Saturday, July 6, 2024

Sunday's News Links

[AP] A far-right victory or a hung parliament? Follow France election live updates

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Le Pen’s Far Right Seeks Historic French Election: What to Watch

[Reuters] France votes in parliamentary election with far right seeking power

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Private Credit Funds With No Skin in Game a Worry: Credit Weekly

[Yahoo/WSJ] The Next Big Power Play on Wall Street

[WSJ] Crushing Debts Await Europe’s New Leaders

[WSJ] China’s Foreign-Exchange Reserves Edged Down in June

[WSJ] China’s Support for Russia’s War in Ukraine Puts Beijing on NATO’s Threat List

[FT] Cohabitation or grand coalition: France frets over next political chapter

[FT] China stabbing attacks raise concerns of growing social tensions

Saturday's News Links

[AP] Records tumble as dangerous heat wave scorches the US West and beyond, with the worst yet to come

[AP] It’s France’s moment of truth. Here’s how its snap elections work and what comes next

[Reuters] Le Pen's investment in far-right Bardella pays off ahead of French election

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Will Meloni and Le Pen Be Right-Wing Besties? It’s Complicated

[Yahoo/WSJ] Big Banks Are Taking Hits From Commercial Real Estate

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] ECB Can’t Rush Rate Cuts Due to Wages, Services Costs: Muller

[Reuters] Iranian voters pick moderate as president to replace hardline Raisi

[Reuters] China anchors 'monster ship' in South China Sea, Philippine coast guard says

[FT] Huge majority is double-edged sword for Labour government, say allies

Friday, July 5, 2024

Weekly Commentary: Nothing Matters

The CBB will be back to “normal” next Friday.

Two-year Treasury yields dropped 14 bps this week, to the low (4.60%) since March 27th. Ten-year yields fell 12 bps to 4.28% (within a few bps of the low since March), while benchmark MBS yields sank 16 bps to 5.73% (also near lows back to March). The market ended the week pricing a 4.82% policy rate for the Fed’s December 18th meeting, implying 51 bps of rate reduction (two cuts). The rate was down six bps this week, for the lowest close since May 15th.

Bonds have turned notably receptive to indications of economic softening. With the Fed signaling the importance of labor market performance, markets this week reacted to weaker-than-expected June Non-Farm payroll (and household survey) and ADP data. While total non-farm payrolls increased a stronger-than-expected 206,000 (est. 190k), private payrolls rose a meaningfully weaker-than-expected 136,000 (est. 160k). Manufacturing jobs declined 8,000 versus a forecast of a gain of 5,000. Previous months payroll additions were revised lower. ADP job gains were reported at 150,000 versus the 165,000 median forecast.

The grossly imbalanced U.S. economy may be weaker - but not weak. It is certainly vulnerable. Yet I remain unconvinced that we are observing the start of a major downturn. Financial conditions remain exceptionally loose. Meanwhile, the bond market has developed a propensity for lower yields. Stronger data tend to be ignored, while yields quickly fall after weaker economic reports.

Especially with the interplay of highly speculative market dynamics, loose conditions, and robust system Credit expansion, I don’t want to dismiss the importance of lower market yields. Probabilities remain reasonably high that the market response (lower yields and looser conditions) to weaker data will underpin economic activity.

It’s reasonable for the Wall Street consensus to interpret recent bond market behavior as confirmation of a downturn about to trigger a Fed easing cycle. But I tend to view global bond yields as reacting to mounting risks, latent fragilities, and heightened vulnerability at the “periphery.” It’s more about fragile market structure than economic activity.

July 3 – Financial Times (Adrienne Klasa and Leila Abboud): “France’s leftist and centrist parties have pulled hundreds of candidates from Sunday’s high-stakes election in a co-ordinated attempt to keep the far-right Rassemblement National out of power. By a deadline on Tuesday evening, more than 200 third-placed candidates from the left and centre had dropped out as their parties sought to avoid splitting the anti-RN vote and decrease the likelihood of it achieving an absolute majority. The figure… represents more than two-thirds of the three-way races produced by last weekend’s first-round vote.”

July 4 – Bloomberg (James Regan): “Marine Le Pen’s National Rally is set to fall well short of an absolute majority in the French legislative election on Sunday, according to projections from polling companies. The far-right group and its allies are on course to win between 190 and 250 of the 577 seats in the National Assembly, based on four surveys released on Wednesday and Thursday. That would be significantly below the 289 that would enable it to pass bills easily and push through its agenda.”

French – and European and even global - markets were comforted by the prospect of political gridlock (better than the alternative).

France’s CAC 40 equities index rallied 1.8%. French yields dropped nine bps to 3.21%. With German bund yields reversing five bps higher to 2.56%, the spread between French and German yields narrowed about 15 bps to 65 bps (reversing almost half of the recent widening). Italian spreads collapsed 19 bps (to 138bps), and Greek spreads narrowed 20 bps (to 20bps). Société Generali CDS dropped 11 to 49 bps, with BNP Paribas CDS falling 10 to 42 bps – both now within a few bps of pre-election levels. European Bank (subordinated) debt CDS sank 20 to 109 bps, having spiked to 135 bps from a near multi-year low on June 6th of 103 bps. The euro rallied 1.2% this week, more than reversing its post-election decline.

The Nasdaq100 surged 3.4% this week to an all-time high. It’s no coincidence that the AI/Tech mania Bubbles along, even as stress builds at the “periphery.” For one, elevated global risk boosts shorting and hedging. This bearish positioning is susceptible to market-fueling squeezes. Weak-handed (low pain threshold) shorts help the market climb the proverbial wall of worry. Little wonder that risk is disregarded, and complacency reigns supreme at this late cycle phase.

Delving a little deeper into “no coincidence” analysis, it’s important to appreciate that rising global political instability and manic speculative Bubbles are both long-term manifestations of monetary disorder. Unprecedented debt and monetary inflation have fueled historic asset inflation and wealth inequality. And the greater level of inequality and intensity of speculative Bubbles, the more confident Wall Street becomes that the Federal Reserve (and global central banks) wouldn’t dare risk a blowup. Friday NYT headline: "Political Unrest Worldwide Is Fueled by High Prices and Huge Debts."

Years of Bubble Dynamics ensure bifurcated economies both at home and abroad. Using the weak and suffering as justification, a self-serving Wall Street beckons the Fed to loosen monetary policy. And the prospect for lower policy rates only stokes asset inflation and Bubbles, exacerbating systemic fragilities and gross wealth disparities.

The Fed erred in taking rate hikes off the table, while signaling prospective rate cuts. The inflationist crowd will invariably argue that the Fed miscalculated by not cutting rates sooner. Instead, the grave policy error was the Fed’s failure to impose sufficiently tight financial conditions. Sure, Wall Street strategists and market pundits will claim otherwise. But it is categorically reckless monetary management to discuss rate cuts when markets are in the throes of a historic speculative mania and global AI/tech arms race.

It's certainly possible that French voters deny Le Pen’s National Rally party a majority of Parliamentary seats and control of the government. Markets this week celebrated the likelihood of French political paralysis. But this is just speculative market shortsightedness. The global populism movement is just gathering momentum. Government debt problems are about to get underway.

A historic speculative melt-up certainly helps mask the reality of decades of inflationism coming home to roost. Markets can disregard root causes and ramifications of French and UK elections. And they can ignore the increasingly alarming geopolitical environment. Ditto for the deranged climate. Apparently, Nothing Matters so long as the AI and big tech stocks are running.

But each passing week global markets become only more fragile and susceptible to an unexpected bout of de-risking/deleveraging. My worries only grow when Bubble markets demonstrate an incapacity to react to - and adjust for - myriad mounting risks.

July 2 – Financial Times (Martin Arnold): “The head of the Federal Reserve has warned the US economy is too strong to justify running such high deficits and urged Washington to address its fiscal imbalance ‘sooner rather than later’, in a sign of monetary policymakers’ rising concern about rampant government spending. Jay Powell warned that the Biden administration was taking excessive risks by ‘running a very large deficit at a time when we are at full employment’ and said ‘you can’t run these levels in good economic times for very long’. The jobless rate in the world’s largest economy has not exceeded its current level of 4% for more than two years, longer than at any time since Powell was ‘a teenager’, the Fed chair said.”

Only higher yields and market discipline will force Washington to start the process of getting its financial house in order. And surely market discipline would have imposed Washington spending restraint some years ago, if not for the Fed’s recurring QE gambles. It’s worth noting that Gold jumped 2.8% and Silver 7.1% this week. The metals are sniffing out inflation risk and financial asset fragility. Sunday’s French election will be interesting. And if markets can plug their noses and get through French politics, it’s only four months from a real stink bomb U.S. election.


For the Week:

The S&P500 rose 2.0% (up 16.7% y-t-d), and the Dow added 0.7% (up 4.5%). The Utilities increased 0.7% (up 9.0%). The Banks slipped 0.2% (up 8.6%), while the Broker/Dealers added 0.7% (up 14.2%). The Transports declined 0.9% (down 3.9%). The S&P 400 Midcaps lost 1.2% (up 4.1%), and the small cap Russell 2000 fell 1.0% (unchanged). The Nasdaq100 jumped 3.6% (up 21.2%). The Semiconductors rose 3.4% (up 35.5%). The Biotechs slipped 0.6% (down 3.0%). With bullion surging $65, the HUI gold index rallied 6.0% (up 16.7%).

