Friday, October 18, 2019

Market Commentary: China Watch

I’ve held the view that Chinese finance has been at the epicenter of international market unease. The U.S./China trade war was not the predominant global risk. However, it has had the potential to become a catalyst for Chinese financial instability. And there remains a high probability for an eruption of Chinese disorder to quickly reverberate through global markets and economies. To be sure, rapidly deteriorating U.S./China relations were a major contributor to this summer’s global yield collapse and bond market dislocation.

At this point, I’ll assume some “phase 1” deal gets drafted and then signed by Presidents Trump and Xi next month in Chile. In the grand scheme of things, little will have been resolved. It appears many of the most critical issues between the world’s two rival superpowers have been excluded from the initial compromise, I’ll assume tabled for some time to come. Short-term focused markets are content with a “truce,” welcoming a period of reduced risk of a rapid escalation of tensions.

Perhaps near-term financial risks have subsided in China. A counter argument would point out that Beijing’s push to improve its negotiating position forced officials to once again hit the Credit accelerator. Did Beijing push its luck too far? I would point to the $1 TN of additional household (chiefly mortgage) debt accumulated over the past year. China’s Household borrowings were up 15.9% in one year, 37% in two, 69% in three and 138% in five years. Importantly, Beijing’s stimulus efforts stoked China’s historic mortgage finance and apartment Bubbles already well into “Terminal Phase” excess. How deeply have fraud and shenanigans permeated Chinese housing finance? Similar to P2P and corporate finance?

China’s Total Aggregate Financing (TAF) increased 2.273 TN yuan, or $321 billion during September. This was almost 20% ahead of estimates – and 5% above September 2018. After a slower July, Credit growth accelerated to place the quarter’s Credit expansion slightly ahead of comparable 2018. At $2.646 TN, year-to-date TAF expansion was 22% above 2018. With rough estimates of $600 billion of Q4 TAF growth and a $600 billion 2019 increase in national debt, China’s total system Credit growth will approach $4.0 TN.

At $240 billion, September growth in Bank Loans was 24% ahead of estimates. Loans grew at the fastest pace since March – and almost 14% above September 2018. Bank Loans expanded $1.924 TN y-t-d, up about 4% from comparable 2018. Yet September Consumer Loan growth was only 1% above September 2018, with third quarter expansion down a notable 7.8% y-o-y.

Chinese GDP expanded at a 6.0% y-o-y pace during Q3, slightly below estimates (and the “lowest level since 1992”). According to Bloomberg, “Consumption’s contribution increased to 60.5% from 55.3%; Investment’s contribution slowed to 19.8% from 25.9%.” That growth continues to slow in the face of 12.5% y-o-y Credit (TAF) growth portends instability ahead. With surging household debt and inflating housing markets, the ongoing consumption boom comes as no surprise. Property Investment was up 10.5% y-o-y, continuing the powerful Bubble momentum unleashed with Beijing’s 2016 stimulus measures. Retail sales were up 7.8% y-o-y in September, in line with estimates.

Beyond the acute vulnerability to any weakening of Credit growth, the Chinese Bubble economy is demonstrating obvious signs of imbalances and price distortions. While the housing boom for the most part is ongoing, auto sales have slowed markedly.

October 12 – Bloomberg: “Chinese auto sales fell in September for the 15th month in 16, extending their unprecedented slump despite government efforts to support the world’s largest car market. Sales of sedans, sport utility vehicles, minivans and multipurpose vehicles dropped 6.6% from a year earlier to 1.81 million units… The only increase since mid-2018 came in June, when dealers offered big discounts to clear inventory.”

Meanwhile, weaker-than-expected trade data point to waning economic momentum.

October 13 – Reuters (Yawen Chen and Gabriel Crossley): “A slide in China’s exports picked up pace in September while imports contracted for a fifth straight month, pointing to further weakness in the economy and underlining the need for more stimulus as the Sino-U.S. trade war drags on… September exports fell 3.2% from a year earlier, the biggest fall since February… Total September imports fell 8.5% after August’s 5.6% decline, the lowest since May, and were expected to fall 5.2%.”

Price data (i.e. CPI at six-year high and PPI at three-year low) also support the view of monetary disorder and an imbalanced economy:

October 14 – Market Watch (Grace Zhu): “Rising pork prices pushed China's consumer inflation to its highest level in nearly six years in September… The consumer price index rose 3% in September from a year earlier compared with the 2.8% expansion recorded August… The government aims to keep consumer inflation under roughly 3% for 2019. In the first nine months of the year China's CPI rose 2.5% from the same period a year earlier… Food prices in September surged 11.2% on year to set the strongest pace in nearly eight years and extend August's 10.0% gain.”

October 14 – Reuters (Yawen Chen and Gabriel Crossley): “China’s factory gate prices declined at their fastest pace in more than three years in September, reinforcing the case for Beijing to unveil further stimulus as manufacturing cools on weak demand and U.S. trade pressures. The producer price index (PPI), considered a key barometer of corporate profitability, dropped 1.2% year-on-year in September…”

The Shanghai Composite dropped 1.3% Friday, the largest decline since September 17th – giving back about half of the previous week’s gain. According to Bloomberg, Chinese defaults this week reached an annual all-time high, with more than two months to spare. There must also be some system stress smoldering below the surface.

October 16 – Financial Times (Don Weinland and Sherry Fei Ju): “China’s central bank made an unexpected Rmb200bn ($28bn) injection into the banking system on Wednesday, highlighting policymakers’ concerns over liquidity levels as economic growth falls to a 30-year low. Policymakers have worried that liquidity constraints over the past year have made banks less willing to lend to companies at a time when the Sino-US trade dispute is also proving a drag on economic activity. ‘It suggests that the [People’s Bank of China] feels the interbank market needs more liquidity,’ said Julian Evans-Pritchard, senior China economist at Capital Economics. ‘Whether or not the goal is to push down interbank rates or simply to keep them broadly stable is unclear at this stage.’”

I have suggested it was no coincidence China’s August money market instability was followed some weeks later by U.S. “repo” market tumult. It was interesting to see both the PBOC and Federal Reserve actively adding liquidity this week. A “phase 1” deal is at hand, while quarter-end funding issues have subsided. Why then does pressure persist in both funding markets?

October 18 – Wall Street Journal (Michael S. Derby): “The Federal Reserve injected both temporary and permanent liquidity into the financial system Friday. The permanent addition came by way of $7.501 billion in Treasury bill purchases, which are aimed at growing the Fed’s nearly $4 trillion in holdings… The New York Fed also on Friday added $56.65 billion in short-term liquidity to financial markets. In a repurchase agreement operation that will expire on Monday, the Fed took in $47.95 billion in Treasurys, $500 million in agency securities, and $8.2 billion in mortgage-backed securities. The Fed’s operations on Friday are part of an effort to help tame volatility in short-term rate markets with temporary and permanent injections of liquidity… On Thursday, the Fed added $104.15 billion in temporary liquidity.”

Fed funds futures price in an 88% probability of a third Fed rate cut on October 30th. Those sure seem like rather short odds considering the backdrop, including an easing of trade tensions and near-record stock prices. There will be a number of dissents if the FOMC accommodates market expectations. Shouldn’t the Fed’s restart of balance sheet expansion support the case for holding off for now on an additional rate reduction? Some bond selling on a rate cut announcement wouldn’t be all that surprising. Curiously, a Friday evening announcement from the ECB: “ECB Policy Makers Don’t Expect More Easing in Coming Months.”

October 18 – Bloomberg (Piotr Skolimowski, Jill Ward and Paul Gordon): “European Central Bank policy makers don’t expect any more monetary easing in coming months despite a likely downgrade in their economic forecasts in December, according to euro-area officials. The interest-rate cuts and quantitative easing pushed through by President Mario Draghi in September are enough to see the euro-zone economy through its slowdown unless it’s hit by shocks such as escalating trade tensions or a no-deal Brexit, the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity. The vehement opposition by some governors to those measures dampens the chance of more action any time soon, they added.”

October 18 – Bloomberg (Jeff Kearns): “The International Monetary Fund warned that global economic risks have risen as central banks reduce borrowing costs and that stronger oversight is needed to ease threats to an already shaky expansion… ‘The search for yield in a prolonged low-interest-rate environment has led to stretched valuations in risky asset markets around the globe, raising the possibility of sharp, sudden adjustments in financial conditions,’ the fund said. ‘Such sharp tightening could have significant macroeconomic implications, especially in countries with elevated financial vulnerabilities.’”

The entire world these days has “elevated financial vulnerabilities,” certainly including China. Saturday's Brexit vote will be fascinating.


For the Week:

The S&P500 added 0.5% (up 19.1% y-t-d), while the Dow slipped 0.2% (up 14.8%). The Utilities dipped 0.2% (up 14.8%). The Banks jumped 2.4% (up 17.7%), and the Broker/Dealers rose 1.7% (up 8.8%). The Transports gained 2.1% (up 14.6%). The S&P 400 Midcaps advanced 1.1% (up 16.5%), and the small cap Russell 2000 jumped 1.6% (up 13.9%). The Nasdaq100 added 0.3% (up 24.3%). The Semiconductors were little changed (up 37.6%). The Biotechs rose 1.5% (up 1.4%). While bullion traded little changed, the HUI gold index rallied 2.0% (up 29.6%).

Three-month Treasury bill rates ended the week at 1.62%. Two-year government yields slipped two bps to 1.58% (down 91bps y-t-d). Five-year T-note yields added one basis point to 1.57% (down 94bps). Ten-year Treasury yields increased two bps to 1.76% (down 93bps). Long bond yields rose six bps to 2.25% (down 77bps). Benchmark Fannie Mae MBS yields gained two bps to 2.72% (down 77bps).

Greek 10-year yields dropped another 13 bps to 1.30% (down 309bps y-t-d). Ten-year Portuguese yields were unchanged at 0.20% (down 152bps). Italian 10-year yields slipped a basis point to 0.93% (down 182ps). Spain's 10-year yields added one basis point to 0.25% (down 117bps). German bund yields jumped six bps to negative 0.38% (down 62bps). French yields rose five bps to negative 0.08% (down 79bps). The French to German 10-year bond spread narrowed one to 30 bps. U.K. 10-year gilt yields were little changed at 0.71% (down 57bps). U.K.'s FTSE equities index fell 1.3% (up 6.3% y-t-d).

Japan's Nikkei Equities Index surged 3.2% (up 12.4% y-t-d). Japanese 10-year "JGB" yields rose five bps to negative 0.13% (down 13bps y-t-d). France's CAC40 declined 0.5% (up 19.1%). The German DAX equities index gained 1.0% (up 19.6%). Spain's IBEX 35 equities index increased 0.6% (up 9.2%). Italy's FTSE MIB index gained 0.7% (up 21.8%). EM equities were mixed. Brazil's Bovespa index increased 0.9% (up 15.1%), while Mexico's Bolsa was about unchanged (up 3.7%). South Korea's Kospi index rose 0.8% (up 1.0%). India's Sensex equities index jumped 3.1% (up 9.0%). China's Shanghai Exchange fell 1.2% (up 17.8%). Turkey's Borsa Istanbul National 100 index declined 0.6% (up 7.8%). Russia's MICEX equities index rose 1.7% (up 16.2%).

Investment-grade bond funds saw inflows of $2.892 billion, and junk bond funds posted inflows of $1.792 billion (from Lipper).

Freddie Mac 30-year fixed mortgage rates jumped 12 bps to 3.69% (down 116bps y-o-y). Fifteen-year rates rose 10 bps to 3.15% (down 111bps). Five-year hybrid ARM rates were unchanged at 3.35% (down 75bps). Bankrate's survey of jumbo mortgage borrowing costs had 30-year fixed rates rising 12 bps to 4.12% (down 76bps).

Federal Reserve Credit last week increased $0.3bn to $3.910 TN. Over the past year, Fed Credit contracted $230bn, or 5.5%. Fed Credit inflated $1.099 Trillion, or 39%, over the past 362 weeks. Elsewhere, Fed holdings for foreign owners of Treasury, Agency Debt declined $6.9bn last week to $3.412 TN. "Custody holdings" fell $21bn y-o-y, or 0.6%.

M2 (narrow) "money" supply jumped $39.2bn last week to a record $15.144 TN. "Narrow money" gained $920bn, or 6.5%, over the past year. For the week, Currency slipped $0.6bn. Total Checkable Deposits dropped $37.0bn, while Savings Deposits surged $70.6bn. Small Time Deposits dipped $2.2bn. Retail Money Funds gained $8.5bn.

