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    Turkish firms face wave of closures amid economic reckoning

    CORUM, Turkey (Reuters) – It is hard for Dogan Duman to see how he can keep his garment factory in central Turkey running much longer, even after firing a third of his staff to cut costs that have soared for companies nationwide, generating a wave of bankruptcies and closures.Idle sewing machines are pushed to the side of his factory floor in Corum, where outside “For Sale” signs and padlocked gates dot the small city’s once-buzzing industrial zone. Such sober scenes are spreading across Turkey as part of the fallout from a more than year-long policy-tightening effort, including a 50% benchmark interest rate, to rein in years of soaring inflation and overheated demand. Thousands of companies like Duman’s – which makes coats and jackets for global fashion brand Zara – are squeezed by inflation that topped 75% earlier this year, an overvalued lira, hikes to electricity and gas prices and dwindling export orders. “The orders are shrinking daily because we are losing our competitiveness… and I think they will shrink even more,” he said of his 27-year old company that is now down to 60% capacity and 210 employees. Turkey is one of the world’s top five garment manufacturers and a critical source for Europe’s top brands. But despite its advantage of proximity to Europe, its main trade partner, Duman says swelling energy, labour and FX costs have left him trailing rivals in Vietnam and Bangladesh. “Considering the current lira exchange rate and the expected further rise to minimum wage next year, I think we won’t be able to compete,” he said. “We will be at a point of shutdown.” These days, Turkish households and business are facing the economic consequences of a cumulative 41.5 percentage points of rate hikes that began in June last year and are now finally beginning to cool inflation, which dipped to 52% last month. Last year’s dramatic policy U-turn, including fiscal steps, aims to leave behind years of soaring prices and currency crashes under President Tayyip Erdogan’s formerly unorthodox approach of monetary easing to stoke growth. But with credit now out of reach for many, and lira depreciation badly lagging monthly price rises, companies, especially apparel and textile exporters, are in a crunch. Almost 15,000 companies closed down in the first seven months of the year, up 28% from 2023, according to the Union of Chambers and Commodity Exchanges of Turkey. Other data suggest bankruptcy stress is brewing. Monitoring outlet konkordatotakip.com says 982 companies were granted initial court protection from debt in the first eight months of the year, almost double last year’s total. Construction and textile firms have made the largest number of such applications to suspend debt payments to banks and suppliers to continue operations, and also for bankruptcy proceedings. Such company strains have knock-on effects, slowing or halting payments across the economy and lifting joblessness. There may be “heavy costs,” said Erdal Bahcivan, chairman of Istanbul Chamber of Industry. “While trying to save a company, dozens of (creditor) firms may end up in dire straits.”    Some economists say that given the aggressive tools used to slay inflation, rising unemployment and bankruptcies are all but certain. “This is a serious dilemma for the government,” said Seyfettin Gursel, director at Bahcesehir University Center for Economic and Social Research. “It is trying to put the monster it created back into its lair, but doesn’t know how to do it”. STREWN GARMENTSIn Corum, 500 kilometres east of Istanbul, some factories have broken windows and one had dozens of colourful rain-drenched garments strewn across its grassy yard. Bulent Demirci, co-owner of a yarn factory in the city with 50 workers, said he shut it down a couple of months ago due to an “unpredictable economic outlook”.”We had production cuts from time to time in the past. But this time it is all doom and gloom,” he said. Ankara’s latest hike to the minimum wage was to 17,002 liras ($500) in January, which is up 100% from a year earlier and 500% from the end of 2021, when a historic lira crash rocked Turkey.Gas and electricity prices have risen about sevenfold and threefold respectively since 2021 for small to mid-scale manufacturers.Turkey’s overall production costs are now almost 40% higher than in competing Asian countries in dollar terms, according to interviews with exporters, who also blame barriers to financing and dwindling working capital.Exporters have lobbied for more currency depreciation given that, year-to-date, inflation is 32% while the lira has fallen only 13% to the dollar. Authorities however have urged lira holdings, helped along by high deposit rates.Istanbul-traded Mega Polietilen and garment manufacturer 3F Tekstil are among those that applied for court protection from debt payments.An executive at 3F who requested anonymity said the move helped as it struggled to survive with a total 600 workers, and to continue supplying fashion brands such as Mango and H&M (ST:HMb).”But our suppliers and those who have receivables will suffer more in this process,” amounting to roughly 10,000 workers at outsourced manufacturers across the country, the executive said.”When interest rates reached 60-70% the companies could not bear it. They cannot manage their debt,” he said. “Businesses have paid for high inflation in Turkey.” More