Three-month Treasury bill rates ended the week at 5.22%. Two-year government yields fell 14 bps this week to 4.60% (up 35bps y-t-d). Five-year T-note yields dropped 14 bps to 4.23% (up 38bps). Ten-year Treasury yields fell 12 bps to 4.28% (up 40bps). Long bond yields declined eight bps to 4.48% (up 45bps). Benchmark Fannie Mae MBS yields sank 16 bps to 5.73% (up 46bps).

Italian yields dropped 14 bps to 3.94% (up 24bps y-t-d). Greek 10-year yields fell 14 bps to 3.61% (up 55bps). Spain's 10-year yields declined eight bps to 3.34% (up 35bps). German bund yields gained six bps to 2.56% (up 53bps). French yields dropped nine bps to 3.21% (up 65bps). The French to German 10-year bond spread narrowed 15 bps to 65 bps. U.K. 10-year gilt yields declined five bps to 4.13% (up 59bps). U.K.'s FTSE equities index added 0.5% (up 6.1% y-t-d).

Japan's Nikkei Equities Index jumped 3.1% (up 22.3% y-t-d). Japanese 10-year "JGB" yields were unchanged at 1.08% (up 47bps y-t-d). France's CAC40 rallied 2.6% (up 1.8%). The German DAX equities index rose 1.3% (up 10.3%). Spain's IBEX 35 equities index increased 0.7% (up 9.1%). Italy's FTSE MIB index jumped 2.5% (up 12.0%). EM equities were mixed. Brazil's Bovespa index rallied 1.9% (down 5.9%), while Mexico's Bolsa index slipped 0.2% (down 8.8%). South Korea's Kospi index rose 2.3% (up 7.8%). India's Sensex equities index gained 1.2% (up 10.7%). China's Shanghai Exchange Index declined 0.6% (down 0.8%). Turkey's Borsa Istanbul National 100 index rose 1.9% (up 45.3%).

Federal Reserve Credit declined $18.0 billion last week to $7.190 TN. Fed Credit was down $1.700 TN from the June 22, 2022, peak. Over the past 251 weeks, Fed Credit expanded $3.463 TN, or 93%. Fed Credit inflated $4.379 TN, or 156%, over the past 608 weeks. Elsewhere, Fed holdings for foreign owners of Treasury, Agency Debt gained $4.4bn last week to $3.319 TN. "Custody holdings" were down $113 billion y-o-y, or 3.3%.

Total money market fund assets surged $51.2 billion to $6.154 TN. Money funds were up $723 billion, or 13.3%, y-o-y.

Total Commercial Paper slipped $2.0 billion to $1.288 TN. CP was up $138bn, or 12.0%, over the past year.

Freddie Mac 30-year fixed mortgage rates rose nine bps to 6.95% (up 8bps y-o-y). Fifteen-year rates gained nine bps to 6.25% (down 2bps). Bankrate's survey of jumbo mortgage borrowing costs had 30-year fixed rates up seven bps 7.39% (up 5bps).

Currency Watch:

For the week, the U.S. Dollar Index declined 0.9% to 104.875 (up 3.5% y-t-d). For the week on the upside, the Brazilian real increased 2.5%, the British pound 1.3%, the euro 1.2%, the Australian dollar 1.2%, the Mexican peso 1.2%, the Norwegian krone 1.1%, the Swedish krona 1.1%, the New Zealand dollar 0.9%, the Singapore dollar 0.6%, the Swiss franc 0.4%, the Canadian dollar 0.3%, the Japanese yen 0.1%, and the South African rand 0.1%. On the downside, the South Korean won declined 0.3%. The Chinese (onshore) renminbi was little changed versus the dollar (down 2.32% y-t-d).

Commodities Watch:

The Bloomberg Commodities Index rallied 1.5% (up 3.9% y-t-d). Spot Gold jumped 2.8% to $2,392 (up 16.0%). Silver surged 7.1% to $31.219 (up 31.2%). WTI crude jumped $1.62, or 2.0%, to $83.16 (up 16%). Gasoline rose 2.3% (up 22%), while Natural Gas sank 10.8% to $2.319 (down 8%). Copper jumped 5.9% (up 20%). Wheat rose 3.4% (down 9%), and Corn jumped 3.5% (down 13%). Bitcoin sank $3,430, or 5.7%, to $56,700 (up 33%).

Middle East War Watch:

July 2 – Financial Times (Andrew England and Bita Ghaffari): “An adviser to Iran’s supreme leader has warned that if Israel launches an all-out offensive against Hizbollah, it would risk triggering a regional war in which Tehran and the ‘axis of resistance’ would support the Lebanese militant movement with ‘all means’. Kamal Kharrazi, foreign affairs adviser to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, told the Financial Times the Islamic republic was ‘not interested’ in a regional war and urged the US to put pressure on Israel to prevent further escalation. But asked if Iran would support Hizbollah — its most important and powerful proxy — militarily in the event of a full-blown conflict, Kharrazi said: ‘All Lebanese people, Arab countries and members of the axis of resistance will support Lebanon against Israel.’”

Ukraine War Watch:

July 5 – Washington Post (David L. Stern): “By relentlessly attacking Ukraine's power sector for the past two years with missiles and drones, Russian President Vladimir Putin has inadvertently accelerated the country's shift to greener energy options. Even as Ukrainians look toward one of the coldest and darkest winters in their history, authorities see a potential upside: Ukraine can now begin anew and create a cleaner, eco-friendly energy sector. ‘The war, of course, is a tragedy, but it depends on you, how you react to it,’ said Volodymyr Kudrytskyi, CEO of Ukraine's state electricity distributor, Ukrenergo. ‘You can say 'Okay, it's a horrible situation, and we are just victims' — or we can try to build back better, to come back in better shape.’”

July 2 – Bloomberg (Alberto Nardelli, Jennifer Jacobs, and Alex Wickham): “Chinese and Russian companies are developing an attack drone similar to an Iranian model deployed in Ukraine, European officials familiar with the matter said, a sign that Beijing may be edging closer to providing the sort of lethal aid that western officials have warned against. The companies held talks in 2023 about collaborating to replicate Iran’s Shahed drone, and started developing and testing a version this year in preparation for shipment to Russia, said the officials… The Chinese drones have yet to be used in Ukraine, they said. Providing Russia a Shahed-like attack drone would mark a deepening of Beijing’s support for Russia despite repeated warnings from the US and its allies.”

France Instability Watch:

July 3 – Bloomberg (Phil Serafino and Valentine Baldassari): “Marine Le Pen’s National Rally is scrambling to get an absolute majority in the final round of France’s legislative election Sunday as rival parties are maneuvering to keep the far-right party out of power. President Emmanuel Macron’s centrist group and the broad, left-wing New Popular Front alliance have pulled their candidates out of 215 runoffs with more than two candidates to avoid splitting the vote against the far right… In response, the National Rally has been seeking allies to help it win a majority in the 577-seat lower house of parliament in order to enable it to implement a program that includes reversing the government’s pension reform, reducing value-added tax and cutting certain aid for foreigners.”

July 2 – Reuters (Michel Rose): “Opponents of France's far right sought to build a united front to block the path to government of Marine Le Pen's National Rally (RN)…, after the party made historic gains to win the first round of a parliamentary election. The RN and its allies won Sunday's round with 33% of the vote, followed by a left-wing bloc with 28% and well ahead of President Emmanuel Macron's broad alliance of centrists, who scored just 22%...”

July 2 – Bloomberg (Phil Serafino and Richard Bravo): “Marine Le Pen is seeking support beyond her far-right National Rally party in case she falls short of an absolute majority as mainstream parties move to block her from taking control in Sunday’s runoff. ‘If we’re just a few members of parliament away from a majority, we’ll try to go find them,’ Le Pen told France Inter radio... ‘We’re going to go and see the others, and we’re going to say to them: ‘Are you ready to join us in a new majority?’’”

July 4 – Bloomberg (Franklin Nelson): “The European Central Bank must guide investors that policymakers won’t easily come to the rescue of France in the event of financial-market stress, according to former Chief Economist Peter Praet. Officials face ‘a test of fiscal dominance’ that will determine their resolve to support budget discipline in the euro area, and they’ll be worried about how that will play out, the Belgian told… Bloomberg... ‘The markets are expecting probably a little bit too much from central bankers at this stage, so I think they should be tough,’ Praet said. ‘The bar must be very high.”

July 5 – Bloomberg (Francois de Beaupuy and Petra Sorge): “Marine Le Pen’s energy plans risk throwing a spanner into the workings of Europe’s electricity market. The National Rally’s proposals for tackling the high cost of living include policies that could disrupt power flows across national borders, weaken Europe’s biggest power supplier Electricite de France SA, and make the whole region’s energy supplies less secure, according to political and business leaders.”

UK Instability Watch:

July 5 – Financial Times (Craig Stirling): “Labour has won a historic landslide victory in the UK general election, returning to government after 14 years in opposition… New prime minister Sir Keir Starmer told Britons that his administration would be ‘unburdened by doctrine’ as he promised to ‘rebuild’ the country. As of 11.40am, Labour had won 411 House of Commons seats out of a total of 650 and secured a majority of 172, despite gaining only about 34% of the national vote, the lowest-ever winning share. The result is similar in scale to the 179-seat majority won by Tony Blair in the 1997 election. The Conservative party becomes the official opposition, having won 121 seats on 24% of the vote — its worst-ever general election performance. The centrist Liberal Democrats have secured 71 seats, beating their modern-era record of 62, while populist party Reform UK has four MPs…”

July 5 – Reuters (Andrew Macaskill, Elizabeth Piper and Alistair Smout): “Keir Starmer vowed to rebuild Britain as its next prime minister after his Labour Party on Friday surged to a landslide victory in a parliamentary election, ending 14 years of often tumultuous Conservative government. The centre-left Labour won a massive majority in the 650-seat parliament. Rishi Sunak's Conservatives suffered the worst performance in the party's long history as voters punished them for a cost of living crisis, failing public services, and a series of scandals. ‘We did it,’ Starmer said... ‘Change begins now ... We said we would end the chaos, and we will, we said we would turn the page, and we have. Today, we start the next chapter, begin the work of change, the mission of national renewal and start to rebuild our country.’”