Total money market fund assets declined $1.6bn to $3.468 TN. Money Funds gained $596bn y-o-y, or 20.8%.

Total Commercial Paper fell $12.4bn to $1.079 TN. CP was down $3.2bn y-o-y, or 0.3%.

Currency Watch:

October 12 – Financial Times (Max Seddon and Henry Foy): “Russia is exploring currency settlements in euros and roubles for its vast energy exports in an attempt to avoid the dollar and insulate Moscow from the US-led global financial system. Maxim Oreshkin, Russia’s economy minister, told the Financial Times that Russia wanted to minimise its exposure to the US by attracting more investors through rouble settlements. ‘We have a very good currency, it's stable. Why not use it for global transactions?’ Mr Oreshkin said… ‘We want [oil and gas sales] in roubles at some point,’ he said. ‘The question here is not to have any excessive costs from doing it that way, but if the broad . . . financial infrastructure, is created, if the initial costs are very low, then why not?”

The U.S. dollar index declined 1.2% to 97.141 (up 1.0% y-t-d). For the week on the upside, the British pound increased 2.5%, the Swedish krona 1.6%, the Swiss franc 0.2%, the Mexican peso 1.2%, the euro 1.1%, the Australian dollar 0.9%, the New Zealand dollar 0.7%, the Singapore dollar 0.7%, the South Korean won 0.6% and the Canadian dollar 0.6%. On the downside, the Norwegian krone declined 0.9%, the Japanese yen 0.2%, the South African rand 0.1% and the Brazilian real 0.1%. The Chinese renminbi increased 0.09% versus the dollar this week (down 2.87% y-t-d).

Commodities Watch:

The Bloomberg Commodities Index slipped 0.2% this week (up 2.2% y-t-d). Spot Gold was little changed at $1,490 (up 16.2%). Silver added 0.2% to $17.578 (up 13.1%). WTI crude fell 92 cents to $53.78 (up 18%). Gasoline declined 1.0% (up 23%), while Natural Gas rallied 4.8% (down 21%). Copper increased 0.3% (unchanged). Wheat surged 4.8% (up 6%). Corn dropped 1.7% (up 4%).

Market Instability Watch:

October 16 – Bloomberg (Alexandra Harris): “Signs of pressure in dollar funding markets are reappearing, with rates for repurchase agreements at elevated levels and the Federal Reserve’s overnight operation coming in fully subscribed for the first time in three weeks. The New York Fed took $75 billion of securities in its overnight system repurchase agreement operation Wednesday… That was the maximum amount on offer for the action and less than the $80.35 billion in bids it received. The last time such an overnight offering was fully subscribed was Sept. 25. The rate on overnight general collateral repo was around 2.15% on Wednesday morning… That’s above the range of 1.75%-2.00% that the central bank currently maintains for the federal funds rate…”

October 18 – Bloomberg (Sarah Ponczek and Lu Wang): “When it comes to mixed messages from markets, 2019 has been a year with few precedents. Whenever a believable signal starts to emerge from stocks or bonds about the economy, it changes. While some disagreement is normal, this is approaching the historic. For context, in a typical year, returns in either equities or Treasuries lead the other by 10 percentage points or more, reflecting a relatively firm consensus over whether growth will be good or bad. But over the past 39 weeks, the two markets have been hugging each other like no time since the early 1990s, data compiled by Ned Davis Research show.”

Trump Administration Watch:

October 15 – New York Times (Ana Swanson and Keith Bradsher): “President Trump portrayed the ‘Phase 1’ agreement he announced on Friday with China with typical fanfare, describing the pact as ‘massive’ and ‘the largest contract’ ever signed. ‘We made a fantastic deal,’ Mr. Trump said… Tuesday at the White House. There are good reasons to be skeptical about those claims. The deal appears likely to benefit American farmers by increasing Chinese purchases of agricultural goods and gives some other businesses more access to the Chinese market. But the ‘agreement in principle’ is limited in scope, and exact details have yet to be put in writing — a process that has derailed negotiations with China in the past.”

October 14 – Reuters (Makini Brice and Andrea Ricci): “U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said… that an additional round of tariffs on Chinese imports will likely be imposed if a trade deal with China has not been reached by then, but added that he expected the agreement to go through. ‘I have every expectation - if there’s not a deal, those tariffs would go in place - but I expect we’ll have a deal,’ he said…, when asked about a round of tariffs scheduled for Dec. 15.”

October 12 – Financial Times (Tom Mitchell): “After five months of constant escalations in their long-running trade war with the US, Chinese officials on Friday finally secured a respite. In return for a series of modest concessions, most of which had been offered by President Xi Jinping’s administration in previous negotiating rounds, Donald Trump agreed to suspend another set of tariff increases originally scheduled to take effect on October 15. The truce sets the stage for a series of much higher-stakes negotiations after Mr Xi and Mr Trump’s expected encounter on the sidelines of the Asia Pacific Economic Conference, scheduled for November 16-17 in Santiago, Chile, where Friday’s agreement will be finalised. The two sides are still a long way from a final settlement that addresses much more contentious issues, such as Chinese government support for strategic industries and state-owned enterprises…”

October 16 – Reuters (Patricia Zengerle): “The U.S. House of Representatives… passed four pieces of legislation taking a hard line on China, three related to pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong and one commending Canada in its dispute over the extradition of a Chinese telecom executive. All four measures passed by unanimous voice vote, as members of Congress - Democrats and Republicans - said they wanted to take an aggressive stance on China and show support for Hong Kong following four months of unrest in the city.”

October 16 – Reuters (Timothy Gardner and Arshad Mohammed): “The White House is warning Chinese shipping companies against turning off their ships’ transponders to hide Iranian oil shipments in violation of U.S. sanctions, two senior administration officials said. ‘We’ve been messaging very heavily to the shipping companies, you don’t want to do this, it’s not worth it,’ said one official… ‘It’s incredibly dangerous and irresponsible behavior.’”

Federal Reserve Watch:

October 16 – CNBC (Jeff Cox): “Chicago Federal Reserve President Charles Evans agrees with the two interest rate cuts this year but thinks that’s probably enough for now. As markets anticipate another reduction later this month, Evans, a voting member of the Federal Open Market Committee, said… that policy is probably appropriate given an economy that is softening but still in good shape. ‘I think policy probably is in a good place right now. All told, the growth outlook is good, and we have policy accommodation in place to support rising inflation,’ he said… ‘That said, there is some risk that the economy will have more difficulty navigating all the uncertainties out there or that unexpected downside shocks might hit.’ Evans conceded ‘there is an argument for more accommodation’ as a buffer against downside risks such as a slowing global economy and the U.S.-China trade war. However, he said his ‘own assessment is pretty much in line’ with the consensus that emerged from the September FOMC meeting.”

October 15 – Reuters (Marc Jones and Dhara Ranasinghe): “St. Louis Federal Reserve bank president James Bullard said… that negative interest rates could be problematic in the United States. Central banks in the euro zone and Japan have cut interest rates below zero to boost inflation and economic growth, raising a debate about the ammunition other major central banks such as the U.S. Federal Reserve have to fight a slowdown. ‘I’m not a fan of this policy,’ Bullard told the press… ‘Negative interest rates have had mixed results where they’ve been tried,’ he said, adding that it was not clear either how multi-trillion dollar U.S. money markets would adapt to such a policy.’”

October 15 – Reuters (Ann Saphir): “San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly… said she was watching data closely to see whether the economy maintains its momentum in the face of headwinds including slowing global growth and geopolitical and trade policy uncertainty. ‘Right now, I see the economy in a good place, and policy accommodation in a good place,’ Daly told reporters… As for the headwinds, ‘the gusting seems to have gone down a little bit on the news of some progress on Brexit, some progress on trade negotiations between the U.S. and China’…”

October 16 – Associated Press (Martin Crutsinger): “The U.S. economy was expanding at a modest pace in September and into October despite the fact manufacturing was being hurt by rising trade tensions and weaker global growth while adverse weather was affecting farmers. The Federal Reserve, issuing its latest assessment of business conditions around the country, reported… ‘persistent trade tensions and slower global growth’ were weighing on the economy.”

U.S. Bubble Watch:

October 15 – CNBC (Diana Olick): “Anyone out hunting for an affordable home today knows that the pickings are slim – and they are about to get slimmer. Housing inventory hit a record low about two years ago, but a lull in home sales over the past year helped build back much-needed supply, especially in the mid-priced range. Then a sharp drop in rates this summer brought demand back and depleted that supply dramatically. National housing inventory fell 2.5% annually in September, a sharper decline than August’s 1.8% decrease… Supply has always been leanest on the low end, as investors have been very active in that price range since the foreclosure crisis. Roughly 5 million mostly entry-level homes have been turned into single-family rentals, and strong demand for those rentals means investors are unlikely to put the homes up for sale anytime soon. In addition, an unseasonably strong surge in demand at the end of summer and into this fall now has the supply of homes priced below $200,000 down 10% compared with a year ago.”

October 16 – CNBC (Diana Olick): “U.S. homebuilders are loving today’s lower mortgage rates, which are bringing buyers back and boosting sales. Builder confidence in the single-family market jumped 3 points in October to 71 on the National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index… That is the highest level since February 2018 and up from 68 in October of last year. Anything above 50 is considered positive sentiment… Of the index’s three components, current sales conditions rose 3 points to 78, sales expectations over the next six months jumped 6 points to 76 and buyer traffic rose 4 points to 54.”

October 16 – Reuters (Lucia Mutikani): “U.S. retail sales fell for the first time in seven months in September, suggesting that manufacturing-led weakness could be spreading to the broader economy, keeping the door open for the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates again later this month… Retail sales dropped 0.3% last month as households cut back spending on motor vehicles, building materials, hobbies and online purchases. That was the first drop since February. Data for August was revised up to show retail sales rising 0.6% instead of 0.4% as previously reported.”

October 14 – Wall Street Journal (Maureen Farrell, Liz Hoffman and Eliot Brown): “SoftBank Group Corp. has prepared a financing package that would give it control of WeWork and further sideline its founder Adam Neumann in exchange for relieving the shared-office startup’s looming cash crunch… WeWork is racing to find a way to shore up its financing after its New York parent company We Co. pulled its plans for an initial public offering and Mr. Neumann resigned as chief executive under pressure. One potential solution is the SoftBank package.”

October 18 – Bloomberg (Lisa Lee): “Leveraged loan investors are getting increasingly angsty, and their fear may be a harbinger of more pain coming in credit markets. Money managers are plowing into the least risky junk debt they can find while avoiding the junkiest. Since the start of October, lower rated B loans have dropped about 1%, while less risky BB rated loans have lost just 0.26% through Wednesday. An index of riskier loans is hovering near its lowest level relative to higher-rated loans since mid-2017… Leveraged loans of all stripes are performing worse than junk bonds, which have risen about 0.1% this month…”

October 14 – Bloomberg (Catherine Ngai, Michael Jeffers, and Kevin Crowley): “America’s shale boom got the world accustomed to soaring production. Now growth has slowed, and a cloud has formed over the industry. Fracking pushed the U.S. closer to its long-sought goal of energy independence at a time of unprecedented geopolitical risk. Wells from Texas’s Permian Basin to the Bakken in North Dakota turned farmers and ranchers into overnight millionaires. Drivers enjoyed cheap gasoline, decent-paying jobs sprung up in small towns and new technology attracted investment from all corners of the world, keeping drillers busy… For years, the good times came with the warning that a litany of financial and engineering issues would doom the revolution. Such naysaying was proven wrong again and again by the industry’s resilience. Producers were able to borrow cheaply, fine-tune operations and trim costs along their supply chains. But the tea leaves look different this year. Money isn’t as plentiful for an industry that in the past decade burned through nearly $200 billion. Investors are restless.”

October 15 – Wall Street Journal (Chip Cutter): “Applications to some of America’s most elite business schools fell at a steeper rate this year, as universities struggled to attract international students amid changes to immigration policies and political tensions between the U.S. and China. The declines affected some of the nation’s top-rated programs, with Harvard University, Stanford University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, among others, all reporting larger year-over-year drops in business-school applications. Some… posted double-digit percentage declines. Overall, applications to American M.B.A. programs fell for the fifth straight year…”

China Watch:

October 14 – CNBC (Grace Shao): “Chinese state media warned the U.S. over the weekend to ‘avoid backpedaling’ on the partial trade agreement, and expressed caution about the initial phase of the deal which President Donald Trump called ‘very substantial.’ On Friday, the Trump administration announced it was suspending a tariff increase to 30% from 25% on at least $250 billion in Chinese goods which were set to take effect on Tuesday. However, a tariff hike implemented in September was not rolled back and plans for another hike just before the Christmas holiday on Dec. 15 remain in place. ‘While the negotiations do appear to have produced a fundamental understanding on the key issues and the broader benefits of friendly relations, the Champagne should probably be kept on ice, at least until the two presidents put pen to paper,’ said China Daily…”

October 15 – Associated Press (Joe McDonald): “A truce in a U.S.-Chinese tariff war and Beijing’s promises to open more of its state-dominated economy are raising investor hopes. But Beijing is trying to temper expectations, while companies express frustration over the halting pace of market-opening. The China Daily… warned Tuesday the two sides have yet to put last week’s agreement on paper after President Donald Trump suspended a planned tariff hike. In exchange, Trump said Beijing would buy up to $50 billion of American farm goods, a pledge China has yet to confirm.”

