David Fuller and Eoin Treacy's Comment of the Day
Category - Global Middle Class

    Political moves heat up as Indonesian parties hunt for presidential, vice-presidential candidates

    This article from the Strait Times may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section: 

    The PDI-P, which secured 22 per cent of parliamentary seats in 2019, is the only party that can nominate candidates without having to ally with other parties. Both Mr Widodo and Mr Ganjar are members of PDI-P.

    For Mr Ganjar, the main obstacle to being named PDI-P’s presidential candidate is his own party, said Padjadjaran University political communication expert Kunto Adi Wibowo.

    “If Ganjar wants the nomination, PDI-P should be the one to nominate him. He doesn’t want to quit his own party. But will Megawati (Sukarnoputri) give the ticket to Ganjar while she is grooming Puan (Maharani)?,” he said.

    Ms Megawati is PDI-P’s chief, while Ms Puan, her daughter, is the House of Representatives Speaker and ranks low in electability rating polls.

    Prof Firman noted that both PDI-P and Gerindra may finally have to strike a “tough deal” if they cannot come up with their nominees amid the constant rise in popularity of Dr Anies, given the solidity of his support. 

    “If they are forced by pressing circumstances, they will make a deal and resort to the most popular candidates,” he said.  

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    Volkswagen Joins China Price War With Discounts on Full Lineup

    This note may be of interest. Here it is in full:

    Volkswagen’s China joint venture with SAIC Motor is offering 3.7 billion yuan ($540 million) in cash subsidies to boost sales, according to a statement on the company’s Wechat account, making the German automaker the latest participant in the ongoing price war. 

    The venture will provide a subsidy of between 15,000 yuan and 50,000 yuan on any model in its lineup until April 30, which includes brands like Teramont, Lavida, Lamando, Tiguan, Passat, Touran, and the all-electric ID. series

    Other incentives include short-tern interest-free loans, lifelong service packages, upgraded components and buy-back guarantees.

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    Budget key points: All you need to know about Jeremy Hunt's spring statement

    This article from the Independent may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section: 

    Defence budget and levelling up
    Mr Hunt confirmed the government will add £11 billion to the defence budget over the next five years and another £30 million is being allocated for veterans.

    There will be 12 new investment zones, and they will potentially be in the West Midlands, Greater Manchester, the North East, South Yorkshire, West Yorkshire, East Midlands, Teesside and Liverpool. There will also be at least one in each of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

    Mr Hunt also announced a series of levelling-up and local transport-related funding pots.

    Taxes
    The chancellor confirmed the planned increase in corporation tax to 25 per cent will be going ahead, but announced a new policy of “full capital expensing” over the next three years, which will mean every pound invested in IT equipment, plant, or machinery can be deducted immediately from profits.

    Mr Hunt said he will introduce a new tax credit for small and medium-sized firms that spend 40 per cent of their expenditure on research and development. Tax reliefs for film, TV and video gaming will also be extended, he said.

    Up to £20 billion will be allocated for the early development of carbon capture and storage.

    Mr Hunt said that, subject to consultation, nuclear power will qualify for the same investment incentives as renewable energy and alongside that “will come more public investment”.

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    Schwab Tumbles Most Ever as Firm Seeks to Calm Investors

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section: 

    Charles Schwab Corp. tumbled the most ever on an intraday-basis as the online brokerage sought to reassure investors that it has sufficient liquidity to handle any volatility following the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank.

    Shares of Westlake, Texas-based Schwab dropped as much as 23% to $45 after trading was halted for volatility. The stock later pared its decline and was down 17% to $48.93 at 10:09 a.m.
    in New York.

    The firm has a broad base of customers and capital in excess of regulatory requirements, founder and Co-Chairman Charles Schwab and Chief Executive Officer Walt Bettinger said in a statement on its website Monday.

    “Schwab’s long-standing reputation as a safe port in a storm remains intact, driven by record-setting business performance, a conservative balance sheet, a strong liquidity position, and a diversified base of 34 million-plus account-holders who invest with Schwab every day,” the executives wrote.

    The company, with roughly $7.4 trillion of client assets, said it has access to about $100 billion of cash flow, more than $300 billion of incremental capacity with the Federal Home Loan Bank and other short-term facilities, and that more than 80% of deposits at its bank are insured by the Federal Deposit
    Insurance Corp.
     

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    Email of the day on basic military equipment

    Your focus on some military defence companies is timely. What do you think are the best "spades and shovels" type defence companies (not high techs like Raytheon) but ones that makes bullets, shells, camouflage, personal military equipment? Have we missed Rheinmetall?

    Can you pls keep them under review in the video thereafter as I sometimes don't have time to read the front page and prefer video. Thanks and keep up the good work.

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    Brazil May Speed Up Rate Cut as Credit Worsens: Ex-BCB Director

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest. Here it is in full: 

    Brazil’s worsening credit outlook amid troubles facing local retailer Americanas SA raises the risk of a recession that could lead its central bank to change its balance of risks at the upcoming interest rate decision on March 21 and 22, Tony Volpon, a former director at the bank, said in an interview.