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    Draghi calls for €800bn EU investment boost

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    Israel budget deficit widens further amid war to 8.3% of GDP in August

    The deficit for the 12 months to August rose to 8.3% of gross domestic product, from 8.0% in the 12 months to July, compared to a target of 6.6% for all of 2024.Spending on the war, which began last October, has reached some 97 billion shekels.The ministry said the deficit will continue to increase through the third quarter before moving back to its target.Tax revenue rose 8.1% in August is up 1.9% over the first eight months of 2024.($1 = 3.7384 shekels) More

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    Apple’s iPhone 16 will put AI features in focus

    SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) on Monday is set to unveil its iPhone 16 lineup, focusing on how its flagship device’s features have been infused with artificial intelligence, rather than its usual emphasis on hardware upgrades. The event at the tech giant’s Apple Park headquarters at 10 a.m. PDT (1700 GMT) follows its developer conference in June during which the company unveiled Apple Intelligence, its take on generative AI that can conjure text, images and other content on command.It had also showed off an improved version of voice assistant Siri, featuring an integration with ChatGPT, the chatbot developed by Microsoft-backed OpenAI.The refresh comes as iPhones face stiff competition from Huawei in China, where consumers are hankering for more AI features and are willing to pay for them. Huawei itself has scheduled its own product announcement mere hours after Apple’s event. Apple Intelligence must be approved by Beijing in order to be released in the Chinese market. In July, OpenAI blocked access to ChatGPT in China, a move that could impact the chatbot’s integration into Siri. “The Chinese market is hungrier for AI features than the U.S. market,” said Ben Bajarin, CEO and principal analyst at Creative Strategies. “It will be very difficult to bring it to China immediately, so they’ll be going off the merits of the hardware.”IPhones accounted for more than half of Apple’s $383 billion sales last year, and the new devices are an important update for the Cupertino, California-based company that is betting the AI feature will drive consumers to upgrade amid a slowdown in iPhone sales. In China, Apple aggressively slashed prices earlier this year, prompted by government restrictions and increased domestic competition.The iPhone 16 lineup will be the first Apple smartphones designed around these AI features, though those will also be available on iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max, the top-end versions of the previous-generation devices. New versions of the Apple Watch and AirPods are also expected.”The software side, and how Apple frames it, is the biggest question,” said Bajarin. “Investors will look for if it’s compelling enough to have a larger than normal upgrade cycle.”Rivals including Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL)’s Google are also showcasing AI features to try to upend Apple’s dominance in the high-end smartphone market. Google, developer of the Android operating system which competes with Apple’s iOS, traditionally announced its Pixel smartphones in the autumn. This year, it pushed the event to August ahead of Apple’s announcement.Google focused on AI features including Gemini Live, which allows users to hold live voice conversations with a digital assistant. Many of the AI features Google announced were also rolled out to the Android-based devices made by manufacturers such as Samsung (KS:005930) and Motorola (NYSE:MSI). “The question is who is going to be the first to combine a truly personal AI assistant with knowledge and information that is accurate and personalized,” said Bob O’Donnell, chief analyst for TECHnalysis Research. Apple has so far shared a timeline for the release of Apple Intelligence only in the United States, where it is slated to launch on compatible devices in the autumn. In June, one week after its developer conference, Apple said it would delay the release in Europe due to European Union tech rules.  More

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    US Congress brings election-year issues into government funding fight