October 14 – Bloomberg: “China wants to hold more talks this month to hammer out the details of the ‘phase one’ trade deal touted by Donald Trump before Xi Jinping agrees to sign it, according to people familiar with the matter. Beijing may send a delegation led by Vice Premier Liu He, China’s top negotiator, to finalize a written deal that could be signed by the presidents at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit next month in Chile… Another person said China also wants Trump to scrap a planned tariff hike in December in addition to the hike scheduled for this week, something the administration hasn’t yet endorsed.”

October 16 – Wall Street Journal (Chao Deng and Lingling Wei): “China has promised to buy more U.S. farm products, but questions remain over how much, the time frame for purchases, and what the U.S. might have to give in return. Beijing is pushing the U.S. to drop plans to impose new 15% tariffs on $156 billion in consumer goods starting Dec. 15 and could use the farm purchases as leverage. Chinese negotiators continue to say purchases must be based on actual demand and at fair-market prices… The roughly $50 billion in farm products touted by President Trump is far beyond what China has historically spent in any one year and would likely require Beijing to lean heavily on its state-owned firms to accomplish. ‘The uncertainty is still there,’ says John Frisbie, managing director of international consulting firm Hills & Company…”

October 15 – CNBC (Evelyn Cheng): “China will take countermeasures against the U.S. in response to a bill that favors the Hong Kong protesters, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said… On Tuesday in Washington, the U.S. House of Representatives passed the ‘Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act.’ The bill requests that various government departments consider whether recent political developments in Hong Kong require the U.S. to change the region’s special trading status. Hong Kong is a special administrative region of China, and exports from the mainland traveling through Hong Kong can potentially evade U.S. export controls and sanctions. ‘If the relevant bill is finally passed into law, not only will it hurt Chinese interests and China-U.S. relations, but also seriously damage U.S. interests,’ Geng Shuang, Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson, said…”

October 15 – Reuters (Lusha Zhang and Kevin Yao): “China’s banks extended more new yuan loans than expected in September, as policymakers ramped up support to stabilize the slowing economy during a bruising trade war with the United States… Chinese banks extended 1.69 trillion yuan ($238.98bn) in new loans in September, up from August and exceeding analyst expectations… Analysts polled by Reuters had predicted new yuan loans would rise to 1.4 trillion yuan in September, up from 1.21 trillion yuan in August but largely in line with the tally in September last year… Corporate loans jumped to 1.01 trillion yuan in September from 651.3 billion yuan in August. Household loans, mostly mortgages, rose to 755 billion yuan last month from 653.8 billion yuan in August…”

October 18 – Bloomberg: “The total number of Chinese onshore company bond defaults this year just equaled the record set for the whole of 2018. New defaulted bonds reached 120 this week… The missed payments totaling 102.9b yuan ($14.6bn) is approaching last year’s all-time high of 122 billion yuan. Some 45 companies have defaulted on their debt year-to-date versus 40 in the previous year…”

October 13 – Reuters (Yawen Chen and Gabriel Crossley): “China’s exports to the United States fell 10.7% from a year earlier in dollar terms in January-September, while U.S. imports dropped 26.4% during that period…”

October 15 – Bloomberg: “China’s securities regulators are taking steps to curb private bond issuance in a bid to contain credit risks at the nation’s weaker firms. The China Securities Regulatory Commission and stock exchanges in Shanghai and Shenzhen have sent a window guidance to some brokerages to keep the outstanding value of privately sold corporate bonds on exchanges at or below 40% of issuers’ net assets… New bond sales exceeding this ratio should only be used to repay old debt.”

October 13 – Reuters (Yawen Chen and Ryan Woo): “Chinese President Xi Jinping warned… that any attempt to divide China will be crushed, as Beijing faces political challenges in months-long protests in Hong Kong and U.S. criticism over its treatment of Muslim minority groups. ‘Anyone attempting to split China in any part of the country will end in crushed bodies and shattered bones,’ he told Nepal’s Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli… ‘And any external forces backing such attempts dividing China will be deemed by the Chinese people as pipe-dreaming!’ he was quoted as saying.”

Central Banking Watch:

October 13 – Reuters (Kirsti Knolle): “New Austrian National Bank Governor Robert Holzmann sharply criticized the European Central Bank’s ultra-easy monetary policy in an interview… and said he hoped for a new course under incoming chief Christine Lagarde. Holzmann took over as governor and became a member of the European Central Bank’s rate-setting governing council last month. ‘My statement is that the current monetary policy... is wrong and that a different policy is needed in the future,’ Holzmann told Austrian broadcaster ORF.”

Brexit Watch:

October 18 – BBC: “Parliament will sit on a Saturday for the first time in 37 years to vote on Boris Johnson's Brexit deal. The PM has been trying to convince MPs to support the agreement he secured with the EU, ahead of what is expected to be a knife-edge vote in the Commons. His former DUP allies and opposition parties plan to vote against it. But at least nine Labour MPs are expected to rebel and the PM is hoping to be backed by some of the Tory MPs he sacked for opposing him last month. BBC deputy political editor John Pienaar said numbers for the vote looked ‘painfully tight’, adding Mr Johnson ‘either has to win round the DUP - which looks close to impossible - or look elsewhere for votes’.”

Europe Watch:

October 15 – Bloomberg (Alessandro Speciale and Giovanni Salzano): “Italy’s debt rose almost to the highest level on record, adding urgency to the government’s clash over the 2020 budget. The country’s public debt increased to 138% of gross domestic product in the second quarter… That’s just under the high of 138.8% reached in the second quarter of 2015.”

October 13 – Reuters (Emma Pinedo and Joan Faus): “Spain’s Supreme Court on Monday jailed nine Catalan separatist leaders for between nine and 13 years for their role in a failed independence bid, a decision that triggered mass protests in the region and left the future course of the dispute uncertain.”

EM Watch:

October 15 – Bloomberg (Ugur Yilmaz, Tugce Ozsoy, and Asli Kandemir): “Turkey’s market regulators suspended short-selling in seven banks including Turkiye Halk Bankasi AS and ordered brokers not to execute orders unless a client has the respective shares in his account. Traders say the moves make it hard to sell shares in the country’s largest banks.”

Global Bubble Watch:

October 14 – Bloomberg (Masaki Kondo and Toru Fujioka): “The Bank of Japan is on course for an historic turning point that would see its bond holdings shrink next year for the first time in a decade… The shift is all the more notable given that the European Central Bank and Federal Reserve are set to once again increase their balance sheets. It’s a remarkable prospect for a central bank that has refused to drop guidance for boosting government debt holdings by 80 trillion yen ($740 billion) annually, even as it steadily tapers purchases since pivoting to yield-curve control in 2016.”

October 16 – Associated Press (Martin Crutsinger): “The International Monetary Fund is further downgrading its outlook for the world economy, predicting that growth this year will be the weakest since the 2008 financial crisis… The IMF’s latest World Economic Outlook… foresees a slight rebound in 2020 but warns of threats ranging from heightened political tensions in the Middle East to the threat that the United States and China will fail to prevent their trade war from escalating… The new forecast predicts global growth of 3% this year, down 0.2 percentage point from its previous forecast in July and sharply below the 3.6% growth of 2018.”

October 16 – Reuters (Pete Schroeder): “The International Monetary Fund heightened its warnings for the corporate debt market…, as investors search for richer returns in riskier assets after recent interest rate cuts by central banks… The IMF and other economic policymakers have expressed concern over high levels of risky corporate debt in the past. But the group said… attempts by central banks worldwide to lower interest rates to combat immediate economic risks have exacerbated the situation, leading to ‘worrisome’ levels of debt with poor credit quality and increasing financial vulnerabilities over the medium-term.”

Fixed-Income Bubble Watch:

October 16 – Bloomberg (Lara Wieczezynski and Jeannine Amodeo): “U.S. leveraged loan investors are willing to buy the lowest rated junk debt the market has to offer -- for a price. And that price is rising. A flight to quality is driving up borrowing costs for those selling new B rated debt to its highest level in more than three years as investors look to avoid sectors and companies they see at risk of struggling in a downturn. Through Oct. 11, margins on B rated debt -- the amount borrowers pay in addition to the market’s benchmark rate – was 515.9 bps. If that trend continues that will be the highest margin on B rated debt borrowers have had to pay since August 2016.”

October 16 – Bloomberg (Rachel Evans and Gowri Gurumurthy): “Investors are piling back into junk-bond exchange-traded funds as easing trade tensions between the U.S. and China is giving them greater confidence to buy riskier debt that offers higher interest rates. More than $540 million flowed into State Street Corp.’s SPDR Bloomberg Barclays High Yield Bond ETF on Tuesday, the biggest one-day increase since May 2017… Investors also added cash to BlackRock Inc.’s iShares iBoxx High Yield Corporate Bond fund – the largest junk-debt ETF, which is known as HYG -- and to another speculative-grade product that focuses on short-dated securities.”

October 16 – Bloomberg (Danielle Moran): “U.S. state and local governments are poised to sell bonds at the fastest pace in almost two years as they take advantage of lower interest rates and strong investor demand. Municipal bond issuers are expected to sell $21.4 billion in debt over the next month. This is the highest visible supply since December 2017, when governments rushed deals to market to get ahead of federal tax law changes effective at the start of 2018… The upcoming supply will add to the $289 billion in long-term bonds state and local governments have already sold this year, an 11% increase over the same period in 2018.”

Leveraged Speculation Watch:

October 14 – Bloomberg (Heejin Kim): “Lime Asset Management Co., South Korea’s largest hedge fund with about $4 billion of assets, suspended withdrawals from more funds on Monday, freezing a total of $710 million of its portfolio, after the firm said last week it couldn’t sell assets fast enough to meet redemption demands. The hedge fund halted an additional 243.6 billion won ($210 million) today after freezing funds worth 603 billion won on Oct. 10, Won Jong-Jun, chief executive officer at the Seoul-based firm, said in a press briefing this afternoon. A further 489 billion won of funds may also be restricted from withdrawals, he said. Investors are seeking redemptions after local media speculated over the past few months about a Korean regulatory probe into the company’s investments in convertible bonds.”

October 16 – Bloomberg (Heejin Kim and Kyungji Cho): “A run on South Korea’s biggest hedge fund is stoking contagion fears as investors in Asia’s fourth-biggest economy rapidly reassess the risk of owning hard-to-trade assets. In an echo of the liquidity crunch that caused the stunning downfall of British investor Neil Woodford, Seoul-based Lime Asset Management Co. last week began freezing withdrawals from $710 million of funds that owned convertible bonds of small Korean companies. Clients asked to pull their cash amid reports of alleged wrongdoing at Lime, but the firm said it couldn’t sell its holdings fast enough to meet the redemption requests. The worry now is that Lime’s crisis will spook investors in other hedge funds, triggering a flood of outflows that ripples through Korean markets.”

October 17 – Bloomberg (Ishika Mookerjee): “Hong Kong’s hedge fund industry saw its biggest quarterly outflow since the global recession a decade ago, a shift that may deepen concern about investor sentiment in the protest-wracked financial hub. Net redemptions totaled about $1 billion in the three months ended September, the most since the second quarter of 2009… Analysts from the research firm said that while anti-government protests in Hong Kong have unnerved markets, the outflow was in keeping with redemptions from hedge funds globally after poor returns from a number of managers in 2018.”

Geopolitical Watch:

October 14 – Reuters: “Turkey vowed to press ahead with its offensive in northern Syria on Tuesday despite U.S. sanctions and growing calls for it to stop, while Syria’s Russia-backed army moved on the key city of Manbij that was abandoned by U.S. forces. They say ‘declare a ceasefire’. ‘We will never declare a ceasefire,’ Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan told reporters… ‘They are pressuring us to stop the operation. They are announcing sanctions. Our goal is clear. We are not worried about any sanctions.’”