Taiwan Watch:

July 3 – Bloomberg (Cindy Wang, Yian Lee and Foster Wong): “China detained a Taiwanese fishing boat and its crew, a move that risks worsening tensions with the island’s new president. The vessel was stopped by the Chinese Coast Guard… near the Taiwanese island of Kinmen… Kinmen is roughly 1.9 miles from China.”

Market Instability Watch:

July 1 – Wall Street Journal (Enes Morina and Paul Hannon): “Governments should cut back on borrowing to ease one of the biggest threats to the stability of the global financial system and support efforts to tame inflation, the Bank for International Settlements said... In its annual report on the global economy, the central bank for central banks warned that rising debt levels exposed governments to the risk of a crisis similar to that which roiled the U.K. in 2022… ‘Markets could at some point question fiscal sustainability,’ Claudio Borrio, head of the BIS economic department, said… ‘We know from experience that things look sustainable until, suddenly, they no longer do.’”

July 2 – Reuters (Marc Jones): “The United States, France and major economies are unlikely to halt the rises in their debt levels in the next few years, credit rating firm S&P Global warned... The assessment comes ahead of upcoming elections in the U.S., Britain and France where governments are pledging to improve economies, social services and voters' daily lives. ‘We estimate that --for the U.S., Italy, and France-- the primary balance would have to improve by more than 2% of GDP cumulatively for their debt to stabilize; this is unlikely to happen over the next three years,’ S&P said in a report.”

July 2 – Bloomberg (Carter Johnson and Michael Mackenzie): “Financial giants from Goldman… to Morgan Stanley and Barclays Plc. are taking a fresh look at how a Donald Trump victory in November could play out in the bond market. After last week’s debate hurt President Joe Biden’s chances of winning reelection, Wall Street strategists are urging clients to position for sticky inflation and higher long-term bond yields. At Morgan Stanley… in a weekend note argued that ‘now is the time’ to wager on long-term interest rates rising relative to short-term ones.”

July 2 – Bloomberg (Alexandra Harris): “A key rate tied to the day-to-day borrowing needs of the financial system hit the highest level since the beginning of the year as chunky Treasury auction settlements and clogged primary dealer balance sheets curbed lending capacity. The Secured Overnight Financing Rate spiked seven bps to 5.40% on July 1…”

Global Credit Bubble Watch:

July 1 – Bloomberg (Ameya Karve): “Dollar loan sales for the first half across Asia excluding Japan tumbled to their lowest since 2010 as higher borrowing costs in the greenback deterred companies… The amount of loans… declined 44% to about $45.5 billion in the period, the lowest since 2010 when $34.9 billion of deals were done in the first six months… The figure is in stark contrast with global US-currency loan sales, which jumped 37% to nearly $2 trillion in the first half of 2024, the highest in three years.”

AI Bubble Watch:

July 1 – Wall Street Journal (Jennifer Hiller and Sebastian Herrera): “Tech companies scouring the country for electricity supplies have zeroed in on a key target: America’s nuclear-power plants. The owners of roughly a third of U.S. nuclear-power plants are in talks with tech companies to provide electricity to new data centers needed to meet the demands of an artificial-intelligence boom. Among them, Amazon Web Services is nearing a deal for electricity supplied directly from a nuclear plant on the East Coast with Constellation Energy, the largest owner of U.S. nuclear-power plants… In a separate deal in March, the Amazon.co subsidiary purchased a nuclear-powered data center in Pennsylvania for $650 million. The discussions have the potential to remove stable power generation from the grid while reliability concerns are rising across much of the U.S. and new kinds of electricity users—including AI, manufacturing and transportation—are significantly increasing the demand for electricity in pockets of the country.”

July 2 – Reuters (Lewis Krauskopf): “A U.S. stock rally supercharged by excitement over artificial intelligence is drawing comparisons with the dotcom bubble two decades ago, raising the question of whether prices have again been inflated by optimism over a revolutionary technology. AI fever, coupled with a resilient economy and stronger earnings, has lifted the S&P 500 index to fresh records this year following a run of more than 50% from its October 2022 low. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite index has gained over 70% since the end of 2022.”

July 2 – New York Times (Erin Griffith): “For two years, many unprofitable tech start-ups have cut costs, sold themselves or gone out of business. But the ones focused on artificial intelligence have been thriving. Now the A.I. boom that started in late 2022 has become the strongest counterpoint to the broader start-up downturn. Investors poured $27.1 billion into A.I. start-ups in the United States from April to June, accounting for nearly half of all U.S. start-up funding in that period, according to PitchBook... In total, U.S. start-ups raised $56 billion, up 57 percent from a year earlier and the highest three-month haul in two years.”

Bubble and Mania Watch:

July 5 – CNBC (Ryan Browne): “Cryptocurrencies plunged Friday as investors focused on the payout of nearly $9 billion to users of collapsed bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox. As of 10:50 a.m. London time, bitcoin’s price slumped nearly 6% in 24 hours to hit $54,500.53, marking the first time it’s traded below the $55,000 level since Feb. 27... Rival token ether sank around 9% to $2,872.10. Altogether, the entire cryptocurrency market has shed more than $170 billion in combined market capitalization in the last 24 hours…”

July 5 – Reuters (Ankur Banerjee, Tom Westbrook, Sameer Manekar and Iain Withers): “Bitcoin was set for its biggest weekly fall in more than a year on Friday, as traders fretted over the likely dumping of tokens from defunct Japanese exchange Mt. Gox and further selling by leveraged players after the cryptocurrency's strong run. The price of the world's largest cryptocurrency slid as much as 8% on the day to $53,523, its lowest since late February. It was on track for a more than 12% weekly decline, its biggest since early November 2022.”

July 3 – Financial Times (Richard Bernstein): “No economic model would have predicted stocks would be at all-time highs and credit spreads would be very narrow after the Federal Reserve raised its benchmark interest rate by 5.25 percentage points since early 2022… The Fed seems ready to declare victory in its fight against inflation, but the outperformance of highly speculative investments suggests that even such a sharp increase in interest rates hasn’t been a big enough mop to soak up the excess liquidity sloshing around the financial markets. Central banks still don’t seem to understand that financial bubbles are sources of future real asset inflation. Bubbles misallocate capital within an economy to unneeded assets (cryptocurrencies and meme stocks, perhaps?). And capital doesn’t flow to productivity-enhancing investment. Indeed, the US consumer price index finally peaked at 5.6% subsequent to the technology bubble in 2008.”

July 3 – Financial Times (Will Schmitt): “Investors are shovelling cash into exchange traded funds that invest in a handpicked array of bonds, with record inflows since January that are pushing the industry towards its first $1tn annual haul. Actively managed fixed-income ETFs took in $7bn in June and have garnered $41bn over the first half of 2024, surpassing 2023’s record of $33bn for the entire year, according to… State Street Global Advisors… Most investors think of passive equity strategies such as index trackers when they think of ETFs… but active ETFs and bond ETFs in particular have been capturing a growing share of new money from investors in the $9tn US ETF industry.”

July 1 – Wall Street Journal (Peter Grant): “Starwood Capital Group’s move to severely tighten restrictions on investor withdrawals from its $10 billion real-estate fund is rippling through the $90 billion private real-estate fund business. After the giant investment firm announced the new restrictions in May, sponsors of similar funds said they experienced a jump in redemption requests. Investors in these funds… appear worried that their funds might also tighten the withdrawal spigot, forcing them to wait indefinitely in line if they want to cash out. ‘When Starwood started cutting redemptions, the first thing you think about is: what’s my guy going to do,’ said Kevin Gannon, chief executive of Robert A. Stanger… ‘There’s a natural knee-jerk reaction.’”

July 4 – New York Times (Joe Rennison and Julie Creswell): “It might seem like a great time to own apartment buildings. For many landlords, it is. Rents have soared in recent years because of housing shortages across much of the country and a bout of severe inflation. But a growing number of rental properties, especially in the South and the Southwest, are in financial distress. Only some have stopped making payments on their mortgages, but analysts worry that as many as 20% of all loans on apartment properties could be at risk of default. Although rents surged during the pandemic, the rise has stalled in recent months. In many parts of the country, rents are starting to fall. Interest rates, ratcheted higher by the Federal Reserve to combat inflation, have made mortgages much more expensive for building owners.”

U.S./Russia/China/Europe Watch:

July 2 – Wall Street Journal (Warren P. Strobel): “Images captured from space show the growth of Cuba’s electronic eavesdropping stations that are believed to be linked to China, including new construction at a previously unreported site about 70 miles from the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay… The study from the Center for Strategic and International Studies… follows reporting last year by The Wall Street Journal that China and Cuba were negotiating closer defense and intelligence ties, including establishing a new joint military training facility on the island and an eavesdropping facility.”

De-globalization and Iron Curtain Watch:

July 4 – Bloomberg (Alberto Nardelli and Jorge Valero): “The European Union moved ahead with plans to impose provisional tariffs on electric vehicles imported from China that would raise rates to as high as 48%, a step likely to escalate trade tensions with Beijing. The EU confirmed… it would apply provisional duties on three Chinese manufacturers that were sampled for its anti-subsidy investigation.”

