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    Argentina dollar deposits spike by $8 billion under Milei

    BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) – Argentina’s foreign currency deposits have jumped by around $8 billion since libertarian President Javier Milei took office in December, driven by a series of pro-market austerity measures and incentives to lure dollars back into the financial system.The latest central bank data available on Monday show that total foreign currency deposits now exceed $24 billion, up from around $16.5 billion when Milei, an economist and former TV pundit, took power amid a major economic crisis.The government needs an injection of funds into Argentina’s economy and financial system to help drag the country out of recession, as well as to shore up creaking state finances after years of fiscal deficits, draining reserves and high inflation.Milei has offered an amnesty until Sept. 30 for people to bring funds back into the formal system without penalty after years of savers looking to hoard dollars outside the formal banking system, offshore, or even stuffed under mattresses. More

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    Fed’s Bostic: Economy returning to normal faster than expected so policy should as well

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. economy is close to normal rates of inflation and unemployment and the Federal Reserve needs monetary policy to “normalize” as well, Atlanta Federal Reserve president Raphael Bostic said Monday in comments that suggested openness to a quick pace of interest rate cuts in coming months.”Progress on inflation and the cooling of the labor market have emerged much more quickly than I imagined at the beginning of the summer,” Bostic said in comments prepared for delivery to the European Economics and Financial Centre. “In this moment, I envision normalizing monetary policy sooner than I thought would be appropriate even a few months ago.””Normalizing” refers to returning the Fed’s policy rate of interest to a level that neither encourages or discourages investment and spending, a level felt to be somewhat below the range of 4.75% to 5% set last week after the Fed began easing policy with a half-point cut.Bostic said disagreement over the precise normal or “neutral” rate of interest was of little importance while rates remained this high, with balanced risks to both inflation and the unemployment rate, currently 4.2%. He said he supported the half-point cut approved last week as a compromise between the fact that inflation remains a half-point above the Fed’s 2% target, with housing prices still rising faster than hoped for, and the sense the economy and the job market are slowing.Bostic earlier in the year expected a less aggressive pace of cuts and a later start, and said the larger cut last week “does not lock in a cadence for further moves” that will depend on incoming data.But, he said, “inflation has fallen faster than I had expected, and the most recent data solidify my conviction that the US economy is indeed sustainably on the path back to price stability.” He noted businesses said their pricing power had “all but evaporated” and some important recent measures of inflation were below the Fed’s target. Firms, meanwhile, are taking a more deliberate approach to hiring as well, he said, though they do not yet seem to be at the point of laying off workers.”We have made sufficient progress on inflation, and the labor market has exhibited enough cooling, that the time has come to shift the direction of monetary policy to better reflect the more balanced risks,” he said. More

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    Swiss National Bank to cut rates by 25 bps on Thursday, hold in December- Reuters poll

    BENGALURU – The Swiss National Bank will cut its benchmark interest rate by 25 basis points on Thursday for a third straight meeting, according to a significant bulk of economists polled by Reuters, a slight majority of whom said the SNB would hold in December.The central bank raised interest rates more modestly than major peers following the pandemic and started cutting in March, also much earlier than others.Swiss inflation fell to 1.1% last month – the lowest among G10 economies, almost exactly in the middle of the SNB’s preferred 0-2% range.But the franc has stayed strong, up more than 5% against the euro from the year’s low in late May.Almost all economists, or 30 of 32, in the Sept. 18-23 Reuters poll predicted the central bank will reduce its main interest rate on Thursday by 25 basis points to 1.00%, in line with market pricing. One expected a 50 basis-point cut and one said no change.Policymakers are unlikely to deliver a bigger 50 basis-oint rate cut like the U.S. Federal Reserve did last week due to limited policy space, according to most analysts, as the key rate is only 1.25%.”The SNB is almost certain to cut its policy rate by 25bp to 1.00% this coming Thursday,” said Karsten Junius, chief economist at J. Safra Sarasin.”We are aware that the SNB is not afraid to front-load policy changes if deemed necessary…(but) we still believe that a 50bp cut in September would display unnecessary panic.”Around a 55% majority of economists, or 18 of 32, expected the SNB to hold rates in December. Sixteen said the rate will be at 1.00% by year-end, 15 said 0.75% and one said 1.25%.Poll medians showed the central bank would then cut in March to 0.75% and make no more changes until at least 2026.If the poll is correct about this week’s decision, the SNB will have cut rates by a cumulative 75 basis points this year, matching what is expected from the European Central Bank. The ECB reduced its deposit rate by 25 basis points this month for a second time and is expected to deliver another in December, according to a separate survey.But the Swiss currency has broadly strengthened in recent months, partly on expectations of more reductions from the ECB.SNB Chairman Thomas Jordan, who will step down at the end of September, recently said the strength of the franc was making it difficult for Swiss industry.”Policymakers will be unhappy with the franc’s recent appreciation and will use rate cuts to try and stifle its ascent. Further ahead, if the franc continues to appreciate the SNB may revert to using large FX interventions,” said Adrian Prettejohn, Europe economist at Capital Economics.”We think the SNB will not want to cut the policy rate much further, if at all, in response to a strong franc as policymakers will want to reserve some space to loosen policy in case a domestic shock occurs in the future.”Swiss inflation will average 1.2% this year, according to the poll, before easing to 1.0% in 2025, broadly above the government’s latest projections.(Other stories from the Reuters global economic poll) More