October 13 – Financial Times (Chloe Cornish, Laura Pitel and Lauren Fedor): “Kurdish forces say they have struck a deal with the Syrian regime and its Russian backers to stem a Turkish military assault, in a dramatic shift that came just hours after Donald Trump ordered the evacuation of the remaining US forces in the country’s north-east. The Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) said it had agreed with the Damascus government that the Syrian army should enter the Kurdish-controlled territory and deploy along the Syrian-Turkish border. The aim, the group said, was to protect Syria’s territorial integrity and ‘liberate areas entered by the Turkish army and its hired mercenaries’…”

October 16 – Reuters (Alexandra Alper and Tuvan Gumrukcu): “U.S. President Donald Trump… said he had no problem if Russia helped Syria in a conflict with Turkey and rejected criticism of his withdrawal of U.S. troops from Syria that exposed Kurdish allies, calling it ‘strategically brilliant.’ Trump’s decision to pull out American forces ahead of a Turkish offensive into northern Syria has shattered the relative calm there and he has been criticized for abandoning Kurdish militia who helped the United States defeat Islamic State militants in the region. Washington’s hasty exit has created a land rush between Turkey and Russia - now the undisputed foreign powers in the area - to partition the formerly U.S.-protected Kurdish area.”

October 15 – Reuters (Josh Smith): “Aides to Kim Jong Un are convinced the North Korean leader plans ‘a great operation’, state media said… in a report that included lavish descriptions and images of the leader riding a white horse up North Korea’s most sacred mountain… ‘His march on horseback in Mt Paektu is a great event of weighty importance in the history of the Korean revolution,’ KCNA said.”

October 14 – Reuters (Twinnie Siu, Farah Master and John Ruwitch and David Brunnstrom): “Embattled Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam… ruled out making any concessions to pro-democracy protesters in the face of escalating violence, which police said was now ‘life threatening’ citing the detonation of a small bomb. ‘I have said on many occasions that violence will not give us the solution. Violence would only breed more violence,’ Lam told a news conference.”

October 15 – Reuters (Chris Prentice, Rodrigo Campos, Marianna Parraga and Devika Krishna Kumar): “India wants to comply with global sanctions, including U.S. sanctions on Venezuela and Russia, but also needs to maintain its own strength and strategic interests, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said… Sitharaman said the Indian government has expressed its view to the United States… ‘We value the strong partnership with the USA, but we should equally be allowed to be a strong economy.’”

Friday Evening Links

[Reuters] Wall Street weighed by Boeing, J&J, bleak China data

[Reuters] Trump hopes U.S.-China trade deal will be signed by middle of November

[Reuters] Fed's Clarida keeps rate-cut door open; others less sure

[Reuters] Lebanon, pushed to the brink, faces reckoning over graft

[Reuters] Hong Kong protesters vow to hit the streets in major 'illegal' march

[Reuters] Clashes in central Barcelona on fifth day of separatist protests

[Reuters] Turkey plans presence across northeast Syria, Erdogan says

Thursday, October 17, 2019

Friday's News Links

[Reuters] Shares sapped by poor China growth, dollar gets weekly mauling

[Reuters] China third-quarter GDP grows 6%, slowest pace in almost three decades

[Reuters] China's September property investment resilient, buoyed by new construction

[Reuters] Six warning lights flashing for China’s slowing economy

[Reuters] Brexit on a knife edge as PM Johnson stakes all on 'Super Saturday' vote

[Reuters] Exclusive: Wall Street banks see green light from Fed on reserves - sources

[Reuters] IMF warns of Asia's darkening growth outlook as trade war bites

[Reuters] The IMF in figures: Debtors vs creditors

[Reuters] Japan's inflation hits 2-1/2-year low, raises stimulus chance this month

[Reuters] Turkey's forex reserves an Achilles heel if sanctions were to deepen

[Reuters] Turkey agrees with U.S. to pause Syria assault while Kurds withdraw

[Bloomberg] China’s Economy Slows on Weak Investment, Testing Global Growth

[Bloomberg] Number of China Bond Defaults Touches Last Year’s Record

[NYT] China’s Economic Growth Slows as Challenges Mount

[WSJ] Top Economic Advisers Warned Trump on Tariffs Before China Truce

[WSJ] Fed Eyes Another Rate Cut, Weighs When to Stop

[WSJ] Deals on Brexit, China Trade Don’t Make Those Problems Go Away

[FT] Why the Federal Reserve may have painted itself into a corner

[FT] How bonds became stocks and stocks became bonds

Thursday Evening Links

[Reuters] U.S. stocks gain on upbeat earnings, geopolitical news

[Reuters] Fed's Williams: Economic threats that led to rate cuts don't guarantee further action

[Reuters] China says it hopes to reach phased trade pact with U.S. as soon as possible

[Reuters] UK heading for 'fairly hard' Brexit if Johnson deal passes

[CNBC] WeWork could run out of cash by mid-November — here’s what would happen next

Wednesday, October 16, 2019

Thursday's News Links

[Reuters] Wall Street cheers Brexit deal; Netflix, Morgan Stanley results set positive mood

[Reuters] European markets roar approval at new Brexit deal

[Reuters]  Britain clinches Brexit deal, Johnson now faces parliament hurdle

[Reuters] U.S. housing starts fall from 12-year high

[CNBC] ‘Addiction’ to cheap money will do ‘tremendous damage’ to the global economy

[Reuters] U.S. diplomats, Congress take aim at China; Trump expects trade deal signing

[Reuters] Catalan regional chief calls for independence vote after night of violence

[Bloomberg] What’s in the Brexit Deal? Here’s Some of the High Points

[Bloomberg] U.S. Senators Defy China Threat, Press Ahead With Hong Kong Bill

[Bloomberg] Giugliano: How the U.S.-China Trade War Could Wallop the Financial System

[Bloomberg] China Office Vacancies Reach Decade High on Slowing Economy

[Bloomberg] $1 Billion Pulled From Hong Kong Hedge Funds, Most Since 2009

[WSJ] Fed Kicks Off Balance Sheet Expansion Effort With T-Bills Purchases

[WSJ] Negative U.S. Interest Rates? Options Traders Say Yes

[FT] The risks behind foreign banks’ dollar funding

[FT] Why hedge fund managers are happy to let the machines take over

[FT] Chinese local government funds run out of projects to back

Wednesday Evening Links

[Reuters] Wall Street inches lower as trade concerns linger

[Reuters] Oil rises 1.4% on hopes OPEC will extend supply cuts, weaker U.S. dollar

[CNBC] Fed’s Evans says no more rate cuts are needed through 2020

[CNBC] Homebuilder confidence surges to highest level in nearly two years, thanks to lower mortgage rates

[AP] Fed survey finds US economy being hurt by trade battles

[Reuters] Brexit deal at hand in Brussels, Johnson struggles to win support at home

[Reuters] Trump officials rush to Turkey as Moscow advances to fill Syria void from U.S. retreat

[Bloomberg] Fed Says Many Businesses Temper Outlook for Economic Growth

[Bloomberg] U.S. Economy Flashes Vivid Contradictions With Housing, Retail

[Bloomberg] Muni Sales Set to Surge Most Since 2017, Extending Supply Boom

[Bloomberg] Hedge Fund’s Liquidity Crisis Spurs Contagion Fears in Korea

Tuesday, October 15, 2019

Wednesday's News Links

[Reuters] Stocks slip on renewed U.S.-China trade war concerns

[Reuters] Sterling falters as Brexit approaches its endgame

[Reuters] U.S. retail sales post first decline in seven months

[AP] Brexit talks don’t get breakthrough, continue on summit eve

[CNBC] There are doubts about China’s promise to purchase more US farm products

[Reuters] U.S. House takes hard line on China over Hong Kong, Huawei

[CNBC] China threatens countermeasures in response to US bill supporting Hong Kong protesters

[Reuters] U.S. 'deeply concerned' about untrackable China ships carrying Iran oil: officials

[Reuters] Uncertainty seen persisting, along with Fed's divide

[Reuters] IMF heightens warnings on corporate debt following central bank cuts

[Reuters] India cannot sacrifice economic strength to comply with U.S. sanctions: Finance Minister

[Reuters] 'Defiant message' as North Korea's Kim rides white horse on sacred mountain

[Bloomberg] China Unexpectedly Injects $28 Billion of Cash as Growth Slows

[Bloomberg] Turkey Bans Short-Selling in Top Banks as U.S. Indicts Halkbank

[NYT] What’s Really in the Trade Deal Trump Announced With China

[WSJ] The Fed Is Buying Bonds Again. Just Don’t Call It Quantitative Easing.

[WSJ] Uncertainty Hovers Over China’s Commitment to U.S. Farm Purchases

[WSJ] U.S. to Try Diplomacy in Turkey as Russian Forces Swoop Into Syria

[FT] China’s cash injection highlights policymaker concerns

[FT] Fed ‘repo’ plan could face fund manager resistance

Tuesday Evening Links

[Reuters] Wall Street advances as earnings season hits the road running

[Reuters] Treasuries - Yields rise on report Britain, EU close to Brexit deal

[CNBC] Sterling soars to 4-month high as traders eye imminent draft Brexit deal

[CNBC] Oil falls 1.5% on China data, trade war jitters

[UK Guardian] Boris Johnson 'on brink of Brexit deal' after border concessions

[AP] IMF downgrades outlook for world economy, citing trade wars

[CNBC] Lower mortgage rates are causing an epic housing shortage

[Reuters] Fed policy is 'in a good place,' Daly says

[Reuters] Hong Kong leader rules out concessions in face of escalating violence

[WSJ] Elite M.B.A. Programs Report Steep Drop in Applications

Monday, October 14, 2019

Tuesday's News Links

[Reuters] Wall Street rises after upbeat start to earnings season

[AP] China tempers hopes about US tariff truce

[Reuters] Just hours left to secure a Brexit deal before EU summit

[Reuters] China wants tariffs cut to enable $50 billion imports from U.S.: Bloomberg

[Reuters] China Sept new bank loans beat expectations, more easing seen

[Reuters] Brexit hangs in the balance as EU doubts a deal this week

[Reuters] Sub-zero interest rates could be problematic in U.S.: Fed's Bullard

[MarketWatch] China consumer inflation hits nearly 6-year high

[Reuters] China's factory prices post steepest fall in three years

[Reuters] Goldman profit misses estimates on weak underwriting, M&A

[Reuters] Scrambling to limit damage, Trump tells Turkey to stop its Syria invasion

[Reuters] Trump sanctions fail to slow Turkey assault; Moscow's allies advance

[Bloomberg] Italy’s Debt Edges Close to All-Time High Amid Budget Squabble

[Bloomberg] China Places Cap on Private Corporate Bonds to Stem Credit Risks

[FT] Fed awaits answers on liquidity strains

[FT] Mario Draghi leaves a divided central bank in his wake

[FT] ECB critics are right to worry about ultra-loose monetary policy

[FT] Russia calls Turkey’s invasion of north Syria ‘unacceptable’

Monday Evening Links

[Reuters] Stocks pause on unsettled trade deal; earnings eyed

[Reuters] Oil falls more than 2% on U.S.-China trade deal doubts, stronger dollar

[CNBC] Trump halting trade negotiations with Turkey, raising its steel tariffs to 50%

[AP] ‘Nothing-burger’: US-China truce leaves big issues for later

[Reuters] Spain jails Catalan separatist leaders, protesters flood streets

[Reuters] Russia-backed Syrian army sweeps in after U.S. announces abrupt exit

[Bloomberg] Peak Shale: How U.S. Oil Output Went From Explosive to Sluggish

[Bloomberg] Kuroda Is on Course to Shrink the Bank of Japan’s Bond Holdings

[FT] Hopes fade for Brexit deal at summit as EU needs ‘more time’

Tactical Short Quarterly Call Today

Please join Doug Noland and David McAlvany today, October 17th, at 4:00PM Eastern / 2:00pm Mountain time for the Tactical Short Q3 recap conference call, “Managing Short-Side ‘Beta’ in an Extraordinary Environment.” Click here to register.