Inflation Watch:

July 3 – Bloomberg (Prashant Gopal): “Owning a house is less affordable for average earners in the US than at anytime in 17 years. The costs of a typical home — including mortgage payments, property insurance and taxes — consumed 35.1% of the average wage in the second quarter, the highest share since 2007 and up from 32.1% a year earlier, according to… Attom.”

July 2 – Bloomberg (Mary Schlangenstein and Danny Lee): “Alaska Air Group Inc.’s unionized flight attendants are in line to get an average pay increase of 32% as part of a new “record contract” with the US carrier, according to a union statement… The Association of Flight Attendants Alaska disclosed further details of its tentative three-year agreement, which, among a slew of improved changes to remuneration and conditions, includes around 21 months of retroactive pay.”

Biden Administration Watch:

July 5 – Bloomberg (Amanda Gordon): “A coalition of top business leaders is taking their campaign to get President Joe Biden to drop his re-election bid one step further, penning a letter to him signed by billionaires and top executives. Christy Walton, Michael Novogratz and Paul Tagliabue are among the 168 signatories of the letter from the Leadership Now Project… It states that ‘nothing short of American democracy is at stake this November’ and follows an unsigned statement Wednesday that said the group of business leaders has ‘heard from many individuals who share our deep concerns about the present course but fear speaking out.’”

July 5 – Bloomberg (Michael Nienaber, Donato Paolo Mancini and Samy Adghirni): “There was a time when US President Joe Biden’s allies abroad would make allowances for his age, let the slip-ups slide, gently bring him back to the fold when he appeared to wander off. No longer. His calamitous presidential debate performance changed the calculus. Now even Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva — a leading South American leftist who wants a Democrat in the White House and is hosting the next G-20 summit — is saying the quiet part out loud. ‘I think Biden has a problem,’ Lula… told a local radio station. ‘He’s moving more slowly, he is taking longer to answer questions. The US elections are very important for all the world.’”

Federal Reserve Watch:

July 3 – Reuters (Howard Schneider): “Federal Reserve officials at their last meeting acknowledged the U.S. economy appeared to be slowing and that ‘price pressures were diminishing,’ but still counseled a wait-and-see approach before committing to interest rate cuts, according to minutes of the June 11-12 session. The minutes… noted in particular a weak May reading in the consumer price index as one among ‘a number of developments in the product and labor markets’ that supported a view that inflation was falling.”

July 5 – Reuters (Lindsay Dunsmuir): “The Federal Reserve has taken great strides in lowering inflation back down toward its 2% target rate but is still ‘a way’ from achieving the goal, New York Fed Bank President John Williams said… ‘We have seen significant progress in bringing it down,’ Williams said... ‘But we still have a way to go to reach our 2% target on a sustained basis. We are committed to getting the job done.’”

July 2 – Bloomberg (Philip Aldrick and Francine Lacqua): “Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago President Austan Goolsbee said policymakers should cut interest rates if US inflation continues to fall back to the 2% target. The Chicago Fed chief… said he feels ‘we are on a path to 2%’ inflation and ‘if you just hold the rates where they are while inflation comes down, you are tightening — so you should do that by decision, not by default.’”

U.S. Economic Bubble Watch:

July 5 – Bloomberg (Matthew Boesler): “US hiring and wage growth stepped down in June while the jobless rate rose to the highest since late 2021… Nonfarm payrolls rose by 206,000 and job growth in the prior two months was revised down by 111,000… The median forecast… called for a 190,000 increase. The unemployment rate rose to 4.1% as more people entered the labor force, and average hourly earnings cooled.”

July 2 – Bloomberg (Jarrell Dillard): “US job openings unexpectedly rose in May, interrupting a months-long downtrend that underscored a gradual slowdown in labor demand. Available positions increased to 8.14 million from a downwardly revised 7.92 million reading in the prior month…, the Bureau of Labor Statistics Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey, known as JOLTS, showed... The median estimate… called for 7.95 million openings. Both hiring and layoffs picked up in a sign of churn in the job market. The quits rate was unchanged.”

July 5 – Bloomberg (Jarrell Dillard): “Hiring at US companies grew in May at the slowest pace since the start of the year… Private payrolls increased 152,000 last month, according to the ADP Research Institute… ‘Job gains and pay growth are slowing going into the second half of the year,’ Nela Richardson, chief economist at ADP, said... ‘The labor market is solid, but we’re monitoring notable pockets of weakness tied to both producers and consumers’… Wage growth slowed for workers who changed jobs for the second month, to 7.8% from a year ago… Earnings gains for workers who stayed in their job held at 5%, the slowest since 2021.”

July 3 – Reuters (Shariq Khan): “High fuel costs and the threat of a hurricane are not expected to dampen Americans' desire to hit the road this summer, with vacationers preparing for record travel to kick off Fourth of July holiday festivities. Motorist group AAA expects a record of almost 71 million people to travel around the U.S. Independence Day holiday, growth similar to a pre-pandemic trajectory. Some 60 million people will drive with nearly 6 million flying to their destinations, while around 4.6 million people will take buses, trains or cruises during the holiday period, according to AAA's forecast.”

July 3 – New York Times (Jeanna Smialek): “The travel industry is in the midst of another hot summer as Americans hit the road and make for the airport to take advantage of slightly cheaper flights and gas. But the 2024 vacation outlook isn’t all sunny: Like the rest of the American consumer experience this year, it is sharply divided. Many richer consumers… are feeling good this year as a strong stock market and rising home values boost their wealth. While they have felt the bite of rapid inflation over the last few years, they are likely to have more wiggle room in their budgets and more options to ease the pain by trading down… Poorer families have had less room to maneuver to avoid the brunt of high prices.”

July 3 – Bloomberg (Vince Golle): “The US services sector contracted in June at the fastest pace in four years due to a sharp pullback in business activity and declining orders. The Institute for Supply Management’s composite gauge of services slumped 5 points to 48.8… The ISM’s business activity index — which parallels the group’s factory output gauge — plunged 11.6 points last month, the steepest slide since April 2020. Orders placed with service providers shrank for the first time since the end of 2022.”

July 3 – Bloomberg (Chris Middleton): “S&P Global releases June US services purchasing managers’ index. Index rises to 55.3 from 54.8 in May; year ago 54.4. Highest reading since April 2022. Seventeenth consecutive month of expansion. Employment rises to 52.3 vs 49.4 in May. Highest reading since May 2023… New business rises vs prior month. Highest reading since June 2023.”

July 2 – Bloomberg (Alex Tanzi): “More older lower-rate mortgages are being replaced by newer borrowing with higher financing costs, gradually pushing up the average loan rate for US homes, Intercontinental Exchange Inc. data show. Four million first-lien mortgages originated since 2022 have a rate above 6.5%, and about 1.9 million these have a rate of 7% or higher… ‘As of May, 24% of homeowners with mortgages now have a current interest rate of 5% or higher,’ Andy Walden, vice president of ICE Research and Analysis, said... ‘As recently as two years ago an astonishing nine of every 10 mortgage holders were below that threshold.’”

July 2 – CNBC (Scott Cohn): “An insurance crisis that has sent premiums skyrocketing and caused carriers to flee coastal states like Florida and California is spreading, and it is fundamentally changing the real estate market in states across the country. ‘Not only is the cost higher than people anticipated, but just the inability to secure insurance at all makes deals fall through before they even happen,’ said Bill Baldwin, owner of Boulevard Realty in Houston. Increasingly… he and other brokers are seeing insurance companies swoop in just as deals are about to close, making nearly impossible demands. ‘A new roof, for roofs that are only seven years old, or 10 years old. They want trees cut down that are within 20 feet of the edge of the house. Oftentimes those trees are on the neighbor’s property,’ he said. ‘And when that can’t happen, you can’t get insurance, which causes the sale to fall through.’”

July 2 – New York Times (Stacy Cowley): “After an unprecedented three-year timeout on federal student loan payments because of the pandemic, millions of borrowers began repaying their debt when billing resumed late last year. But nearly as many have not. That reality, along with court decisions that regularly upend the rules, has complicated the government’s efforts to restart its system for collecting the $1.6 trillion it is owed. At the end of March, six months after the hiatus ended, nearly 20 million borrowers were making their payments as scheduled. But almost 19 million were not, leaving their accounts delinquent, in default or still on pause…”

China Watch:

July 1 – Bloomberg: “The Chinese Communist Party’s top ranks gather this month for one of the country’s biggest annual policy meetings, with everything from chip technology to land reform and a revamp to the nation’s biggest tax source possibly on the cards. What isn’t expected is the kind of major policy pivot that’s often been seen in the past. The so-called Third Plenum gathers some 400 government bigwigs, military chiefs, provincial bosses and academics in Beijing to steer the political and economic course. But investors this year have low expectations… A slew of official readouts, articles and state media editorials over the past weeks suggest instead a reinforcement of President Xi Jinping’s long-tern goals.”

July 1 – Financial Times (Cheng Leng): “China’s central bank plans to intervene directly in bond markets in a sign of officials’ growing discomfort with a rally that has pushed borrowing costs to the lowest level in two decades. The People’s Bank of China said… it would ‘borrow sovereign bonds from primary traders in the open market in the near future’. The decision was made on ‘prudent observation and evaluations of current market situations’ in order to ‘maintain the stable operation of the bond market’.”

