David Fuller and Eoin Treacy's Comment of the Day
Category - Precious Metals / Commodities

    South African Central Bank Maintains That Next Rates Move Is Up

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

    The Reserve Bank’s hawkish stance is likely to draw criticism from politicians and labor unionists, who say it should be doing more to support the economy and reduce unemployment that’s at a record high.

    The central bank cut the key rate by 300 basis points last year. Its contribution to an economic recovery will now be predictable policy, according to Deputy Governor Kuben Naidoo.

    “You need low, predicable rates during the recovery to support economic activity, to encourage people to lend, to encourage businesses to invest,” he told reporters. “That’s the contribution of the SARB during a crisis.”

    Read entire article

    Bitcoin Plunge Wipes $500 Billion From Value in Crypto Rout

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

    Bitcoin is now down more than 50% from its record of almost $65,000 set in April. Fueling the volatility is Tesla CEO Elon Musk, whose social-media utterances have whipsawed the crypto community. A statement from the People’s Bank of China on Tuesday reiterating that digital tokens can’t be used as a form of payment added to the selloff.

    The selloff dominated market chatter on a day when equities also were tumbling and the Federal Reserve was set to release minutes from its latest meeting. #Cryptotrading was trending on Twitter, where critics and fans alike were in a tither over the rout. Critics had warned for weeks that the moves in crypto assets were unsustainable and that any sign of a selloff would lead to a rout.

    “This is going to be the first ‘welcome to crypto’ day for a lot of new entrants,” said Stephane Ouellette, chief executive and co-founder of FRNT Financial. “The history of these assets has been littered with aggressive rallies and sickening selloffs.”

    Read entire article

    Eurozone in Double-dip Recession as Mediterranean Economies Risk Another Lost Summer

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

    But Robert Alster at Close Brothers Asset Management warned of a divide between industrial economies in the north and tourist-reliant nations in the south, despite the start of UK tourism to Portugal. This could spark a return to the two-speed Europe which raised questions over the stability of the bloc after the financial crisis.

    Mr Alster said: “The risk now is that the north/south divide continues to widen. Germany’s economic growth is not far behind the UK’s, with its vaccination programme set to overtake, whereas Spain’s economy has been hardest hit,” he said.

    “The northern countries have benefited from strong manufacturing growth, with the US and China driving global demand, whereas the Southern countries are on tenterhooks to see whether the European tourism season can go ahead.”

    Two consecutive quarters of contraction mean the currency area is officially in recession again, despite not fully recovering from the initial shock of Covid.

    GDP remains more than 4pc below its pre-pandemic peak at the end of 2019.

    Employment fell by 0.3pc in the first quarter of 2021, meaning the number of people in work is still almost 3.6m below its pre-Covid level.

    Jack Allen-Reynolds at Capital Economics said the jobs market should soon start to recover too, but that the rebound in hiring will probably be quite slow.

    He said: "Many firms will be able to raise output by increasing employees’ working hours before they start taking on more staff."

    Read entire article

    Averting Climate Crisis Means No New Oil or Gas Fields, IEA Says

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

    Reducing emissions to net zero -- the point at which greenhouse gases are removed from the atmosphere as quickly as they’re added -- is considered vital to limit the increase in average global temperatures to no more than 1.5 degrees Celsius. That’s seen as the critical threshold if the world is to avoid disastrous climate change.

    But it’s a path that few are following. Government pledges to cut carbon emissions are insufficient to hit “net zero” in the next three decades and would result in an increase of 2.1 degrees Celsius by the end of the century, the IEA said.

    “This gap between rhetoric and action needs to close if we are to have a fighting chance of reaching net zero by 2050,” the agency said. Only an “unprecedented transformation” of the world’s energy system can achieve the 1.5 degrees Celsius target.

    The IEA’s road map appears to be at odds with climate plans laid out by Europe’s top three oil companies -- BP Plc, Royal Dutch Shell Plc and Total SA. They all have targets for net-zero emissions by 2050, but intend to keep on seeking out and developing new oil and gas fields for many years to come.

    “No new oil and natural gas fields are needed in our pathway,” the IEA said. If the world were to follow that trajectory, oil prices would dwindle to just $25 a barrel by mid-century, from almost $70 now.

    Read entire article

    SGD Gains as Stock Rally Outweighs Virus Fear

    This note from Bloomberg may be of interest to subscribers.

    The Singapore dollar gains as buoyant Asian equities outweigh concern over the spread of coronavirus infections in the city state.