Sunday, October 13, 2019

Monday's News Links

[Reuters] Wall Street lower as trade deal optimism fades

[Reuters] Turkish lira slips but traders doubt Trump's sanctions threat

[CNBC] China wants another round of talks before signing phase one of the trade deal, source says

[Reuters] U.S. Treasury Secretary Mnuchin sees tariffs being imposed Dec. 15 if no China trade deal

[CNBC] Hold the ‘champagne’: What Chinese state media are saying about the trade talks

[Reuters] China September exports, imports in deeper contraction as tariffs bite

[AP] China’s September imports from US fall 20% amid tariff war

[Reuters] China's nine-month exports to U.S. down 10.7% in dollar terms

[Reuters] Brexit hangs in the balance as EU doubts a deal this week

[Reuters] As options narrow on Syria, Trump prepares to drop sanctions hammer on Turkey

[Bloomberg] China Wants More Talks Before Signing Trade Deal With Trump

[Bloomberg] Korea’s Top Hedge Fund Freezes $710 Million As Investors Try to Withdraw

[Bloomberg] El-Erian: Is Fed’s Bill-Buying Spree QE? Does It Matter?

[NYT] Wall Street’s Sky-High Expectations Are About to Collide With Reality

[WSJ] Investors Pull Money Out of Stock Funds, Squeezing Money Managers

[WSJ] America Is Losing the Chinese Shopper

[WSJ] SoftBank Seeking to Take Control of WeWork Through Financing Package

[FT] US Congress examines private equity role in surging healthcare costs

[FT] Chinese censorship is spreading beyond its borders

Sunday Evening Links

[Reuters] Asia shares cheered by Sino-.U.S. trade progress

[Reuters] Oil prices edge up, supported by Iran ship attack, U.S.-China trade detente

[Reuters] What to watch in third quarter earnings from U.S. companies

[Reuters] Morgan Stanley warns tariff escalation remains a ‘meaningful risk’ despite partial US-China deal

[Bloomberg] Trump’s China Handshake Fails to Lift Economic Gloom

[FT] Kurds strike deal with Russia and Syria to stem Turkish assault

Sunday's News Links

[Reuters] Countdown to divorce: Meetings that will decide Brexit

[Reuters] ECB's Holzmann calls current monetary policy 'wrong', hopes for new course under Lagarde

[Reuters] Russia looks at alternatives to dollar for energy transactions

[Reuters] China's Xi warns attempts to divide China will end in 'shuttered bones'

[Bloomberg] China Is Cool on Trump Trade ‘Deal’ Its Economy Still Needs

[Bloomberg] Trump’s China Deal Yields Plenty of Questions, and Critics

[NYT] For Both Trump and Xi, Trade Deal Comes Amid Growing Pressures at Home

[WSJ] China Emerges With Wins From U.S. Trade Truce

[WSJ] China, Facing Slowdown, Still Unlikely to Push for More Stimulus

[FT] Americans face huge generational divide on retirement wealth

Friday, October 11, 2019

Weekly Commentary: What the Heck is Happening in the Cayman Islands?

Please join Doug Noland and David McAlvany Thursday, October 17th, at 4:00PM Eastern/ 2:00pm Mountain time for the Tactical Short Q3 recap conference call, "Managing Short-Side ‘Beta’ in an Extraordinary Environment.” Click here to register.

Another quiet week… When the Fed on Friday announced its “Not QE” balance sheet reflation strategy, the Dow was already 400 points higher on anticipation of a positive trade negotiation outcome. The Federal Reserve will Tuesday begin buying $60 billion of Treasury bills monthly through 2020’s second quarter. This follows a five-week period where Federal Reserve Credit surged $187 billion. In addition, the Fed said it will continue with its overnight and term “repo” market interventions, along with reinvesting proceeds from maturing longer-dated maturities.

I have speculated the Fed’s balance sheet might inflate to $10 TN over the course of the next crisis and down-cycle. It’s possible that we could see expansion approaching $500 billion over the next six to nine months.

Announcing its “Not QE” plan as markets were in the throes of an intense short squeeze creates poor optics. Most analysts had expected the rollout to come at the Fed’s end-of-month meeting - or even during November. This is one more example of the Fed acting as if it is facing a serious risk to financial stability.

October 11 – Bloomberg (Rich Miller and Christopher Condon): “…The central bank… stressed that ‘these actions are purely technical measures to support the effective implementation’ of interest-rate policy and ‘do not represent a change’ in its monetary stance. ‘In particular, purchases of Treasury bills likely will have little if any impact on the level of longer-term interest rates and broader financial conditions.’”

There may come a day when bond markets push back against central bank interventions – “purely technical” or otherwise. Ten-year Treasury yields jumped six bps Friday to 1.73% - though this move higher was in response to the markets’ “risk on” mood ahead of the completion of trade talks. Two-year Treasury yields rose five bps Friday to 1.60%, up 19 bps for the week (reversing most of last week’s drop). The implied yield on January Fed funds futures rose 9.5 bps this week to 1.555% (current Fed funds rate 1.82%). Even with a successful “Phase 1” trade deal with China – not to mention the Fed’s plan to expand holdings - the probability of a rate cut at the Fed’s October 30th meeting was little changed this week at 71%.

University of Michigan Consumer Confidence was reported at a much stronger-than-expected – and three-month high - 96. The Current Conditions component jumped 4.9 points to 113.4, the high going back to December 2018 (116.1). The St. Louis Fed’s Real GDP Nowcast Model has Q3 GDP at 3.12%. And if the world is indeed at the cusp of a U.S./China trade truce, there is even less justification for an additional rate cut. Yet I am not convinced trade risks – or economic vulnerabilities more generally – are the crux of underlying market fragilities and central bank unease.

It was an unfittingly low-key headline: “Better Data on Modern Finance Reveals Uncomfortable Truths.” The subheading to Gillian Tett’s Thursday FT article was more direct: “It is Unnerving That the Shadow Banking Sector is Swelling, Given its Role in the Financial Crisis.”

The FT’s list of “most read” articles included “Why Investors See Inflation as a Very British Problem” and “TP ICAP Pays £15m to Settle FCA Charges Over ‘Wash Trades.’” Ms. Tett’s insightful piece failed to make the cut. I was however reminded of an FT article from early 1998 highlighting the explosion of trading in Russia currency and bond derivatives, along with Gillian Tett’s exceptional reporting on the proliferation of subprime CDOs and mortgage derivatives late in the mortgage finance Bubble period.

October 10 – Financial Times (Gillian Tett): “What the heck is happening in the Cayman Islands? That is a question often asked in relation to corporate tax. This week, for example, the OECD called for an end to the loopholes that let global companies cut their tax bills in places like the British overseas territory. As the debate bubbles on, there is another facet of globalisation that merits more discussion: the financial flows associated with offshore centres, particularly between banks and non-bank entities.”

“Cross-border lending by banks to non-bank financial institutions, such as hedge funds, has also jumped, from $4.8tn in 2016 to $6.6tn in 2019. More striking, those non-bank institutions have quietly ‘become important sources of cross-border funding for banks, particularly in international currencies,’ the BIS notes. Yet again, those offshore financial centres feature: almost 20% of banks’ cross-border dollar funding is now supplied by entities based in the Cayman Islands, a ratio only topped by those in the US, while entities based in Luxembourg and the Caymans are crucial in the euro markets. Or as the BIS concludes, ‘Banks’ positions with [non-banks] are concentrated in few countries, particularly financial centres.’”

“Non-bank intermediaries’ share of total financial system assets increased from 31% to 36%” between 2007 and 2017, observes a report from the IESE Business School… Meanwhile, the BIS data shows that banks’ cross-border dealings with non-bank entities has been swelling too. One reason is that banks are increasingly funding governments (by buying their debt). But their exposure to non-financial companies is also rising noticeably, both to onshore and offshore subsidiaries. ‘Banks lend significant amounts to non-financial corporations located in financial centres . . . [providing] credit to the financing arms of multinational corporations located there,’ the BIS notes, adding that banks’ claims on NFCs [non-financial corporations] in the Cayman Islands are larger than on those in Italy. (Yes, really.)”

Convoluted, murky stuff: The amalgamation of “offshore financial centres,” “cross-border dollar funding,” “non-bank intermediaries” and “offshore subsidiaries,” make CDOs, special purpose vehicles, and other mortgage financial Bubble era “shadow” financial processes appear rather clear and luminous by comparison.

Ms. Tett’s article pinpoints the “belly of the beast.” The GSEs, securitizations, sophisticated mortgage derivatives, and “repo” finance created the nucleus of the risk intermediation and leverage fueling precarious mortgage finance Bubble excess. I am convinced the mushrooming of government bonds, the proliferation of global “repo” markets and off-shore securities lending operations, along with unmatched global derivatives excess and leveraged speculation, are at the epicenter of the runaway “global government finance Bubble.”

Tett’s article notes the global push to accumulate reliable official data. The BIS (Bank for International Settlements) has expanded data for non-bank counterparties and offshore financial centers. While interesting – and certainly illustrating the enormous scope of offshore finance – I’m not confident that the BIS and global central bank community have a handle on what evolved into colossal global flows intermediated through securities finance and “offshore” financial centers. The recurring extensive revisions to the Fed’s Rest of World (ROW) Z.1 data informs me that there are major shortcomings and outright holes in the data. Indeed, What the Heck is Happening in the Cayman Islands?

A few snippets from the BIS’s September 2019 Quarterly Review - International Banking and Financial Market Developments (referenced in Tett’s article).

“Derivatives trading in over-the-counter (OTC) markets rose even more rapidly than that on exchanges, according to the latest BIS Central Bank Triennial Survey… The daily average turnover of interest rate and FX derivatives on markets worldwide – on exchanges and OTC – rose from $11.3 trillion in April 2016 to $18.9 trillion in April 2019.”

“The turnover of interest rate derivatives increased markedly between April 2016 and April 2019, especially in OTC markets, where trading more than doubled from $2.7 trillion per day to $6.5 trillion.”

“The OTC trading of FX derivatives also rose substantially… In OTC markets, the daily average turnover of FX derivatives increased from $3.4 trillion to $4.6 trillion between April 2016 and April 2019.”

Tett’s article also mentioned data from the Financial Stability Board (FSB), whose Global Monitoring Report on Non-Bank Financial Intermediation 2018 (issued in February) includes detail on global non-bank entities through the end of 2017.

The FSB’s tabulation of MUNFI (monitoring universe of non-bank financial intermediaries) has a 2017 ending value of $185 TN, up substantially from the $100.6 TN to close out 2008. FSB analysis focuses on a “Narrow Measure of NBFI” (non-bank financial intermediaries), and then breaks down this category by Economic Function (subgroups EF1 through EF5). EF1 ended 2017 at $36.7 TN, more than double the $14.2 TN from 2008.

“EF1 includes collective investment vehicles (CIVs) with features that make them susceptible to runs.” This group includes fixed-income funds, hedge funds, money market funds, trust companies, ETF and real estate funds (along with smaller components). “EF1 growth is mainly attributable to the four jurisdictions where most EF1 entities reside – US (with 26.3% of total EF1 assets), China (16.5%), the Cayman Islands (14.3%), and Luxembourg (8.9%).”

Breaking down “Narrow Measure of NBFI:” Investment Funds ($45.4 TN, 13.6% ’17 growth); Captive Financial Institutions and Money Lenders ($25.9 TN, 0.5% ’17 contraction); Broker-Dealers ($9.6 TN, 1.1% ’17 contraction); Money Market Funds ($5.8 TN, 10.2% ’17 growth); Hedge Funds ($4.4 TN, 15.8% ’17 growth); Structured Finance Vehicles ($4.9 TN, 2.2% ’17 growth); Trust Companies ($4.6 TN, 27.1% ’17 growth).

“The resulting narrow measure was $51.6 trillion at end-2017” (from ‘08’s $36.2TN). “The total financial assets of entities in the narrow measure grew in 2017 (8.5%), both in absolute terms and relative to GDP... This growth rate is consistent with the average annual growth rate (8.8%) of the narrow measure over 2011-16. This average growth rate was mainly driven by the Cayman Islands, China, Ireland and Luxembourg, which together accounted for 67% of the dollar value increase since 2011.”

Such heady growth in finance comes with consequences. That growth in non-bank (“shadow”) finance over this boom cycle has been driven by entities in the Cayman Islands, China, Ireland and Luxembourg bodes well for the accumulation of leverage and latent risk intermediation issues – not so much for sustainability and stability.

Other highlights: “The total repo assets of banks and OFIs grew by 9.6% in 2017 to reach $9.4 trillion, while their total repo liabilities grew by 9.8% to reach $9.2 trillion, largely driven by banks’ increasing use of repos.”

“Hedge funds’ assets grew in 2017, based on data reported from 15 jurisdictions. The Cayman Islands continues to be the largest hub for such funds among reporting jurisdictions (87% of submitted total hedge fund assets) where they grew by 17.5%, driving the overall growth of the reported sector.” This passage comes with a curious footnote: “There is no separate licensing category for hedge funds incorporated in the Cayman Islands, thus the Cayman Islands Monetary Authority (CIMA) estimated their size based on certain characteristics (eg leverage).”