July 2 – New York Times (Keith Bradsher): “Four months ago, China’s leaders announced what seemed like a straightforward and proven plan to recharge the economy: Subsidize consumers who want to replace old cars and household appliances. The early results are not promising. Only 113,000 cars qualified for trade-in subsidies through June 25 — a blip in a country where monthly sales exceed two million cars. And buyers of new appliances such as washing machines and refrigerators are being offered discounts of only about 10%... The incentives are not enough to bring customers into stores. ‘If it is not needed, people will not go out of their way to find an old machine to participate,” said Dai Yu, the manager of an appliance store in Jingdezhen…”

July 2 – Bloomberg: “Chinese developers are facing headwinds offloading new home inventory, despite a rebound in second-hand transactions in mega cities. In Shenzhen, new home sales fell 4% in June compared with last year, even after the government relaxed measures to stimulate the market. Midland Realty said developer inventory remains high, adding to the polarizing results between new and existing apartment sales. In the capital of Beijing, new property sales underperformed existing ones in June… Buyers remain cautious toward new apartments in China’s so-called first-tier cities…”

July 3 – Bloomberg: “A Chinese online financing company has failed to pay investors who bought equity-backed products partially underpinned by projects linked to China Vanke Co... Shenzhen-based Penging, which is partially owned by Vanke, used revenue from real estate projects related to the developer as underlying assets for products it then sold to some Vanke staff… Investors failed to receive payments starting a few months ago...”

July 2 – Reuters (Liangping Gao and Ryan Woo): “China's services activity expanded at the slowest pace in eight months and confidence hit a four-year low in June, dragged by slower growth in new orders, a private-sector survey showed… The Caixin/S&P Global services purchasing managers' index (PMI) eased to 51.2 from 54.0 in May, marking the lowest reading since October 2023 but remaining in expansionary territory for the 18th straight month. The 50-mark separates expansion from contraction… The new orders subindex fell to 52.1 in June from 55.4 the previous month. Overseas demand also eased slightly even on top of strong exports in May.”

July 5 – Bloomberg: “Chinese stocks cap their seven straight weeks of losses — the longest downturn streak since early 2012 — as investor sentiment continued to weaken ahead of a key policy meeting this month.”

July 5 – Bloomberg: “Some exchange traded funds favored by China’s sovereign wealth fund have seen spikes in inflows after the country’s stocks tumbled below a key psychological level… The increasing inflows into the ETFs, including the nation’s biggest Huatai-Pinebridge CSI 300 ETF, added to signs that the so-called ‘national team’ may have stepped in to shore up market confidence ahead of the Communist Party’s Third Plenum later this month.”

July 3 – Financial Times (Sun Yu): “China is demanding acts of loyalty from its young professionals living and working in the US, sometimes putting them at odds with local law and immigration requirements, as it seeks more control over expatriates amid rising tensions between the two countries. The demands are increasingly being placed on Chinese nationals who joined the country’s Communist party as students or young professionals before they left home, in the hopes of career advancement once they eventually return. By some estimates, at least 10,000 members of the party are studying or working in the US. This is a small fraction of its 5.4mn Chinese diaspora but many are in top roles at leading universities and corporations in the technology and finance sectors.”

July 2 – Financial Times (Kaye Wiggins, Cheng Leng and Thomas Hale): “Western financial institutions in China have cut their investment banking workforce by the most in years after a market slowdown hit profits and halted years of expansion in the country. The cuts in 2023 came as five of the seven Chinese securities units that are part of Wall Street and European banks either made a loss or reported tumbling profits… The seven units employed 1,781 people last year, a fall of 13% from 2022. China’s capital markets activity has slowed in a weaker economy dominated by a prolonged property slowdown and the fallout from rising geopolitical tension between Washington and Beijing.”

Global Bubble Watch:

July 4 – Wall Street Journal (David Uberti): “U.S. tourists are flooding foreign locales from Japanese temples to Hungarian thermal baths at an opportune moment: The American dollar is soaring. An economy that is outrunning many peers is pulling investment stateside, driving the value of the dollar near its highest levels of the year. The U.S. currency has gained 15% against the yen and 2.3% against the euro since the end of 2023… A rising dollar boosts Americans’ relative purchasing power by making imports cheaper. At the same time, it generally hurts exports—except the type who carry luggage.”

July 2 – Bloomberg (Swati Pandey): “Australian retail sales rose by more than expected in May with spending largely driven by discounts in the face of elevated borrowing costs, an outcome that further strengthens the case for an interest rate hike this year. Sales advanced 0.6% from the prior month, making it the biggest increase in four months... The outcome, which was double the pace that analysts forecast, follows a 0.1% gain in April.”

Europe Watch:

July 1 – Reuters (Jonathan Cable and Leika Kihara): “Manufacturing activity in Europe suffered a setback last month but Asian factories enjoyed solid momentum, offering policymakers some hope the region can weather the hit from soft Chinese demand, surveys showed. The downturn in Europe was widespread, with Italy the only big player not to see a fall in its Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI)... HCOB's final euro zone manufacturing PMI, compiled by S&P Global, fell to 45.8 in June from May's 47.3.”

July 2 – Reuters (Balazs Koranyi): “Euro zone inflation eased last month but a crucial services component remained stubbornly high, likely fuelling concern among some European Central Bank policymakers that domestic price pressures could stay at elevated levels. Consumer inflation in the 20 nations sharing the euro currency slowed to 2.5% in June from 2.6% a month earlier…, as a rise in energy and unprocessed food costs moderated… This closely watched core inflation figure held steady at 2.9%, coming above expectations for 2.8%, mostly on a continued 4.1% rise in services prices.”

July 1 – Reuters (Maria Martinez): “The downturn in Germany's manufacturing sector, which accounts for about a fifth of Europe's biggest economy, experienced a fresh setback in June as output and new orders declined at a faster pace, a survey showed… The HCOB final Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) for German manufacturing fell to 43.5 in June from 45.4 in May…”

Japan Watch:

July 5 – Reuters (Satoshi Sugiyama and Leika Kihara): “Japanese household spending fell unexpectedly in May as higher prices continued to squeeze consumers' purchasing power…, complicating the central bank's decision on how soon to raise interest rates… Consumer spending fell 1.8% in May from a year earlier, far short of the median market forecast for a 0.1% uptick… Japanese firms offered to hike pay by 5.1% on average this year, the biggest increase in 33 years and far outpacing inflation now hovering at about 2%, a labour union survey showed…”

June 30 – Reuters (Kaori Kaneko): “Japan's land prices in 2023 rose at the fastest pace since comparable data available in 2010…, suggesting a recovery gathered pace helped by brisk tourism after the coronavirus pandemic. Average land prices climbed 2.3% last year, rising for the third straight year, a National Tax Agency survey showed, extending gains from a 1.5% increase in 2022 and a 0.5% rise in 2021.”

July 2 – Reuters (Satoshi Sugiyama): “Japanese service activity contracted for the first time in nearly two years in June as domestic demand cooled…, although business confidence and hiring indicators remained upbeat. The service sector has been propelling economic growth in Japan, offseting feeble manufacturing performance. The final au Jibun Bank Service purchasing managers' index (PMI) slipped to 49.4 in June from 53.8 in May, snapping 21 straight months of expansion…”

Emerging Market Watch:

July 1 – Bloomberg (Selcuk Gokoluk, Jorgelina do Rosario and Vinícius Andrade): “After a blockbuster six months, the sale of emerging-market bonds in hard currencies is set to slow down sharply in a second-half that’s littered with political risk. The amount of debt sold by government and corporate borrowers in developing markets has reached $321 billion in the busiest first-half since 2021… Still, forecasts from JPMorgan… and Bank of America Corp. show issuance is poised to slow more than usual after borrowers rushed to meet their funding needs at the beginning of the year. As governments from France to Bolivia face political upheaval…”

July 4 – Bloomberg (Kelsey Butler): “Venture capital dealmaking in Latin America has hit the slowest pace in six years, in part due to a pullback from US investors in the region. In the first six months of the year, there were 323 deals valued at $2 billion in Latin America, according to PitchBook... The second quarter, with 142 instances of capital put into startups, is the slowest in the region since the fourth quarter of 2018.”

Leveraged Speculation Watch:

July 2 – Bloomberg (Shelley Robinson and Katherine Burton): “Ken Griffin’s Citadel and Izzy Englander’s Millennium Management extended their year-to-date gains in June, underlining their reputations for delivering steady returns. Citadel posted an 8.1% return in its main Wellington hedge fund in the first half of the year… Its Tactical Trading Fund climbed 2.3% in June, taking its 2024 gain to 13.7%... Millennium gained 6.9% in the same period…”

Social, Political, Environmental, Cybersecurity Instability Watch:

July 3 – Financial Times (Attracta Mooney and Aditi Bhandari): “Hurricane Beryl became the earliest hurricane on record to develop into a category five storm, meaning its winds and sea surges could prove catastrophic, as warming oceans fuelled destruction across the south-eastern Caribbean. Forecasters said it was expected to bring ‘life-threatening’ winds and storm surges to Jamaica before hitting the Cayman Islands.”

July 2 – Reuters (Julie Steenhuysen and Jennifer Rigby): “Scientists tracking the spread of bird flu are increasingly concerned that gaps in surveillance may keep them several steps behind a new pandemic, according to… dozen leading disease experts. Many of them have been monitoring the new subtype of H5N1 avian flu in migratory birds since 2020. But the spread of the virus to 129 dairy herds in 12 U.S. states… signals a change that could bring it closer to becoming transmissible between humans. Infections also have been found in other mammals, from alpacas to house cats. ‘It almost seems like a pandemic unfolding in slow motion,’ said Scott Hensley, a professor of microbiology at the University of Pennsylvania. ‘Right now, the threat is pretty low… but that could change in a heartbeat.’”

