [GBP/]British retail sales and U.S. housing starts data are due later on Friday, as are plans from Japan’s largest union group, Rengo, for the year’s wage negotiations. Data showed Japan’s core consumer prices were up 2.4% year-on-year in September, a bit higher than expected. The U.S. dollar index hit a 2-1/2 month high on Thursday at 103.76 and is up 0.8% this week.China’s yuan hovered at 7.1370 in offshore trade, ahead of the onshore open. More