    “At the very least, the central bank committee should change the balance of risks at the next meeting, which would be a signal to start cutting its rate in May”

    NOTE: BCB said in the statement of Feb. 1 meeting, which maintained the Selic rate at 13.75%, that the risks to its inflationary scenarios remain in both directions, upside and downside

    According to Volpon, high interest rates and worsening of credit in the midst of the Americanas case may reduce investment and increase the risk of a drop in economic growth

    “If the BCB does nothing, it is almost certain that there will be a recession”

    Volpon had written earlier on Twitter that “almost every recession needs a ‘snap’ and the Americanas case and the collapse of the credit market already set up an exogenous shock that, left unanswered, should lead to a recession”

    Basic scenario is interest rate cuts starting in May, but BCB could cut it later this month if credit data show a more serious deterioration, says the former director

    According to him, part of the market could react badly to an eventual Selic cut, which would lead to a greater rate curve steepening, but this would not prevent the positive effect of monetary relief on the economy

    Possible negative investor reaction to an early interest rate cut could also be mitigated with announcement of the new fiscal framework, says Volpon

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    Clueless Wall Street Is Racing to Size Up Zero-Day Options Boom

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest. Here is a section: 

    Discovered by retail investors as a cheap way of gambling during the meme-stock era in 2021, zero-day options got a fresh boost on index trading after firms like Cboe Global Markets Inc. last year expanded S&P 500 options expirations to cover each weekday. The offerings became an instant hit among institutions as daily reversals ruled the market, spurred by the Federal Reserve’s most aggressive monetary tightening in decades. 

    By the third quarter of 2022, 0DTE contracts accounted for more than 40% of the S&P 500’s total options volume, almost doubling from six months earlier, data compiled by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. show. 

    Behind the explosive rise, according to JPMorgan, are likely high-frequency traders — the computer-driven firms present at virtually every node of the modern equity landscape — as market makers and fast-moving seekers of an investing edge. 

    It’s a match made in quantitative heaven: For firms known to measure the life cycle of trades in thousandths of a second, zero-day options hold obvious benefits as tools to balance exposure and otherwise hone strategies designed to harvest fleeting profits by darting in and out of positions. 

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    Flying recovery proves a tailwind for new Rolls-Royce boss's turnaround

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section: 

    "There is good performance improvement opportunity in this business in all the divisions, especially in civil aerospace and power systems," he told reporters. "And that is ongoing and then strategic review will create the clarity."

    He said he would focus on reducing its debt, which stood at 3.25 billion pounds at year-end, to obtain an investment grade, before resuming payouts to shareholders.

    Rolls, which also has defence and power systems divisions, posted operating profit of 652 million pounds for 2022, up 57% and beating an analyst forecast of 478 million pounds.

    It guided to underlying operating profit of 0.8-1.0 billion pounds and free cash flow of 0.6-0.8 billion pounds this year, based on a forecast for its engines to fly 80-90% of 2019's level.

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    Australia Recession Risk Rises as RBA Seen Hiking More Than Fed

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest. Here is a section: 

    While US mortgage holders tend to borrow over 30-year terms, insulating them from tightening cycles, a majority of Australian borrowers are on variable rate home loans that adjust upwards each time the central bank hikes. 

    Australia’s housing market is already in a downturn and higher borrowing costs are likely to drive more declines this year. 

    There’s a further risk from re-pricing of loans that were fixed for 2-3 years at record-low rates during the pandemic. RBA data suggest 23% of all outstanding mortgage debt will be re-priced this year and in some cases borrowing costs will more than double to close to 6%. 

    While the RBA is relatively sanguine about housing, Eliza Owen, head of research at property consultancy CoreLogic Inc., sees risks on the horizon.

    “Australians with fixed-rate loans are about to see a painful adjustment. This is partly the intention of rising rates,” Owen said. “The true test of the market will be over the next 10 months.”

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    Pimco-Owned Office Landlord Defaults on $1.7 Billion Mortgage

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section: 

    An office landlord controlled by Pacific Investment Management Co. has defaulted on about $1.7 billion of mortgage notes on seven buildings, a sign of widening pain for the industry as property values fall and rising interest rates squeeze borrowers.

    The buildings — in San Francisco, New York, Boston and Jersey City, New Jersey — are owned by Columbia Property Trust, which was acquired in 2021 for $3.9 billion by funds managed by Pimco. The mortgages have floating-rate debt, which led to rising monthly payments as interest rates soared last year.

    “We, like most office owners, are addressing the unique and unprecedented challenges currently facing our asset class and customer base,” Justina Lombardo, a spokesperson for Columbia Property Trust, said in an emailed statement. “We have engaged with our lenders on a restructuring of our loan on seven properties within our larger national portfolio.  We look forward to a collaborative process yielding thoughtful solutions that reflect current market conditions and best serve the interests of all stakeholders.”

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