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. Congress returns from the campaign trail on Monday to face a month-end government funding deadline, but election-year politics will still be at the forefront as Republicans seek to use the process to advance a voting bill backed by Donald Trump.Republican House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson has proposed a six-month stopgap funding bill that includes a measure requiring people to provide proof of citizenship to register to vote in federal elections.It is already illegal for non-citizens to vote in U.S. federal elections and independent studies have shown that there is no evidence that large numbers of people cast votes illegally. But former President Trump has made it a focus of his presidential campaign against Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris.No. 2 House Republican Steve Scalise said the non-citizen voting measure was a key demand of members of his caucus.”We’ve been talking to a lot of our members, and everybody has their own things they’d like to attach” to the funding bill, Scalise said in an interview. “This is the one that seems to be where most of our members have coalesced.”The Democratic-majority Senate ignored a standalone bill on the issue passed by the Republican-controlled House earlier this year, and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer signaled little interest in the new measure.”As we have said each time we’ve had a CR, the only way to get things done is in a bipartisan way and that is what has happened every time,” Schumer said in a statement to Reuters, using congressional shorthand for “continuing resolution” stopgap funding measures. Some House Republicans have voiced skepticism at trying to include the non-citizen voting measure in a spending bill.”We know it’s not going to get passed. It’s disingenuous and dishonest to attach it to that CR,” said hardline Republican Representative Matt Rosendale in a video posted on social media, in which he advocated for Republicans to focus on funding bills with more conservative spending priorities.The House Rules Committee on Monday is due to take up the bill, which would fund the government through March 28, setting the stage for a possible vote by the full chamber later this week.Top House Democrat Hakeem Jeffries has said that he plans to push for a $1.68 trillion discretionary spending level, a number reached during last year’s debt ceiling negotiations.CRITICAL DEADLINE AHEADAlmost three decades have passed since Congress in 1996 last successfully performed one of its core functions — keeping the government funded — by the Sept. 30 end of the fiscal year. This year, it failed to pass a full-year funding bill until March.Lawmakers face an even more critical self-imposed deadline on Jan. 1, before which they must act to raise or extend the nation’s debt ceiling or risk defaulting on more than $35 trillion in federal government debt.Lawmakers have shown little appetite for a partial government shutdown, of the kind last seen in 2018-2019 during Trump’s presidency, this close to the Nov. 5 election. Trump has often argued in favor of government shutdowns, both in and out of office, and has suggested Republicans push for one if the non-citizen voting bill does not pass.”A shutdown is good for nobody, in my view. It’s a quick way to become a minority, being a part of a shutdown and advocating for it,” centrist Republican Representative Don Bacon told Reuters.Bacon said he would prefer a stopgap that extended only into December, saying that he believed more military spending was needed sooner.House Democrats, meanwhile, accused Republicans of posturing.”House Republicans are again playing politics with the country’s well being. The public is tired of their chaos,” Representative Suzan DelBene, the head of the House Democrats re-election strategy, told Reuters. More

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    Taiwan exports hit record in August on AI, U.S. reaches record again

    Exports rose 16.8% on the year to a record $43.64 billion, the finance ministry said on Monday, exceeding a rise of 7.35% forecast in a Reuters poll and July’s gain of 3.1%, to mark the 10th consecutive monthly rise. “August’s export value hit a record as business for AI and high-performance computing continued to be strong, as well as international brands stocking up on new products,” the ministry said in a statement. The second half of the year should see a “gradual upward slope” in growth as exports enter their peak season, the ministry has said, pointing to the end-of-year holiday shopping season in Western markets such as the United States and Europe. Taiwan firms such as TSMC, the world’s largest contract chipmaker, are major suppliers to Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) and other tech giants.The ministry predicted exports in September could gain between 5% and 9% on the year.In August, exports to the United States soared 78.5% to $11.89 billion, also a record high, compared with a gain of 70.3% in July. Shipments to largest trading partner China were up 1.0% versus the previous month’s slide of 13.5%.Total shipments of electronic components edged up 0.1% in August from a year earlier to $15.15 billion, with semiconductor exports down 0.5%.Imports rose 11.8% to $32.14 billion in August, missing economists’ forecasts for a gain of 15.0%. More

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    Weak China prices boost deflation fears

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