Category: Uncategorized

  • Chinese manufacturing orders decline by 20-30%, according to shippers, as consumers pull back on buying goods

    Chinese manufacturing orders decline by 20-30%, according to shippers, as consumers pull back on buying goods

    • Chinese manufacturing orders are down by as much as 30% for some logistics companies as consumers shift spending to services.
    • A DHL executive described it as a tipping point for the “ship at any cost” economy that has recently dominated in the U.S. amid high consumer demand.
    • Vessel volumes continue to grow at U.S. East Coast and Gulf Coast ports including Savannah and Houston, according to the CNBC Supply Chain Heat Map, as labor talks on the West Coast threaten to cause more supply chain issues.

    https://www.cnbc.com/2022/06/21/chinese-manufacturing-orders-drop-as-consumers-pull-back-on-goods.html

  • ‘The situation is serious’: Germany plans to fire up coal plants as Russia throttles gas supplies

    ‘The situation is serious’: Germany plans to fire up coal plants as Russia throttles gas supplies

    • Economy Minister Robert Habeck on Sunday warned that the situation is going to be “really tight in winter” without precautionary measures to prevent a supply shortage.
    • In light of that, Germany will seek to compensate for a cut in Russian gas supplies by increasing the burning of coal.
    • Coal is the most carbon-intensive fossil fuel in terms of emissions and therefore the most important target for replacement in the transition to renewable alternatives.

    https://www.cnbc.com/2022/06/20/ukraine-war-germany-turns-to-coal-as-russia-throttles-gas-supplies.html

  • Blown off course again, Fed policymakers see near-record uncertainty

    Blown off course again, Fed policymakers see near-record uncertainty

    Federal Reserve policymakers are less confident than at any time since the height of the pandemic about what will happen with the economy, data published alongside their forecasts and the Fed’s hefty three-quarters-of-a-point rate hike this week show.

    The last time they were this worried they could be underestimating the coming deterioration in the labor market was in the depths of the Great Recession. But they are even more worried they are overestimating a hoped-for decline in inflation, documents charting confidence and risks seen in their forecasts show.

    The data helps underscore why policymakers are so focused on raising interest rates fast even if doing so causes a bigger dent to growth and unemployment than previously hoped, and why it is clarity on the inflation outlook that will drive policy.

    “It is clear that path of inflation continues to be the key consideration in how quickly the Fed gets to, and how far it moves past, the range of neutral in order to bring inflation down ‘clearly and convincingly,’” wrote Morgan Stanley economists, referring to the standard Fed Chair Jerome Powell has set for declaring victory on price pressures and slowing up on rate hikes.

    All 18 Fed policymakers are more-than-usually uncertain about their inflation and economic growth forecasts, and all but one note the same about their unemployment rate projections, the data shows. The same documents also show that no policymaker believes their forecasts are too pessimistic, and most believe they could be underestimating the risks.

    Graphic: Fed uncertainty on the rise- https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/zdpxoedzjvx/chart.png

    That means that though Fed forecasts embody the “softish” landing to which they aspire – inflation dropping to 2.2% by 2024, with the economy motoring along at 1.9% and unemployment rising just half a point to 4.1% – they are worried things could be worse, particularly for inflation.

    It also means, as with this week’s last-minute decision to deliver a hefty 75 basis point move after worse-than-expected inflation readings, that what Powell calls this “extraordinarily challenging and uncertain time” is sure to leave investors hanging.

    RAPID PACE OF RATE INCREASES

    Unquestionably, interest rates will rise, and rise fast: 17 of the 18 Fed policymakers see the target rate at least at 3.6% by next year, two full percentage points higher than today, and five see it above 4%.

    But is that where they will end up? Not even Fed Chair Powell knows. “I think we’ll know when we get there,” Powell told reporters Wednesday.

    “With the FOMC looking to remain nimble amid heightened uncertainty, guidance set out by communications should not be regarded as written in stone,” Barclays economists said in a note to clients following the this week’s Federal Open Market Committee meeting.

    It’s a warning that investors may need to keep in mind as Powell’s colleagues start Friday to make their first public statements after this week’s policy meeting, and when Powell gives testimony next week before lawmakers on Capitol Hill.

  • Oil wobbles as global economic worries offset tightening supply

    Oil wobbles as global economic worries offset tightening supply

    • Brent crude futures slipped 8 cents, or 0.1%, to $113.04 a barrel by 0242 GMT, after rising as much as 1% earlier. Front-month prices tumbled 7.3% last week, its first weekly fall in five.
    • U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude was at $109.49 a barrel, down 7 cents, after rising more than $1 earlier. Front-month prices dropped 9.2% last week, the first decline in eight weeks.

    https://www.cnbc.com/2022/06/20/oil-markets-global-economy-supply-concerns.html

  • South Korea drops 2%; China keeps benchmark lending rate unchanged

    South Korea drops 2%; China keeps benchmark lending rate unchanged

    • Shares in Asia-Pacific were mixed on Monday.
    • China’s one-year and five-year loan prime rates were both left unchanged on Monday.
    • Netease shares in the city skidded 6.22% in Monday afternoon trade after the firm announced a delay to the release of its eagerly anticipated video game Diablo Immortal in China, just days before it was expected to launch officially.