July 3 – Reuters (Brendan O'Brien and Rich Mckay): “A huge swath of the United States will experience dangerously high temperatures on Wednesday - just ahead of the long Fourth of July weekend - meteorologists said, while a fast-moving California wildfire has forced thousands of residents to evacuate their homes. Some 110 million people in 21 states across the West, the southern Plains and the Mid-Atlantic will spend their holiday under heat-related advisories and warnings. Temperatures were expected to soar well past 100 degrees Fahrenheit over the next several days…”

July 4 – Reuters (Bernard Orr and David Stanway): “China is facing hotter and longer heatwaves and more frequent and unpredictable heavy rain as a result of climate change, the weather bureau warned…, as the world's second-biggest economy braces for another scorching summer. In its annual climate ‘Blue Book’, the China Meteorological Administration (CMA) warned that maximum temperatures across the country could rise by 1.7-2.8 degrees Celsius within 30 years, with eastern China and the northwestern region of Xinjiang set to suffer the most.”

July 4 – Reuters (Guy Faulconbridge): “Russians were braving some of the hottest weather seen in more than a century on Thursday with Moscow breaking a 1917 record and cities across the world's biggest country sizzling in temperatures well above 95 Fahrenheit. In Moscow, where temperatures can fall to minus 40 degrees Celsius in the legendary Russian winter, the mercury rose to 32.7 degrees Celsius on July 3, breaking the 1917 record for that day…”

Geopolitical Watch:

July 5 – Financial Times (Nicholas Megaw, Madison Darbyshire and James Fontanella-Khan): “Attended by prominent figures such as tech billionaire Michael Dell, Blackstone chief Stephen Schwarzman and Yasir Al-Rumayyan, the head of Saudi Arabia’s $925bn Public Investment Fund, the FII Priority conference in Miami in February was one of the most high-profile business events in the US this year. The first morning audience listened to former US secretary of state Mike Pompeo who warned the investors that it had become ‘impossible to separate geopolitical risk from capital allocation’… When the futures and derivatives industry convened up the coast in Boca Raton the following month, a prominent historian was brought in to lecture attendees on the ‘era of rising political turbulence’. At the Milken Institute conference…, there were speakers from the US state department, the White House National Security Council, West Point and Nato, a former major general and multiple current and former world leaders.”

Friday Afternoon Links

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] S&P 500 Hits Fresh Highs as US Yields Sink on Jobs: Markets Wrap

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Gold Rises as Cooling US Employment Data Backs Rate Cuts

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] US Bond Yields Fall as Jobs Report Supports Case for Fed Cuts

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Oil Heads for Weekly Gain as Falling US Supply Keeps Rally Alive

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Record-Breaking Heat to Test Electric Grids in US West

[Axios] Heat wave intensifies in California, with 150 million under alerts nationwide

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] US Payroll Growth Slows and Jobless Rate Ticks Up to 4.1%

[AP] Federal Reserve highlights its political independence as presidential campaign heats up

Friday's News Links

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Treasury Yields Sink as Jobs Bolster Fed-Cut Bets: Markets Wrap

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Gold Set for Weekly Gain as US Jobs Data May Give Clue on Easing

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Oil Near Two-Month High as Equities Soar and US Stockpiles Draw

[Reuters] Bitcoin set for worst week in over a year on Mt. Gox liquidation fears 

[CNBC] Over $170 billion wiped off cryptocurrencies as market tanks on Mt. Gox bitcoin payout fears

[CNBC] U.S. economy added 206,000 jobs in June, unemployment rate rises to 4.1%

[Reuters] Bond market re-focus on US elections throws wrench into 2024 rally hopes

[Reuters] Morning Bid: Labor in focus - US jobs, new UK government

[Reuters] Starmer pledges to stabilise UK as Labour win huge majority

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Le Pen Rejects Polls Saying Far Right Shy of French Majority

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Le Pen Plan for Power Market ‘Frexit’ Worries France’s Neighbors

[Reuters] Fed's Williams: still 'a way to go' to reach 2% inflation goal

[Reuters] Bonds receive biggest weekly inflow since 2021 as high yields attract, BofA says

[Reuters] Japan household spending falls unexpectedly, clouds BOJ rate path

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] China’s ‘National Team’ Gets Active in ETFs as Stocks Slump

[NYT] Political Unrest Worldwide Is Fueled by High Prices and Huge Debts

[FT] How the investment world is trying to navigate geopolitics

[FT] What happened in the UK general election?

Wednesday, July 3, 2024

Tuesday, July 2, 2024

Wednesday's News Links

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Treasury 10-Year Yield Falls After Soft Jobs Data: Markets Wrap

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Oil Trades Near Two-Month High on Signs of US Inventory Drawdown

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Le Pen Seeks Majority as Rival Groups Team Up to Stop Her

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] US Job Market Shows More Signs of Slowing in ADP and Claims Data

[CNBC] Private payrolls grew by just 150,000 in June, less than expected

[Yahoo Finance] Gas prices rise as Americans hit the road for holiday weekend, with more increases expected

[Reuters] Americans look past fuel cost, bad weather to set July Fourth travel record

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Home Affordability in the US Sinks to Lowest Point Since 2007

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Homebuilders Cut on 'Sluggish' Housing Market, Florida Woes

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Alaska Air Flight Attendants Are Set for 32% Increase in Pay

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] California’s Death Valley May Tie Daily Record of 129F on Sunday

[AP] From red wall to King’s Speech, UK elections have a vocabulary all their own. Here’s what to know

[Reuters] China's services activity growth hits 8-month low, Caixin PMI shows

[Reuters] Japan's service activity slips for first time in 2 years, PMI shows

[Bloomberg] US Allies Allege China Is Developing Attack Drones for Russia

[Bloomberg] China Vanke-Linked Wealth Products Miss Payments Deadline

[Bloomberg] Australia Retail Sales Jump, Boosting Case for RBA Hike

[NYT] America’s Divided Summer Economy Is Coming to an Airport or Hotel Near You

[NYT] Student Loan Borrowers Owe $1.6 Trillion. Nearly Half Aren’t Paying.

[NYT] Investors Pour $27.1 Billion Into A.I. Start-Ups, Defying a Downturn

[WSJ] Supply-Chain Finance Programs Seeing Cuts as Companies Face High Interest Rates

[FT] Jay Powell says US needs to cut deficit ‘sooner rather than later’

[FT] The risk of a replay of the lost decade in US stocks

[FT] Climate change is pushing up food prices — and worrying central banks

[FT] Hurricane Beryl becomes earliest category five storm on record

[FT] China demands loyalty from young expats in the US

Monday, July 1, 2024

Tuesday's News Links

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Stocks Drop Ahead of Jobs Data; Nvidia Slips: Markets Wrap

[Reuters] Dollar soars near 38-year yen peak as Trump risk lifts US yields

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Oil Trades Near Two-Month High on Mideast, Hurricane Concerns

[Reuters] Morning Bid: Growth ebbs, curves steepen, Powell in Portugal

[Reuters] Echoes of dotcom bubble haunt AI-driven US stock market

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Le Pen Seeks Broad Support to Win French Parliamentary Majority

[Reuters] France's moderate voters face extreme choices in run-off vote

[Reuters] Rating agency S&P sends debt warning to US, France and other top economies

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Wall Street Maps Out What a Trump Win Would Mean for Bonds

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Fed’s Goolsbee Says Policymakers Should Prepare for Rate Cuts

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Shift Occurring in US Housing Market as Mortgage Lock Loosens Up

[CNBC] Insurance crisis that started in Florida, California is spreading. Your state could be next

[Reuters] Euro zone inflation eases a touch but services costs stuck

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Asia Dollar Loan Volumes Plunge to 14-Year Low as Rates Bite

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Citadel, Millennium Extend Run of Returns With First Half Gains

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] China New Home Sales Struggle in Face of Lopsided Recovery

[Bloomberg] China Vanke’s Home Sales Stall as Property Picture Blurs

[WSJ] Satellite Images Show Expansion of Suspected Chinese Spy Bases in Cuba

[FT] Marine Le Pen says she will seek to form government even if short of outright majority

[FT] Iran would use ‘all means’ to back Hizbollah if Israel launches full-blown war, official says

[FT] Global investment banks retreat from China expansion

Monday's News Links

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Stocks, Euro Rise in Relief After French Election: Markets Wrap

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] French Markets Gain as Election Spurs Fragile Reprieve From Rout

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Oil Gains With Focus on China’s Economy and Geopolitical Risks

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] China’s 10-Year Yield Falls to Record as Economic Gloom Deepens

[Reuters] Morning Bid: Markets bet on French gridlock

[Reuters] Historic win for far right in French first-round vote

[Reuters] Breakingviews: The risk of a euro crisis is rising

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Macron, French left-wing rivals race to stop Le Pen momentum

[Reuters] French vote, China trade row cast cloud over European earnings

[Reuters] Downturn in German manufacturing suffers fresh setback, PMI shows

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] What to Expect From the Third Plenum, China’s Big Policy Meeting

[Reuters] Japan's land prices rise at fastest pace since 2010, tax agency says

[Reuters] Asia's factory activity expands in June on solid global demand

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] The Year’s $321 Billion EM Bond Spree Looks Set to Slow Down

[Reuters] Scientists wary of bird flu pandemic 'unfolding in slow motion'

[Bloomberg] ‘Non!’ to Macron Opens Longest Week in Politics

[NYT] China Dangled Rebates to Lure People to Spend. It’s Not Enough.