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    China auto association flags concern over dealership losses to government

    The losses were flagged in an emergency report on the financial difficulties and shutdown risks facing dealerships amid a price war in the world’s largest auto market, which was recently submitted by CADA to relevant government authorities.Dealer inventories remain high amid sluggish consumption, forcing them to sell at low prices, the association said in a statement on its WeChat account.The overall discount rate for new cars stood at 17.4% in August, CADA data showed.The collapse of both regional and national domestic dealerships has mostly been due to “capital chain rupture” rather than their own operations, according to CADA. Money-losing China Grand Automotive Services, the country’s second-largest dealership, was delisted from the Shanghai bourse in August after its stock traded below par value for 20 consecutive days.CADA is calling for a ramp-up in financial support for private dealerships, which make up a big part of the so-called automobile circulation industry.Car sales in China fell in August for the fifth straight month, though sales of all-electric and plug-in hybrid models rose, helped by subsidies for drivers trading in more polluting vehicles.($1 = 7.0577 Chinese yuan renminbi) More

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    Fed rate cuts will put money in pockets, but a mood shift may take time

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Even before the Federal Reserve approved its outsized half-percentage-point interest rate cut last week, financial markets had begun making credit cheaper for households and businesses as they bid down mortgage rates, cut corporate bond yields, and chipped away at what consumers pay for personal, auto and other loans.How fast that process will continue now that the U.S. central bank’s first rate cut is in the books is unclear, in particular whether easing credit conditions will become tangible to consumers in ways that shift attitudes about the economy before the Nov. 5 U.S. presidential election.Recent surveys suggest that while the pace of price increases has declined dramatically, the public’s mood is still marred by nearly two years of high inflation – even if falling rates signal that chapter of recent economic history is closed and will begin making it cheaper for people to borrow money.”My daughter has been trying to buy a home for years and cannot,” said Julie Miller, who works at her son’s electrical company in Reno, Nevada, a state where home prices rose fast during the COVID-19 pandemic. One of seven key battleground states in the presidential race, Nevada is being aggressively contested by Vice President Kamala Harris, who replaced President Joe Biden as the Democratic candidate, and former President Donald Trump, the Republican challenger. If housing costs are vexing Miller’s daughter, higher prices at Taco Bell have caused Miller to cut back on the usual Friday night trips to the fast food retailer with her granddaughter, and left her inclined to vote for Trump because “I don’t think Biden has done a great job with inflation.”Harris supporters had similar concerns about high prices even as they vouched for her as the best candidate to address the problem.BORROWING COSTS DECLINEThe Fed’s rate cut on Sept. 18 is likely to be followed by more, with at least another quarter-percentage-point reduction expected when policymakers begin their next two-day policy meeting a day after the U.S. election.Just as rate increases feed through to a higher cost of credit for families and businesses, discouraging them from borrowing, spending and investing in order to cool inflation, reductions in borrowing costs change the calculus for would-be homebuyers and firms, particularly small businesses wanting to finance new equipment or expand production.Looser monetary policy, which the Fed had been signaling was on the way, has already put money back into people’s pockets. The average rate on a 30-year fixed-rate home mortgage, the most popular home loan, for example, is approaching 6% after nearing 8% just a year ago. Redfin (NASDAQ:RDFN), a real estate firm, recently estimated that the median payment on homes sold or listed in the four weeks through Sept. 15 was $300 less than the all-time high hit in April and nearly 3% lower than a year ago.But with that adjustment already done, “mortgage rates are likely to remain relatively stable for the next couple of weeks,” Chen Zhao, an economist at Redfin, wrote in a post on the company’s website.Indeed, under baseline estimates from the Fed’s own staff, mortgage rates are likely to level off somewhere in the mid-5% range, meaning most of the relief there has already occurred.Banks have begun trimming the “prime rate” they charge their most credit-worthy borrowers to match the Fed rate cut. Other forms of consumer credit – the auto and personal loans where a better deal might be available to households – have changed only marginally so far, and it may take longer for banks to give up on charging higher finance