“China accounted for most trust company assets (88% of global trust company assets) and overall growth. The growth rate of China’s trust company assets has increased over the past three years (16.6% in 2015, 24.0% in 2016 and 29.8% in 2017).”

In a recent CBB, I posited it was no coincidence that instability in Chinese money markets was followed not many weeks later by instability in U.S. “repo” finance. I believe a decade of zero and near-zero rates and unrelenting global QE has fostered unprecedented leveraged speculation on a global basis. I suspect the size of “carry trades” and myriad forms of speculative leverage dwarf that from the mortgage finance Bubble era – having seeped into all corners, nooks and crannies of global fixed-income markets. Moreover, “repo,” securities shorting, derivatives and securities finance more generally are the unappreciated sources of global liquidity abundance – in tightly interconnected funding markets with the nucleus in “offshore financial centers.”

I hold the view that massive leverage has accumulated in U.S. fixed income, in Chinese Credit, European debt, dollar-denominated bonds globally and EM debt more generally. I’ll assume heady grown in “repo” and offshore financial intermediation only accelerated since 2017.

It was no coincidence that U.S. “repo” market tumult followed on the heels of an abrupt reversal in global bond yields. I appreciate how the enormous global buildup in leveraged speculation works miraculously so long as bond yields are declining (bond prices rising). Furthermore, uncertainty associated with escalating U.S./China trade frictions spurred a historic global speculative “blow-off” and market dislocation. If only bond yields could fall forever – even as debt and deficits expand uncontrollably. It’s not clear to me how the global system doesn’t turn increasingly unstable, which I believe explains why the ECB and now the Fed have resorted again to QE.

Question: “When you first became chair, you were spotted numerous times carrying Paul Volcker’s book under your arm – and I’m curious what lessons did you learned from Paul Volcker and what lessons are you taking through your chairmanship?”

Jerome Powell, October 8th, 2019, during Q&A at a National Association of Business Economics event in Denver: “I’ve known Paul Volcker since I was an Assistant Secretary in the Treasury in 1992 or 1991. Of course, at that time, he had just relatively recently left the Fed - and I was frightened of even meeting him. I was just so intimidated by this global figure. And he couldn’t have been nicer and more interested in helping me and supporting me and we kind of kept up. He was really a great person to know. I read numerous accounts of his life. This book, if you haven’t read it, really sums it up really well. I don’t think there has been a greater public servant in our broad area in our lifetimes. He really just did exactly what he thought was the right thing – all the time. And he lets the chips fall where they may. He was famously booed at a Washington Bullets basketball game when he had rates very high… He’s a great man. I’m still in touch with him. I actually thought that I should buy 500 copies of this book and just hand them out at the Fed. I didn’t do that. It’s a book I strongly recommend, and we can all hope to live up to some part of who he is.”


For the Week:

The S&P500 increased 0.6% (up 18.5% y-t-d), and the Dow gained 0.9% (up 15.0%). The Utilities fell 1.4% (up 21.6%). The Banks rallied 1.4% (up 14.9%), and the Broker/Dealers recovered 2.6% (up 6.9%). The Transports jumped 2.6% (up 12.2%). The S&P 400 Midcaps gained 0.7% (up 15.2%), and the small cap Russell 2000 rose 0.7% (up 12.1%). The Nasdaq100 advanced 1.2% (up 23.9%). The Semiconductors gained 1.1% (up 37.7%). The Biotechs were little changed (down 0.1%). With bullion down $16, the HUI gold index dropped 3.4% (up 27.1%).

Three-month Treasury bill rates ended the week at 1.63%. Two-year government yields jumped 19 bps to 1.60% (down 90bps y-t-d). Five-year T-note yields surged 21 bps to 1.56% (down 95bps). Ten-year Treasury yields rose 20 bps to 1.73% (down 95bps). Long bond yields jumped 18 bps to 2.20% (down 82bps). Benchmark Fannie Mae MBS yields surged 23 bps to 2.70% (down 80bps).

Greek 10-year yields rose 10 bps to 1.43% (down 297bps y-t-d). Ten-year Portuguese yields gained six bps to 0.20% (down 152bps). Italian 10-year yields jumped 11 bps to 0.94% (down 180ps). Spain's 10-year yields rose 10 bps to 0.24% (down 118bps). German bund yields surged 14 bps to negative 0.44% (down 68bps). French yields jumped 16 bps to negative 0.13% (down 84bps). The French to German 10-year bond spread widened two to 31 bps. U.K. 10-year gilt yields surged 26 bps to 0.71% (down 57bps). U.K.'s FTSE equities index rallied 1.3% (up 7.7% y-t-d).

Japan's Nikkei Equities Index jumped 1.8% (up 8.9% y-t-d). Japanese 10-year "JGB" yields increased three bps to negative 0.18% (down 18bps y-t-d). France's CAC40 rose 3.2% (up 19.8%). The German DAX equities index surged 4.2% (up 18.5%). Spain's IBEX 35 equities index advanced 3.5% (up 8.6%). Italy's FTSE MIB index rallied 3.2% (up 21.0%). EM equities were mixed. Brazil's Bovespa index gained 1.2% (up 14.1%), while Mexico's Bolsa declined 0.5% (up 3.8%). South Korea's Kospi index rose 1.2% (up 0.2%). India's Sensex equities index increased 1.2% (up 5.7%). China's Shanghai Exchange jumped 2.4% (up 19.2%). Turkey's Borsa Istanbul National 100 index sank 4.3% (up 8.5%). Russia's MICEX equities index added 0.6% (up 14.3%).

Investment-grade bond funds saw inflows of $1.840 billion, while junk bond funds posted outflows of $1.500 billion (from Lipper).

Freddie Mac 30-year fixed mortgage rates fell eight bps to 3.57% (down 133bps y-o-y). Fifteen-year rates dropped nine bps to 3.05% (down 124bps). Five-year hybrid ARM rates dipped three bps to 3.35% (down 65bps). Bankrate's survey of jumbo mortgage borrowing costs had 30-year fixed rates up two bps to 4.00% (down 81bps).

Federal Reserve Credit last week jumped $16.9bn to $3.909 TN. Over the past year, Fed Credit contracted $228bn, or 5.5%. Fed Credit inflated $1.098 Trillion, or 39%, over the past 361 weeks. Elsewhere, Fed holdings for foreign owners of Treasury, Agency Debt dropped $22.6bn last week to $3.419 TN. "Custody holdings" fell $25.6bn y-o-y, or 0.7%.

M2 (narrow) "money" supply surged another $49.8bn last week to a record $15.141 TN. "Narrow money" gained $891bn, or 6.2%, over the past year. For the week, Currency increased $1.5bn. Total Checkable Deposits jumped $21.5bn, and Savings Deposits rose $18.2bn. Small Time Deposits were little changed. Retail Money Funds expanded $8.8bn.

Total money market fund assets gained $6.8bn to $3.470 TN. Money Funds gained $586bn y-o-y, or 20.3%.

Total Commercial Paper slipped $0.9bn to $1.092 TN. CP was down $10bn y-o-y, or 0.9%.

Currency Watch:

October 9 – Financial Times (Eva Szalay and Coby Smith): “The US dollar has long towered over global markets and finance. But cracks are starting to appear in the edifice. The greenback’s pre-eminent role in official funds and international trade is formidable and unlikely to fade quickly. But the latest data from the IMF on central banks’ reserves show a subtle shift away from the dollar that analysts say could signal a rethink on the political risk embedded into US assets. ‘Central banks [are] chipping away at the dollar’s ‘exorbitant privilege’,’ said Alan Ruskin, chief international strategist at Deutsche Bank… ‘Politics are starting to infringe in ways that have the potential to challenge the dollar’s dominance.’”

The U.S. dollar index slipped 0.5% to 98.301 (up 2.2% y-t-d). For the week on the upside, the British Pound increased 2.7%, the South African rand 1.9%, the Mexican peso 1.0%, the Canadian dollar 0.8%, the South Korean won 0.7%, the euro 0.6%, the Singapore dollar 0.4%, the Swedish krona 0.4%, the Australian dollar 0.3%, the New Zealand dollar 0.3% and the Norwegian krone 0.2%. On the downside, the Brazilian real declined 1.3%, the Japanese yen 0.3% and the Swiss franc 0.2%. The Chinese renminbi gained 0.85% versus the dollar this week (down 2.96% y-t-d).

Commodities Watch:

October 6 – Bloomberg (Ranjeetha Pakiam): “China has added more than 100 tons of gold to its reserves since it resumed buying in December, reinforcing its standing as one of the major official accumulators as central banks stock up on the precious metal. The People’s Bank of China picked up more gold last month, raising holdings to 62.64 million ounces in September from 62.45 million in August… In tonnage terms, the latest inflow totals 5.9 tons, and follows the addition of about 99.8 tons over the prior nine months.”

October 8 – Wall Street Journal (Sarah Toy): “It is going to take a heck of a winter to ease the pain for natural-gas investors and producers. Dragged down by a supply glut, U.S. natural-gas futures recently suffered their longest losing streak since at least 1990… The front-month gas futures contract fell 12 consecutive trading sessions through Oct. 2, a period in which it declined around 16%. Prices are down 30% from their levels a year ago.”

The Bloomberg Commodities Index gained 1.2% this week (up 2.4% y-t-d). Spot Gold fell 1.0% to $1,489 (up 16.1%). Silver dipped 0.5% to $17.544 (up 12.9%). WTI crude rallied $1.89 to $54.70 (up 20%). Gasoline surged 4.2% (up 24%), while Natural Gas sank 5.9% (down 25%). Copper jumped 2.6% (unchanged). Wheat gained 3.6% (up 1%). Corn rose 3.4% (up 6%).

Market Instability Watch:

October 10 – Reuters (Chibuike Oguh): “U.S. private equity firms raised $191 billion in the first nine months of 2019, nearly as much as in all of 2018, as investors flocked to well-known managers raising large capital pools, according to… Pitchbook. Some of the private equity industry’s biggest players completed their fundraising in the third quarter of this year, including Blackstone Group Inc with a $26 billion buyout fund, and Vista Equity Partners Management LLC with a $16 billion fund. This increased the amount raised by private equity funds by 38% year-on-year…”
October 7 – Financial Times (Leo Lewis, Robin Harding and Tommy Stubbington): “For years, Japan’s giant government bond market has slumbered on the edges of global finance. Dominated by the country’s central bank, prices rarely budge, leaving traders with little to do. But at the start of this month, a sale of 10-year debt failed to stir the usual interest from investors in the ¥1.1 quadrillion ($10.3tn) market. Unnerved by new plans at the central bank to shift to buying more shorter-term debt, some private buyers stayed away, making it the worst auction in terms of demand since 2016. Japanese government bonds, JGBs, stumbled, sending ripples through other markets including US Treasuries and even, briefly, UK gilts.”

Trump Administration Watch:

October 11 – Bloomberg (Jenny Leonard, Saleha Mohsin, Josh Wingrove and Shawn Donnan): “The U.S. and China agreed on the outlines of a partial trade accord Friday that President Donald Trump said he and his counterpart Xi Jinping could sign as soon as next month. As part of the deal, China would significantly step up purchases of U.S. agricultural commodities, agree to certain intellectual-property measures and concessions related to financial services and currency, Trump said Friday at the White House. In exchange, the U.S. will delay a tariff increase due next week as the deal is finalized, though new levies scheduled for December haven’t yet been called off.”

October 8 – Wall Street Journal (Dan Strumpf and Yoko Kubota): “The U.S. decision to add eight Chinese companies to its trade blacklist strikes directly at China’s ambitions in artificial intelligence, threatening its companies’ access to crucial components and relationships with U.S. firms. Some of the companies affected are among China’s most advanced in core areas of AI, including technology involved in recognizing sounds and faces, autonomous driving and surveillance. Although many of the companies targeted have likely been stockpiling components and can shift to backup supply chains, cutting-edge research efforts could slow, given their heavy reliance on advanced U.S. chips.”
October 8 – Bloomberg (Jenny Leonard): “The Trump administration is moving ahead with discussions around possible restrictions on portfolio flows into China, with a particular focus on investments made by U.S. government retirement funds, people familiar with the internal deliberations said. The efforts are advancing even after American officials pushed back strongly against a Bloomberg News report late last month that a range of such limits was under review. Trump officials last week held meetings on the issue just hours after White House adviser Peter Navarro dismissed the report as ‘fake news,’ and zeroed in on how to prevent U.S. government retirement funds from financing China’s economic rise, the people said.”