[WSJ] Rising Government Debt Threatens Financial Stability, Inflation, BIS Says

[WSJ] A Real-Estate Fund Industry Is Bleeding Billions After Starwood Capped Withdrawals

[WSJ] Tech Industry Wants to Lock Up Nuclear Power for AI

[FT] China’s central bank moves to address bond frenzy

[FT] The foreign investors left stranded in Evergrande’s web of Chinese debt

Sunday, June 30, 2024

Weekly Commentary: Just the Facts - June 30, 2024

For the Week:

The S&P500 (up 14.5% y-t-d) and the Dow (up 3.8%) were little changed. The Utilities fell 1.3% (up 8.2%). The Banks rallied 2.5% (up 8.8%), and the Broker/Dealers rose 1.5% (up 13.3%). The Transports advanced 2.0% (down 3.0%). The S&P 400 Midcaps were little changed (up 5.3%), while the small cap Russell 2000 rallied 1.3% (up 1.0%). The Nasdaq100 was about unchanged (up 17.0%). The Semiconductors retreated 1.2% (up 31.1%). The Biotechs gained 0.7% (down 2.4%). With bullion up $5, the HUI gold index added 0.2% (up 10.1%).

Three-month Treasury bill rates ended the week at 5.205%. Two-year government yields added a basis point this week to 4.74% (up 49bps y-t-d). Five-year T-note yields rose nine bps to 4.37% (up 52bps). Ten-year Treasury yields jumped 14 bps to 4.39% (up 52bps). Long bond yields rose16 bps to 4.56% (up 53bps). Benchmark Fannie Mae MBS yields surged 19 bps to 5.89% (up 61bps).

Italian yields jumped 13 bps to 4.07% (up 37bps y-t-d). Greek 10-year yields rose 11 bps to 3.74% (up 69bps). Spain's 10-year yields surged 13 bps to 3.12% (up 43bps). German bund yields rose nine bps to 2.50% (up 48bps). French yields gained nine bps to 3.30% (up 74bps). The French to German 10-year bond spread was unchanged at 80 bps. U.K. 10-year gilt yields jumped nine bps to 4.17% (up 64bps). U.K.'s FTSE equities index declined 0.9% (up 5.6% y-t-d).

Japan's Nikkei Equities Index surged 2.9% (up 18.6% y-t-d). Japanese 10-year "JGB" yields surged 12 bps to 1.08% (up 46bps y-t-d). France's CAC40 fell 2.0% (down 0.8%). The German DAX equities index added 0.4% (up 8.9%). Spain's IBEX 35 equities index declined 0.8% (up 8.3%). Italy's FTSE MIB index slipped 0.5% (up 9.2%). EM equities were mixed. Brazil's Bovespa index gained 2.1% (down 7.7%), while Mexico's Bolsa index declined 0.7% (down 8.6%). South Korea's Kospi index increased 0.5% (up 5.4%). India's Sensex equities index jumped 2.4% (up 9.4%). China's Shanghai Exchange Index fell 1.0% (down 0.3%). Turkey's Borsa Istanbul National 100 index declined 1.1% (up 42.5%). Russia's MICEX equities index was unchanged (up 0.8%).

Federal Reserve Credit declined $13.2 billion last week to $7.208 TN. Fed Credit was down $1.682 TN from the June 22, 2022, peak. Over the past 250 weeks, Fed Credit expanded $3.481 TN, or 93%. Fed Credit inflated $4.397 TN, or 156%, over the past 607 weeks. Elsewhere, Fed holdings for foreign owners of Treasury, Agency Debt recovered $4.5bn last week to $3.314 TN. "Custody holdings" were down $118 billion y-o-y, or 3.4%.

Total money market fund assets added $4.3 billion to $6.103 TN. Money funds were up $669 billion, or 12.3%, y-o-y.

Total Commercial Paper added $1.1 billion to $1.290 TN. CP was up $127bn, or 10.9%, over the past year.

Freddie Mac 30-year fixed mortgage rates slipped one basis point to an 11-week low 6.86% (up 16bps y-o-y). Fifteen-year rates gained three bps to 6.16% (up 5bps). Bankrate's survey of jumbo mortgage borrowing costs had 30-year fixed rates down four bps 7.32% (up 12bps).

Currency Watch:

June 26 – Reuters (Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss): “The yen sank to its lowest against the U.S. dollar in nearly 38 years on Wednesday, as wide interest rate differentials between the two economies in favor of the greenback continued to pummel the Japanese unit, keeping traders on alert for any sign of intervention from Japan to boost its currency. The U.S. dollar rose to as high 160.82, its strongest level since December 1986.”

June 18 – Nikkei Asia (Pak Yiu): “China saw the world’s biggest outflow of high-net-worth individuals last year and is expected to see a record exodus of 15,200 in 2024, dealing a further blow to its economy, a new report says. Uncertainty over China's economic trajectory and geopolitical tensions are top of mind for many Chinese millionaires, in dollar terms, who choose to leave their country, according to… investment migration firm Henley & Partners. The U.S., China's international archrival, stands out as the top destination… China last year saw 13,800 high-net-worth individuals depart, mostly to the U.S., Canada and Singapore, the firm found. Such individuals, abbreviated as HNWIs, are defined as those with at least $1 million in assets.”

June 23 – Reuters (Winni Zhou and Ankur Banerjee): “A sliding yuan and extensive outflows of cash from the mainland into Hong Kong show China's domestic investors are shelving expectations for any immediate recovery in their home markets and fleeing to the closest better-yielding assets. The yuan has dropped to seven-month lows this week, alongside a reversal in equity investment flows into China. Analysts said Hong Kong's stockpile of yuan deposits has also grown as mainland investors use their limited offshore investment channels to seek higher yields and companies prepare to pay annual dividends, adding to the pressure on the currency.”

June 22 – Financial Times (Mary McDougall and Joseph Cotterill): “Emerging market currencies are on track for their worst first half of the year since 2020, pushed lower by an unexpectedly strong dollar and an unwind in a popular trading strategy across Latin American markets. JPMorgan’s emerging markets foreign exchange index has fallen 4.4% so far this year, a drop more than twice as large as the same period in the three previous years.”

For the week, the U.S. Dollar Index was little changed at 105.87 (up 4.5% y-t-d). For the week on the upside, the South Korean won increased 0.9%, the Australian dollar 0.4%, the euro 0.2%, and the Canadian dollar 0.1%. On the downside, the Brazilian real declined 2.9%, the South African rand 1.2%, the Mexican peso 1.1%, the Norwegian krone 1.0%, the Swedish krone 0.8%, the Japanese yen 0.7%, the Swiss franc 0.6%, the New Zealand dollar 0.4%, and the Singapore dollar 0.1%. The Chinese (onshore) renminbi declined 0.09% versus the dollar (down 2.31% y-t-d).

Commodities Watch:

June 28 – Reuters (Rahul Paswan): “Gold prices steadied on Friday and were headed for a third straight quarterly gain after a key U.S. inflation report was broadly in line with expectations, boosting hopes that the Federal Reserve could cut interest rates by September. Spot gold was steady at $2,326.47 per ounce... Prices have gained over 4% for the quarter.”

The Bloomberg Commodities Index declined 0.7% (up 2.4% y-t-d). Spot Gold added 0.2% to $2,327 (up 12.8%). Silver dropped 1.4% $29.143 (up 22.5%). WTI crude gained 81 cents, or 1.0%, to $81.54 (up 13.8%). Gasoline added 0.2% (up 3.5%), while Natural Gas dropped 8.3% to $2.601 (up 4%). Copper declined 0.8% (up 13%). Wheat fell 1.4% (down 12%), and Corn sank 8.7% (down 16%). Bitcoin slumped $4,042, or 6.3%, to $60,118 (up 41.4%).

Middle East War Watch:

June 27 – Politico (Erin Banco): “A large-scale confrontation between Israel and Hezbollah is likely to break out in the next several weeks if Jerusalem and Hamas fail to reach a cease-fire deal in Gaza, U.S. intelligence indicates. U.S. officials are trying to convince both sides to deescalate — a task that would be significantly easier with a cease-fire in place in Gaza. But that agreement is in tense negotiations and U.S. officials are not confident Israel and Hamas will agree to the deal on the table in the near future. Meanwhile, the Israel Defense Forces and Hezbollah have drafted battle plans and are in the process of trying to procure additional weapons, according to two senior U.S. officials briefed on the intelligence.”

June 28 – Bloomberg (Ethan Bronner): “North Israel is a series of ghost towns — abandoned houses and scorched forests from Hezbollah missiles. Parts of south Lebanon have been hit so hard by Israeli bombs that they’ve been reduced to rubble. Tens of thousands of residents have been driven from homes on both sides. A steady, if ugly, tit-for-tat between Israel and Hezbollah since the October outbreak of the Gaza war has been shifting into something more alarming. Record numbers of Hezbollah projectiles — some 900 — have hit Israel this month and its chief says he’s overwhelmed by volunteers ready to fight Israel ‘without any rules, restraints or ceiling.’ Israel, meanwhile, is carrying out deeper and more destructive attacks in Lebanon and its northern military command has just approved a battle plan for the country.”

June 23 – BBC: “A number of Iraq’s leading Shia militias have pledged their allegiance and vowed to fight alongside Lebanon’s Hezbollah movement if Israel enters into a full-scale war against the group, according to a leading Lebanese newspaper. The pro-Iran Al-Akhbar newspaper published a report… saying that its Al-Nujaba Movement and Kataib Hezbollah faction (Hezbollah Brigades) had ‘announced their readiness to participate, if [Lebanese] Hezbollah agrees, in confronting any possible Israeli aggression against Lebanon’.”