costs. Investors and economists saw last week’s rate cut as less important than the message it carried of a central bank ready to loosen credit and confident that recent high inflation won’t recur.Inflation in fact has registered one of its fastest ever declines, with the consumer price index’s annual increase falling from more than 9% in June 2022 to 2.6% on a year-over-year basis last month. The Fed’s preferred personal consumption expenditures price index rose at a 2.5% rate in July, near the central bank’s 2% target.SOUR SENTIMENTThe U.S. economy has been performing reasonably well despite concerns the job market might be on the brink of weakening.New claims for unemployment benefits remain low and unexpectedly fell in the most recent week, while the unemployment rate, at 4.2% in August, has risen from a year ago but is around the level the Fed feels is sustainable without generating excess wage and price pressures. A Philadelphia Fed index of manufacturing rose recently and retail sales for August grew despite expectations for a drop.But none of that has led to a decisive shift in public sentiment. The share of Americans who see the economy as heading in the right direction climbed to 25% in August from 17% in May 2022, according to Reuters/Ipsos polling. Yet the share that sees the economy on the wrong track has eased to 60% from 74% over the same period.A New York Fed survey that through early this year showed people feeling better off than a year ago and expecting more improvement in the year ahead has since been moving in the other direction even as inflation slowed further and rate cuts became more likely.The University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index had been improving but then dropped in recent months and remains below where it was before the pandemic.The most recent U.S. Census “pulse” polls of households showed the share who reported trouble paying household expenses in the past week has ebbed from 2022, when inflation hit its peak, but has made little improvement recently. In his press conference following the rate cut last week, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said his aim was to keep the economy on track between the central bank’s two goals of stable inflation and a healthy job market. To that end, credit will ease but at no guaranteed pace.”This is the beginning of that process,” Powell said. “The direction … is toward a sense of neutral, and we’ll move as fast or as slow as we think is appropriate in real-time.” More

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    Fed speakers in focus this week following jumbo interest rate cut

    The Fed slashed interest rates by 50 basis points last Wednesday and indicated that it would roll out further cuts this year in a bid to help shore up the economy following a prolonged battle against surging inflation.The Federal Open Market Committee, the FOMC, cut its benchmark rate to a range of 4.75% to 5% after leaving borrowing costs at a more than two-decade high for over a year. The decision wasn’t unanimous as Fed Governor Michelle Bowman preferred to lower rates by just 25 basis points.It was the first reduction since March 2020. The size of the cut, along with the updated “dot plot” of officials’ forecasts, suggested that policymakers may be attempting to move to stem any weakening in the economy after the period of elevated rates.Investors will likely hear more about the decision from Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic on Monday, followed by Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee.Meanwhile, Bowman is set to speak on Tuesday and again on Thursday. Last week, she has voiced concerns that the jumbo drawdown would send the wrong signal with the pace of price increases in the US currently above the Fed’s 2% goal.Bowman’s comments clashed with those of fellow Fed Governor Christopher Waller, who argued that a big cut was needed to keep inflation from undershooting the target.Elsewhere, Fed Chair Jerome Powell is scheduled to speak on Thursday at the 10th annual US Treasury Market Conference. New York Fed President John Williams and Vice Chair of Supervision Michael Barr will also speak at the same event.”[W]e will be paying close attention to a slew of Fed speakers to try and parse out what is next for the Fed,” analysts at Bank of America said in a note to clients.Separately, they added that, in their view, inflation figures are no longer the “most important” data point to watch to gauge upcoming Fed policy decisions. Instead, they said labor market numbers are now more crucial, given that the Fed has seemingly already started its cutting cycle.Powell told reporters last week that the labor market is in “solid condition,” adding that the rate cut was intended to bolster job demand. In August, the US economy added fewer jobs than anticipated, although the unemployment rate slowed slightly to 4.2%.September’s job market reading is set to be released on Oct. 4. More

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    FirstFT: Israel escalates bombardment of Lebanon

    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