October 8 – Reuters (Eric Beech and David Shepardson): “The United States has imposed visa restrictions on Chinese government and Communist Party officials it believes responsible for the detention or abuse of Muslim minorities in Xinjiang province, the U.S. State Department said… Secretary of State Mike Pompeo cited the decision of the Commerce Department on Monday to add 28 Chinese public security bureaus and companies - including video surveillance company Hikvision - to a U.S. trade blacklist over Beijing’s treatment of Uighur Muslims and other predominantly Muslim ethnic minorities. The visa restrictions ‘complement’ the Commerce Department actions, he said.”

October 8 – CNBC (Kevin Breuninger): “The White House said… that it will not cooperate with House Democrats’ impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump, claiming that the proceedings amount to ‘baseless, unconstitutional efforts to overturn the democratic process.’ ‘You have designed and implemented your inquiry in a manner that violates fundamental fairness and constitutionally mandated due process,’ White House counsel Pat Cipollone said in an eight-page letter… A senior White House official told CNBC’s Eamon Javers that the letter signifies a ‘full halt’ to cooperation with the impeachment inquiry.”

October 7 – Bloomberg (Josh Wingrove and Selcan Hacaoglu): “Donald Trump’s administration said the U.S. will stand aside when Turkey’s military launches an operation against America’s wartime Kurdish allies in Syria, a significant shift in American policy that raises questions over the fate of thousands of Islamic State detainees. The Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces have been a close U.S. ally in the fight to defeat Islamic State. But Turkey considers Syria’s Kurdish militants a threat to its national security and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said his forces were ready to begin a military operation against them in northeastern Syria imminently. The decision represents a dramatic reversal for U.S. policy…”

October 9 – Reuters (Colin Packham and Jonathan Barrett): “Tariffs are forcing China to pay attention to U.S. concerns, Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross said… ‘We do not love tariffs, in fact we would prefer not to use them, but after years of discussions and no action, tariffs are finally forcing China to pay attention to our concerns,’ Ross told a business function... ‘We could have had a deal two-and-a-half years ago without going through the whole tit-for-tat on tariffs that we have.’”

October 7 – Reuters (Jeff Mason): “President Donald Trump said… he wanted to see the U.S. Federal Reserve enact a ‘substantial’ cut in interest rates because of the lack of inflation in the United States. ‘We’d like to a see an interest rate cut, a very substantial one,’ Trump said. ‘We have no inflation. If anything it’s going below the number, so therefore we’re entitled to an interest rate cut. I hope the Fed does that.’”

Federal Reserve Watch:

October 9 – Financial Times (Joe Rennison): “Ten minutes after Federal Reserve chair Jay Powell insisted that the central bank restarting its Treasury purchases was ‘in no way’ the same as the post-financial crisis policy of quantitative easing, one Wall St analyst sent a note to his clients saying that the new strategy ‘sure sounds like QE’. He was not the only one. The confusion strikes at the heart of the latest communication challenge facing the Fed as it prepares to expand its balance sheet once more. The legacy of QE is rooted in economic woe. When the policy was implemented after the 2008 economic crisis, it was specifically designed to lower longer term interest rates and to ease financial conditions. This time is different, said Mr Powell… ‘It should not be taken as a shift in monetary policy. It is not being done to boost the general availability of credit. The US economy, by and large, remains on a firm footing.’”

October 9 – CNBC (Jeff Cox): “Some Federal Reserve policymakers expressed concern at their most recent meeting that markets are expecting more rate cuts than the central bank intends to deliver, according to minutes… The Federal Open Market Committee approved a quarter-point rate cut at the Sept. 17-18 meeting, putting the overnight funds rate in a target range of 1.75% to 2%. But documents released after the meeting also showed sharp divisions among members about the future path of policy. Minutes amplified those concerns, along with some worry that a market clamoring for easier monetary policy might be getting ahead of itself.”

October 6 – Reuters (Ann Saphir): “Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank President Esther George… rejected the notion that the U.S. central bank should cut interest rates to try to boost low inflation, which she said is largely a result of global forces that U.S. monetary policy can do little to counter. ‘In current circumstances, concern about low inflation seems unnecessary,’ George told the National Association for Business Economics in Denver. ‘The U.S. economy is currently in a good place, with low inflation, low unemployment and an outlook for continued moderate growth.’”

October 7 – Bloomberg (Catherine Bosley and Christopher Condon): “The U.S. economy’s loss of momentum isn’t severe enough to warrant a further reduction to interest rates, two hawkish Federal Reserve board members said. …Both Kansas City Fed President Esther George and the Boston Fed’s Eric Rosengren singled out consumer spending, which accounts for 70% of the economy, as a key variable and said that so long as it remained vibrant there was no need to add additional accommodation even as the manufacturing sector suffers and the trade war weighs on sentiment… ‘If the economy grows at 1.7%, consumption continues to be strong, inflation is gradually going up and the unemployment rate is at 3.5%, I would not see a need for additional accommodation’ at the Fed’s October or December policy meetings, Rosengren said…”

October 8 – Associated Press (Christopher Rugaber): “With the nation’s unemployment rate at its lowest point since human beings first walked on the moon, you might expect the Federal Reserve to be raising interest rates to keep the economy from overheating and igniting inflation. That’s what the rules of economics would suggest. Yet the Fed is moving in precisely the opposite direction: It is widely expected late this month to cut rates for the third time this year. Welcome to the strange world that Jerome Powell inhabits as chairman of the world’s most influential central bank. Though unemployment is low, so are inflation and long-term borrowing rates. Normally, all that would be cause for celebration. But with President Donald Trump’s trade wars slowing growth and overseas economies struggling, Powell faces pressure to keep cutting rates to sustain the U.S. economic expansion.”

U.S. Bubble Watch:

October 7 – The Hill (Niv Elis): “The federal budget deficit for 2019 is estimated at $984 billion, a hefty 4.7% of gross domestic product (GDP) and the highest since 2012, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) said… The difference between federal spending and revenue has only ever exceeded $1 trillion four times, in the period immediately following the global financial crisis. The deficit, which has grown every year since 2015, is $205 billion higher than it was in 2018, a jump of 26%. The CBO has warned that the nation's debt is on an unsustainable path.”

October 7 – Bloomberg (Steve Matthews): “U.S. budget deficits and the national debt are on track to keep growing because both President Donald Trump and his Democratic rivals want to use low interest rates to finance more spending -- in effect embracing some form of Modern Monetary Theory, business economists said at a debate on the topic Monday.”

October 7 – Bloomberg (Reade Pickert): “U.S. consumer credit increased more than forecast in August as school loans and other non-revolving debt rose by the most in three years. Total credit climbed $17.9 billion from the prior month, after a revised $23 billion gain in July that was the largest since late 2017…”

October 8 – Bloomberg (William Edwards): “U.S. small-business sentiment fell to near the lowest level of Donald Trump’s presidency… The National Federation of Independent Business’s optimism index declined 1.3 points to 101.8 in September, the third drop in four months… While the gauge remains elevated by historical standards, it’s the lowest since March and close to January’s 101.2, which was the weakest since Trump’s term began in early 2017.”

October 8 – CNBC: “U.S. producer prices unexpectedly fell in September, leading to the smallest annual increase in nearly three years… The producer price index for final demand dropped 0.3% last month, weighed down by decreases in the costs of goods and services… That was the largest decline since January and followed a 0.1% gain in August. In the 12 months through September the PPI increased 1.4%, the smallest gain since November 2016, after rising 1.8% in August.”

October 8 – Reuters (Jane Lanhee Lee and Manas Mishra): “U.S. venture capitalists are expected to pour over $100 billion into startups for a second straight year, following the record sum invested in 2018… During the first three quarters of the year, venture capital firms had already invested $96.7 billion in 7,862 funding deals, according to… PitchBook Data Inc and National Venture Capital Association. In 2018 it invested a record $137.6 billion.”

October 6 – Wall Street Journal (Maureen Farrell): “The IPO market has gone from hot to not. Shares of newly public companies, earlier this year one of the hottest investments on Wall Street, are now in a slump after investors soured on unprofitable startups from Uber Technologies Inc. to WeWork. Shares of technology startups and other companies that went public in the U.S. this year are trading roughly 5% above, on average, their prices at their initial public offerings… That is a reversal from earlier in the year, when IPO shares were big outperformers. IPO-stock performance is the worst it has been since at least 1995, according to … Goldman Sachs… That and recent market gyrations have helped bring IPO activity to a virtual standstill heading into what is traditionally one of the busiest times of year for new issues…”

October 7 – CNBC (Jessica Bursztynsky): “Former Nasdaq CEO Bob Greifeld warned… that this year’s IPO boom feels similar to the late 1990s dot-com bubble. ‘It’s important to recognize that the IPO market was getting quite bubbly [nowadays],’ said Greifeld, a CNBC contributor and author of the new book, ‘Market Mover: Lessons from a Decade of Chance at Nasdaq.’”

October 9 – New York Times (Erin Griffith): “Fred Wilson, a venture capitalist at Union Square Ventures, recently published a blog post titled ‘The Great Public Market Reckoning.’ In it, he argued that the narrative that had driven start-up hype and valuations for the last decade was now falling apart. His post quickly ricocheted across Silicon Valley. Other venture capitalists… soon weighed in with their own warnings about fiscal responsibility. At some start-ups, entrepreneurs began behaving more cautiously. Travis VanderZanden, chief executive of the scooter start-up Bird, declared at a tech conference in San Francisco last week that his company was now focused on profit and not growth. ‘The challenge is to try to stay disciplined,’ he said. The moves all point to a new gospel that is starting to spread in start-up land.”

October 8 – CNBC (Diana Olick): “Cooler weather historically means a cooling off period in the housing market, but that is not the case this fall. After dropping to the lowest level in eight years, bidding wars are creeping back. In September, 11% of offers written by Redfin… faced a bidding war. That is down dramatically from 41% a year ago, but up from the 10% reading in August. That might not seem like a big deal, but in the past four years, the bidding war rate has dropped — not increased — from August to September.”

October 8 – Reuters (Tim McLaughlin and Ross Kerber): “Index funds now control half the U.S. stock mutual fund market, giving the biggest funds enormous power to influence decisions and demand better returns at the companies in which they invest trillions of dollars. But the leading U.S. index fund firms, BlackRock Inc, Vanguard Group and State Street Corp, rarely use that clout. Instead, they overwhelmingly support the decisions and pay packages of executives at the companies in their portfolios, including the worst performers, according to a Reuters analysis of their shareholder-voting records.”

October 6 – Reuters: “General Electric said… it was freezing pension plans for about 20,000 U.S. employees with salaried benefits, as the industrial conglomerate makes another drastic move to cut debt and reduce its pension deficit by up to $8 billion.”

October 9 – Bloomberg (Katherine Chiglinsky and Rick Clough): “General Electric Co.’s gaping pension deficit certainly stands out for its size. But the company is hardly the only one at risk of potentially shortchanging some of its employees come retirement. All across corporate America, underfunded pensions have become the norm. Even now, a decade after the financial crisis, the largest plans face a shortfall of $269 billion, right about where it was 10 years ago. Years of low interest rates have largely offset gains in the stock market. Companies haven’t helped matters by lavishing money on shareholder rewards and clinging to assumptions about returns that proved to be too rosy.”

China Watch:

October 8 – Bloomberg: “China signaled it would hit back after the Trump administration placed eight of the country’s technology giants on a blacklist over alleged human rights violations against Muslim minorities. Asked… whether China would retaliate over the blacklist, foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang told reporters ‘stay tuned.’ He also denied that the government abused human rights in the far west region of Xinjiang.”

October 9 – Reuters (Keith Zhai): “China is planning tighter visa restrictions for U.S. nationals with ties to anti-China groups…, following similar U.S. restrictions on Chinese nationals, as relations between the countries sour. China’s Ministry of Public Security has for months been working on rules to limit the ability of anyone employed, or sponsored, by U.S. intelligence services and human rights groups to travel to China. The proposed changes follow the introduction by the United States of tighter rules for visas for Chinese scholars in May.”

October 8 – New York Times (Amy Qin and Julie Creswell): “For international companies looking to do business in China, the rules were once simple. Don’t talk about the 3 T’s: Tibet, Taiwan and the Tiananmen Square crackdown. No longer. Fast-changing geopolitical tensions, growing nationalism and the rise of social media in China have made it increasingly difficult for multinationals to navigate commerce in the Communist country. As the National Basketball Association has discovered with a tweet about the Hong Kong protests, tripwires abound. Take the ‘wrong’ stance on one of any number of issues — Hong Kong, Taiwan, Korea, Japan, for instance — and you risk upsetting a country of 1.4 billion consumers and losing access to a hugely profitable market. Now, multinational companies are increasingly struggling with one question: how to be apolitical in an increasingly politicized and punitive China.”