    https://www.cnbc.com/2022/06/20/asia-markets-china-loan-prime-rate-alibaba-currencies-oil.html

  • Workers at Canadian National Railway go on strike after failing to reach contract, union negotiator says

    Workers at Canadian National Railway go on strike after failing to reach contract, union negotiator says

    Workers in signals and communications have gone on strike at Canadian National Railway Co. CNR-T +0.61%increase in a development that threatens to exacerbate transport bottlenecks across the country in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Some 750 members of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers in Canada walked off the job Saturday after failing to agree to a new labour contract with the railway, union negotiator Steve Martin said in an interview. The two sides are not meeting in person but continue to talk and exchange contract proposals, he said.

    A spokesman for Canadian National would not confirm that the walkout had occurred. “We’re not saying anything at this point on our end,” Jonathan Abecassis said by phone on Sunday.

    A lasting strike could deliver yet another hit to supply chains in Canada and drive up prices for goods, which have already been affected by the pandemic. And last year in British Columbia, mudslides and flooding severed all major highways between the Lower Mainland and the Interior, as well as freight routes used by Canadian National and rival Canadian Pacific.

    The railway has a contingency plan in place to ensure that the safe transport of goods continues, Mr. Abecassis said. There is no impact to operations currently and there is none expected, he said.

    The union challenged that view, saying fallout is unavoidable if the work stoppage continues. “The impact to operations is highly likely,” Mr. Martin said. That’s because a large percentage of workers are on-call employees responding to troubleshooting situations like the aftermath of thunderstorms, he explained. Others do preventative maintenance.

    The striking workers repair and maintain CN’s trackside electrical and signalling equipment, such as crossings, track signals and switches. This equipment dictates the potential speed of trains, much in the same way traffic lights dictate the speed of motor vehicles on the road, Mr. Martin said.

    CN intends to use managers and contract workers to do the work if needed, Mr. Abecassis said. It was unclear how this would be possible in Quebec, which has stringent laws against using non-management replacement workers in a labour-conflict situation.

    The union last week gave the company a 72-hour notice of its intention to strike. The company has offered to resolve the remaining differences with the union, chiefly on wages and benefits, through binding arbitration.

    One major issue being contested concerns what’s called “out-of-region work.” The company wants to be able to move workers out of their home region for a specific number of days at time, Mr. Martin said. The same issue came up during the previous contract negotiations, which yielded a five-year collective agreement that expired at the end of 2021.

  • Canadian dollar hits 19-month low as oil tumbles

    Canadian dollar hits 19-month low as oil tumbles

    The Canadian dollar CADUSD -0.61%decrease weakened to its lowest in 19 months against its U.S. counterpart on Friday as oil prices tumbled and the greenback broadly rallied.

    The loonie was trading 0.5% lower at 1.3020 to the greenback, or 76.80 U.S. cents, after touching its weakest since November 2020 at 1.3078.

    For the week, the currency was down 1.8%, its biggest weekly decline since August last year, as investors worried that aggressive tightening by central banks, including Wednesday’s 0.75 percentage point rate hike by the U.S. Federal Reserve, could derail economic growth.

    “On top of those interest rate concerns, we saw oil take a tumble,” said Darren Richardson, chief operating officer at Richardson International Currency Exchange Inc. “That added fuel to the loonie weakness today.”

    The price of oil, one of Canada’s major exports, tumbled to a four-week low on worries that an economic slowdown could cut demand for energy.

    U.S. crude oil futures settled 6.8% lower at $109.56 a barrel, while the U.S. dollar jumped against a basket of major currencies as the Bank of Japan’s decision to buck the recent wave of tightening weighed on the Japanese yen .

    In domestic data, the pace of Canadian home price growth slowed in May, edging off April’s record high, but prices still rose both on the month and on the year, the National Bank Composite House Price Index showed.

    Canadian government bond yields were higher across the curve, with the 10-year up 3.9 basis points at 3.414%. On Thursday, it touched its highest intraday level in 12 years at 3.664%.

  • Ottawa launches first phase of Canada Greener Home Loan program

    Ottawa launches first phase of Canada Greener Home Loan program

    Ottawa has launched the first phase of its plan to offer interest-free loans to Canadians planning upgrades that will have a significant impact in reducing their home’s environmental footprint.

    The program will provide interest-free loans of up to $40,000 per household to help finance eligible retrofits.

    The first phase is open to eligible homeowners who are applying or have an open application to the Canada Greener Homes Grant.

    The second phase will begin in early September.

    It will expand the eligibility to homeowners who have already received a grant or requested a post-retrofit EnerGuide evaluation, but still have remaining eligible retrofits they are interested in doing, that have not yet started.

    The Canada Greener Homes Loan program is an designed to help up to 175,000 eligible homeowners.