    USD/SGD falls 0.2% to 1.3335 after closing up 0.3% on Monday
    MSCI AC Asia Pacific Index advances 1%
    Govt bonds gained across the curve on Monday, with the 10-year yield down 2bps to 1.52%
    HSBC sees more room for underperformance of SGD rates versus USD rates over the next few days, according to a note on Monday

    FX swaps and front-end SGD rates have shifted higher as tighter social distancing measures reduced the odds that the Monetary Authority of Singapore would tighten its currency policy stance later this year

    The highly transmissible strain of Covid-19 that surfaced in India has become more prominent among Singapore’s growing number of unlinked cases
    An air travel bubble between Singapore and Hong Kong has been delayed
    The World Economic Forum canceled the annual meeting it was planning to hold this August in Singapore

    Read entire article

    Gold Miners Rise With Prices on Weaker Dollar, Inflation Worry

    This note from Bloomberg may be of interest to subscribers.

    Earlier, gold was buoyed by signs that money managers and exchange-traded fund investors are turning more positive on the precious metal
    Gold spot price was up as much as 1.3%, silver +2.8% intraday; U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) fell as much as 0.2%
    Precious metal miners intraday gainers include HL which rose as much as 15%, EDR CN +11%, GGD CN +11%, CDE +8.9%, FR CN +7.4%, K CN +6.1%, FVI CN +6.5%
    Goldman said in a note that “gold tends to perform well when realized inflation is elevated and rising, while the dollar suffers, especially as the Fed stays on hold”
    Meanwhile, copper miners also got a boost as price climbed on Monday, lifted by concerns of supply disruptions in Chile and signs that Chinese demand is picking up
    Some of the copper/base metals miner that gained intraday include TKO CN, FCX, FM CN
    TECK also gained, which was partially helped by rise in coal equities on higher natgas prices

    Read entire article

    McDonald's, Amazon Accelerate Push Toward Higher Minimum Wage

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

    McDonald’s Corp. announced Thursday it will raise hourly wages by about 10%, bringing the average wage at its restaurants to more than $13 an hour. Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc. said earlier this week it will set hourly starting wages at $11 to $18. Target Corp. and Costco Wholesale Corp. have increased theirs to $15 and $16, respectively.

    McDonald’s is hiring 10,000 new employees at its company-owned stores over the next three months alone, and Walmart Inc. brought half a million people on board last year. Chipotle is hiring 20,000 workers across the U.S., and Target needs workers for the 30 to 40 stores it will open this year.

    Amazon.com Inc. also upped the labor market ante Thursday by announcing plans to hire 75,000 people in the U.S. and Canada at starting pay that will average more than $17 an hour. New employees will get hiring bonuses of $1,000 and those fully vaccinated for Covid-19 will get additional $100.

    Read entire article

    Bitcoin Falls Below $50,000 as Musk Calls Energy Use 'Insane'

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

    “Surely he would have done his diligence prior to accepting Bitcoin?” said Nic Carter, founding partner at Castle Island Ventures, and a leading voice among defenders of Bitcoin’s energy use. “Very odd and confusing to see this quick reversal.”

    Musk’s decision in February to buy $1.5 billion in Bitcoin and plan to accept it as a form of payment has been a major catalyst in the crypto bull market. In the eyes of analysts, it helped add legitimacy to the token and usher in new investors.

    Musk’s crypto tweets have often been in jest, and his attention toward Dogecoin brought the joke token into the mainstream. He’s quipped about being the “Dogefather” in the past, and tweeted on Tuesday, “Do you want Tesla to accept Doge?”

    Read entire article

    Email of the day - on China's growth potential

    That some manufacturing will move to other parts of Asia makes sense (especially as Chinese labour costs rise)

    But the comparison some make with Japan needs to take account of the facts that:

    a) Even now only 60% of the Chinese population is urbanised (93% for Japan)

    b) Output per capita must still be much lower than advanced countries so they can also catch up in that? Most developing countries have the constraint that they don't have the capital to invest for that but lack of capital is not China's constraint.

    Read entire article

    Over 700 Barges Stuck in Mississippi River From Bridge Crack

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

    “The river is the jugular for the export market in the Midwest for both corn and beans,” said Colin Hulse, a senior risk management consultant at StoneX in Kansas City. “The length of the blockage is important. If they cannot quickly get movement, then it is a big deal. If it slows or restricts movement for a longer period it can be a big deal as well.”

    The New Orleans Port Region moved 47% of waterborne agricultural exports in 2017, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The majority of these exports were bulk grains and bulk grain products, such as corn, soybeans, animal feed and rice. The region also supports a significant amount of edible oil exports, such as soybean and corn oils and even attracted 13% of U.S. waterborne frozen poultry exports in 2017.

    Read entire article