October 8 – Reuters (David Stanway and Xihao Jiang): “Chinese organisers… cancelled a fan event on the eve of a National Basketball Association (NBA) exhibition game in Shanghai, the latest fallout in a growing row over a tweet by a team official supporting the recent protests in Hong Kong. Chinese sponsors and partners have been cutting ties with the NBA after the tweet by Houston Rockets general manager Daryl Morey last week supporting anti-government protests in the Chinese-ruled city. The Shanghai Sports Federation said the cancellation of the fan event ahead of Thursday’s game between the Brooklyn Nets and Los Angeles Lakers was due to the ‘inappropriate attitude’ of Morey and NBA Commissioner Adam Silver.”

October 8 – CNBC (Jake Novak): “Many financial journalists and political pundits have been trying for years to get the U.S. public more concerned about China’s increasingly repressive regime and the questionable trade-offs many American companies have been making to continue doing business in the country. Thanks to the NBA, Twitter and a Chinese government that feeds a national ‘outrage culture,’ those journalists and pundits won’t have to try so hard anymore.”

October 7 – Reuters (Ryan Woo): “China’s services sector grew at its slowest pace in seven months in September despite a strong increase in new orders, as operating expenses continued to rise at the end of the third quarter… The Caixin/Markit services purchasing managers’ index (PMI) fell to 51.3 last month, the weakest since February, versus August’s 52.1.”

October 6 – Wall Street Journal (Shen Hong): “The investment arms of China’s cities and provinces are selling debt at a record pace to fund roads, railways, utilities and ports, as they seek to shore up growth by spending more on infrastructure. Smaller cities and counties in China have long used local government financing vehicles to raise money via debt that is kept off the books of the municipalities themselves. The borrowers are often heavily indebted and lack formal state backing, although they are typically seen as carrying an implicit guarantee that Beijing would bail out investors if debts can’t be repaid… Local government financing vehicles have issued 2.37 trillion yuan ($332bn) of domestic bonds this year. That total is up 38% from the same period in 2018, and is poised to break the full-year record of 2.56 trillion yuan set three years ago.”

October 8 – Bloomberg: “Analysts on the lookout for China’s next financial shock are training their sights on the least regulated corner of the nation’s sprawling shadow banking system. Their concern centers on so-called independent wealth managers, which have expanded rapidly in recent years by selling high-yield products to affluent investors. Largely untouched by a government clampdown on nearly every other form of non-bank financing, the industry has grown from obscurity into a major source of funding for cash-strapped Chinese companies. The worry now is that products arranged by independent wealth managers will face mounting losses as China’s economic slowdown deepens and corporate defaults surge. Confidence in the industry has plunged since July, when Noah Holdings Ltd. said that 3.4 billion yuan ($477 million) of credit products overseen by one of its units were exposed to an alleged fraud by a Chinese conglomerate.”

October 5 – Reuters (James Pomfret and Jessie Pang): “Chinese soldiers issued a warning to Hong Kong protesters on Sunday who shone lasers at their barracks in the city, in the first direct interaction with mainland military forces in four months of anti-government demonstrations.”

October 10 – Bloomberg (Miaojung Lin): “Beijing’s growing political problems in Taiwan were laid bare…, as the island’s two main presidential contenders ruled out any move toward unification. First, President Tsai Ing-wen, who has long been an outspoken critic of Beijing, used her annual National Day address to issue a fresh rejection of China’s push to merge both sides under ‘one country, two systems.’ Moments later, Kaohsiung Mayor Han Kuo-yu -- the candidate for the more Beijing-friendly Kuomintang -- appeared on Facebook Live to say he believed that unification was something for the ‘next generation’ to resolve.”

Central Banking Watch:

October 8 – Financial Times (Caroline Grady): “More than half of central banks are now in easing mode, the biggest proportion since the aftermath of the financial crisis. During the third quarter, 58.5% of central banks cut interest rates. They were responding to a deepening malaise in global manufacturing, with the sector recording the longest downturn in seven years. Economists at UBS estimate that third-quarter global growth was running at an annualised rate of 2.3%, near the lows of the final quarter of 2018, when trade war disruption was at its peak.”

October 7 – Financial Times (Martin Arnold and Brendan Greeley): “The unprecedented growth in central banks’ balance sheets since the financial crisis has had a negative impact on the way in which financial markets function, according to a new report from the Bank for International Settlements. Over the past decade the world’s major central banks have lent vast sums of cheap money as well as buying trillions of dollars in bonds and other assets in a bid to stimulate the global economy. Some are still expanding their balance sheets: the European Central Bank last month decided to restart its €2.6tn bond-buying programme, while the Bank of Japan has used bond-buying as a stimulus measure for decades. Last month’s spike in short-term US borrowing costs was just the latest in a series of market shocks that have fuelled investors’ suspicions that this radical monetary policy is having an impact on how financial markets function.”

October 7 – Reuters (Marc Jones): “A report from a central bank-led global committee has defended the use of crisis-fighting tools such as negative interest rates and large-scale asset purchases, saying the benefits have outweighed the side effects. The study from the Committee on the Global Financial System Committee (CGFS) was a broad analysis, but is likely to attract considerable attention in Europe following growing criticism about the use of such measures… ‘On balance, unconventional monetary policy tools (UMPTs) helped the central banks that used them address the circumstances presented by the crisis and the ensuing economic downturn,’ said Philip Lowe, chair of the CGFS and governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia.”

October 9 – Financial Times (Martin Arnold): “The European Central Bank decided to restart its bond-buying programme last month over the objections of its own officials, a further sign of how the move has reopened divisions within the institution. The bank’s monetary policy committee, on which technocrats from the ECB and the 19 eurozone national central banks sit, advised against resuming its bond purchases in a letter sent to Mario Draghi and other members of its governing council days before their decision, according to three members of the council.”

Brexit Watch:

October 9 – Reuters (Elizabeth Piper and Peter Powell): “A Brexit deal could be clinched by the end of October to allow the United Kingdom to leave the European Union in an orderly fashion, Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar said after what he called a very positive meeting with Boris Johnson. With just three weeks to go before the United Kingdom is due to leave the world’s biggest trading bloc, it remains unclear on what terms it will leave or indeed whether it will leave at all… ‘I think it is possible for us to come to an agreement, to have a treaty agreed, to allow the UK to leave the EU in an orderly fashion and to have that done by the end of October,’ Varadkar told Irish reporters.”

October 8 – Bloomberg (Alex Morales, Dara Doyle and Robert Hutton): “The U.K. stepped up preparations for a no-deal Brexit in three weeks’ time as negotiations with the European Union headed toward a breakdown. In a call on Tuesday morning, Boris Johnson told German Chancellor Angela Merkel a divorce agreement is essentially impossible if the EU demands Northern Ireland must stay in the bloc’s customs union. Johnson spoke later to Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar and the two agreed to meet for talks before the end of the week.”

October 8 – Reuters (Guy Faulconbridge, Elizabeth Piper, John Chalmers): “The European Union accused Britain of playing a ‘stupid blame game’ over Brexit… after a Downing Street source said a deal was essentially impossible because German Chancellor Angela Merkel had made unacceptable demands. With just 23 days before the United Kingdom is due to leave the bloc, the future of Brexit remains deeply uncertain as both London and Brussels position themselves to avoid blame for a delay or a disorderly no-deal Brexit.”

Europe Watch:

October 8 – Bloomberg (Piotr Skolimowski): “Former European Central Bank Chief Economist Peter Praet appealed for calm in an increasingly bitter row over monetary policy that threatens to mar President Mario Draghi’s final weeks in office. Responding to criticism last week of ECB policy by his predecessors and a group of former policy makers, Praet said the memorandum they signed lambasting the institution’s efforts to stoke inflation was emotional and employed straw-man arguments. While recognizing their concern as genuine, he argued it would be better-addressed in a proper discussion… The memorandum criticized the ECB’s approach to complying with its price-stability mandate, raised alarm over the longer-term impact of negative interest rates and alleged the institution is financing governments with its bond-buying program -- a move that’s forbidden by European Union law.”

October 6 – Reuters (Paul Carrel): “German industrial orders fell more than expected in August on weaker domestic demand…, adding to signs that a manufacturing slump is pushing Europe’s largest economy into recession. Contracts for ‘Made in Germany’ goods fell 0.6% from the previous month, with demand for capital goods down 1.6%...”

EM Watch:

October 6 – Bloomberg (Divya Patil): “As India’s shadow banking crisis deepens, it’s getting harder for investors to cut their losses in the sector’s debt. Mutual funds are in a particularly tough spot, given their large holdings of non-bank financing company bonds. That, in turn, threatens everyone from individual investors to conglomerates with money in the funds, underscoring broader risks to policy makers already grappling with an economic slowdown.”

Global Bubble Watch:

October 8 – Reuters (David Lawder): “The global economy is experiencing a ‘synchronized slowdown,’ the new head of the International Monetary Fund said…, warning that it would worsen if governments failed to resolve trade conflicts and support growth. In a blunt inaugural speech since taking the helm of the global crisis lender on Oct. 1, IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva said trade tensions had ‘substantially weakened’ manufacturing and investment activity worldwide. ‘There is a serious risk that services and consumption could soon be affected,’ she said.”

October 7 – Bloomberg (Rachel Evans): “The world’s biggest banks still play a surprisingly large role in the rapidly growing market for exchange-traded funds. Bank of America Corp., Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and ABN Amro Bank NV together handle about half of the $5.5 trillion gross flows into and out of ETFs, according to… BlackRock Inc., which analyzed the first batch of regulatory filings on the institutions that create or redeem ETF shares. That’s in stark contrast to the secondary market, where many banks have ceded market-making roles to faster, more tech-savvy electronic brokers.”

Fixed-Income Bubble Watch:

October 10 – Bloomberg (Danielle Moran): “State and local governments have already borrowed at a faster pace than last year and aren’t slowing down yet, raising the possibility that issuance could reach $400 billion this year, a feat achieved only three times in the past decade.”

Leveraged Speculation Watch:

October 10 – Financial Times (Song Jung-a, Edward White and Hudson Lockett): “The biggest hedge fund manager in South Korea has blocked investors from pulling more than $500m from its funds after a regulatory probe into alleged illegal trading activities, in a move that highlights broader problems with liquidity in the country’s convertible bond market. Seoul-based Lime Asset Management, which manages assets worth about Won4.9tn ($4.1bn), last week froze as much as Won620bn over two of its funds after it received more requests for redemptions than it was able to meet.”

October 6 – Wall Street Journal (Eric Uhlfelder): “The hedge-fund industry continues to do this year what it has been doing for more than a decade—trailing the stock market big time. Hedge funds on average generated less than half the returns of the stock market in the first half of 2019, posting a net return of 7.2%, according to… BarclayHedge. The S&P 500 returned 18.5%. Performance varied widely depending on strategy… Despite net redemptions of nearly $23 billion during the first half of the year, hedge-fund assets continued to rise as returns easily offset that decline. …Hedge Fund Research reports total industry assets rose from $3.1 trillion at the beginning of the year to a record $3.25 trillion at the end of June.”

October 4 – Wall Street Journal (Rachael Levy): “Prominent hedge funds lost money in September, a swift comedown after a relatively strong run for the industry at large. Several technology-focused funds were among those hit hard. Tiger Global Management LLC… lost 7.4% last month, said people familiar… Philippe Laffont’s Coatue Management LLC lost about 6%, Whale Rock Capital Management LLC dropped 14%, and Glen Kacher’s Light Street Capital Management LLC lost around 10%...”

Geopolitical Watch:

October 9 – CNBC (Kevin Breuninger): “Turkey has launched a military operation in northern Syria, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said…, days after the Trump administration announced its controversial decision to pull U.S. troops out of the area. ‘Turkish Armed Forces together with the Syrian National Army against PKK / YPG and Daesh terrorist organizations in northern Syria… has started,’ Erdogan wrote on Twitter… ‘Our aim is to destroy the terror corridor which is trying to be established on our southern border and to bring peace and peace to the region’…”

October 5 – BBC: “The US has denied that its day of nuclear talks with North Korea ended in failure, insisting that ‘good discussions’ were had. Earlier, North Korea said the meeting had broken down, because the US brought ‘nothing to the negotiation table’. Officials from the two countries met in Sweden on Saturday, in the hope of breaking their stalemate.”