June 24 – Wall Street Journal (Paul Berger and Costas Paris): “Ship backups that plagued seaports during the Covid pandemic are making a comeback, as vessel diversions because of attacks in the Red Sea trigger gridlock and soaring costs at the start of the peak shipping season. Flotillas of containerships and bulk carriers are growing off the coasts of Singapore, Malaysia, South Korea and China while ports in Spain and other parts of Europe look to dig out from container piles… The snags are complicating logistics for retail and manufactured goods, but importers and exporters say they are most concerned that the backups could expand as demand picks up in the coming months... That could drive already-resurgent freight rates close to levels seen during the pandemic…”

Ukraine War Watch:

June 23 – Reuters (Guy Faulconbridge and Filipp Lebedev): “Russia said… the United States was responsible for a Ukrainian attack on the Russian-annexed Crimean peninsula with five U.S.-supplied missiles that killed four people, including two children, and injured 151 more. The Russian Defence Ministry said four of the U.S.-delivered Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) missiles, equipped with cluster warheads, were shot down by air defence systems and the ammunition of a fifth had detonated in mid-air… ‘Responsibility for the deliberate missile attack on the civilians of Sevastopol is borne above all by Washington, which supplied these weapons to Ukraine, and by the Kyiv regime…’ the ministry said.”

France Instability Watch:

June 24 – Financial Times (Gideon Rachman): “‘Our Europe is mortal, it can die,’ warned Emmanuel Macron in late April. Who knew that just a few weeks later France’s president would set about proving his point… At present, global attention is focused on the immediate political dramas in France. The first round of voting will take place on June 30… At best, a parliament dominated by the political extremes would plunge France into a period of prolonged instability. At worst, it would lead to the adoption of spendthrift and nationalistic policies that would swiftly provoke an economic and social crisis in France. A French meltdown would rapidly become the EU’s problem. There would be two main transmission mechanisms. The first is fiscal. The second is diplomatic. France is in a financial mess.”

June 24 – Politico (Clea Caulcutt): “French President Emmanuel Macron warned Monday that a victory for the far left or the far right in this month’s snap election could spark ‘civil war.’ Macron said the far-left France Unbowed and Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally both pursued divisive policies that stoked tensions between communities. The far right’s answer to insecurity ‘reduces people to their religion or their origin’ and therefore ‘pushes people towards civil war,’ he said…”

June 25 – Bloomberg (Alice Atkins): “French officials must reassure foreign investors that the nation’s finances are in order or risk a fresh blowout in bond spreads, according to Allianz Global Investors’ multi-asset chief investment officer. Overseas investors own a much larger share of French government debt than they do elsewhere, and some fear the current political turmoil could trigger a European debt crisis to rival the one seen over a decade ago, said Gregor Hirt, whose division has €156 billion ($168bn) of assets under management. ‘Any reminder of the European sovereign debt crisis is a red flag for many international investors,’ he said.”

June 28 – Bloomberg (Valentine Baldassari and Ania Nussbaum): “President Emmanuel Macron’s approval rating fell to the lowest level in three months, delivering a boost to Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally party just two days before voting starts in France’s legislative election. Support for Macron dropped six points to 36%, the worst showing since March, according to a Toluna-Harris Interactive poll for LCI TV published on Friday.”

Taiwan Watch:

June 24 – Reuters (Ben Blanchard): “Democracy is not a crime and autocracy is the real ‘evil’, Taiwan President Lai Ching-te said… after China threatened to impose the death penalty in extreme cases for ‘diehard’ Taiwan independence separatists… On Friday, China ramped up its pressure on Taiwan by issuing new legal guidelines to punish those it says support the island's formal independence, though Chinese courts have no jurisdiction on the democratically governed island.”

June 22 – Reuters (Ben Blanchard): “Taiwan's annual war games this year will be as close as possible to actual combat, no longer just putting on a show to score points but aiming to simulate real fighting given a rapidly rising ‘enemy threat’ from China, a senior official said… A senior Taiwan defence official… said there was an urgent need to rethink how the drills were conducted. ‘In recent years, the enemy threat has changed rapidly,’ the official said. ‘Our defence combat plan must also be continuously revised on a rolling basis, and the urgency of comprehensive combat training is becoming more and more important.’”

Market Instability Watch:

June 24 – Bloomberg (Alexandra Harris): “US fiscal deficits are projected to grow over the next decade, likely pushing the government to increasingly rely on Treasury bills and healthy demand to plug the holes. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office last week upped its deficit estimate for 2024 to almost $2 trillion from about $1.6 trillion in February… Total deficits are expected to equal or exceed 5.5% of GDP in every year from 2024 to 2034... Those latest projections sounded the alarm on Wall Street, prompting analysts to revise trajectories for bill sales.”

June 27 – Financial Times (Claire Jones): “The IMF has urged the US to ‘urgently’ address its mounting fiscal burden, as it took aim at the tax plans of both presidential candidates just hours before their first electoral debate. The fund said projects from its annual Article IV health check of the US economy showed the debt-to-GDP ratio hitting 140% by 2032 — much higher than its current level of 120.7%. The surge, off the back of successive projected fiscal deficits in the coming years, would leave the debt burden in excess of previous highs in the aftermath of the second world war. ‘Such high deficits and debt create a growing risk to the US and global economy, potentially feeding into higher fiscal financing costs and a growing risk to the smooth rollover of maturing obligations,’ the fund said in its Article IV consultation. ‘These chronic fiscal deficits represent a significant and persistent policy misalignment that needs to be urgently addressed.’”

June 26 – Bloomberg (Iris Ouyang and Shulun Huang): “The yield on China’s benchmark bond fell to a more than two decade low as investors continued to flock to the notes amid lingering concerns about the domestic economy and expectations for further stimulus. The onshore 10-year government yield slipped to 2.22%, the lowest since 2002. Yields on the 20- and 50- year bonds have been trading at their historic lows for months.”

Global Credit Bubble Watch:

June 28 – Bloomberg (Samantha Stewart): “US leveraged loan pricings this quarter have reached $370 billion, the most since Bloomberg began tracking broadly syndicated loan data in 2013. The fresh high beats the prior of $339 billion set in the first quarter of 2017 during a repricing wave…”

June 28 – Bloomberg (Harry Suhartono and Ameya Karve): “Asian credit markets are suddenly standing out, even in a world awash in debt deals. Total corporate bond issuance in the region across all currencies has surged to $1.3 trillion this year… Sales of local-currency debt by companies has hit a record for the first half, while this week alone saw the biggest weekly dollar bond issuance for 17 months… The surge in debt sales has come as the region’s borrowers face nearly $2 trillion of maturing bonds next year and the similar amount in 2026… Total company bond issuance in the first half has climbed 18% to an all-time high... Sales of dollar-denominated debt… jumped to $22 billion this week, the most since the start of 2023, as spreads for regional issuers have remained tighter than for their US peers.”

June 27 – Financial Times (Ortenca Aliaj): “Defaults on loans to risky borrowers, a lifeline for companies owned by private equity, have leapt 250%, the Bank of England said as it warned that the sector was ‘facing challenges in the higher rate environment’. Global defaults on leveraged loans jumped 5 percentage points, from about 2% in early 2022 to about 7%, the BoE said… About 73% of these types of loans are extended to companies backed by private equity, according to the central bank. There is still some way to go before defaults on leveraged loans reach the peak of 12% hit during the financial crisis, it added.”

AI Bubble Watch:

June 28 – Wall Street Journal (Karen Langley): “The AI fervor powering the stock market shows no sign of cooling down. Much as in 2023, investors piled into bets in the first half of this year that the artificial intelligence boom is just getting started. They sent Nvidia shares soaring 149%, propelling the graphics-chip maker’s market value above $3 trillion and briefly making it the most valuable company in the world. Nvidia’s ascent is a big reason the S&P 500 has climbed 14% this year… even as a series of hot inflation readings damped investors’ hopes that the Federal Reserve would soon begin to cut interest rates.”

June 25 – Bloomberg (Carmen Arroyo and Immanual John Milton): “The AI revolution is increasingly being funded in a little-watched part of the debt market. Artificial intelligence products need vast troves of information and processing power to turn facts into something approximating human thought. Across the world, companies are pouring billions of dollars into building data centers to store and process this information, and fiber-optic cables to connect computers to these sites and one another… Global spending on data center construction is likely to top $55 billion by 2030, according to Synergy Research Group. The companies building data centers are often thinly capitalized, forcing them to raise at least some of that money in the asset-backed securities market, where they can get financing based on the revenue they expect to generate from the properties, at cheaper prices than they might otherwise find.”

June 28 – Yahoo Finance (Hamza Shaban): “Shareholders getting in on the AI power trade stand to gain from the immense energy demands of AI technology. But those same demands will have challenging ramifications for the sustainability goals of technology companies — and put a massive new strain on the power grid. Already this month, the major heat wave in parts of the Northeast, mid-Atlantic, and Midwest flashed an early preview of a potentially stifling summer that pushed the power grid's load. Those demands pile onto the nationwide boom in data center development that's leading to a surge in long-term demand for electricity, which has done the impossible — made the utilities trade look hot. With power-hungry AI systems, the energy trade is now the AI trade.”

June 25 – Financial Times (Martin Arnold): “Central banks urgently need to ‘raise their game’ to tackle the challenges and opportunities of artificial intelligence, as it transforms economies and the financial system, according to the Bank for International Settlements. The BIS conclusions… underline the awareness of global financial authorities that they need to keep pace with the wave of innovation being released by generative AI, including large language models such as ChatGPT. The organization… has carried out several experiments using the technology. It said AI was likely to be ‘a game changer for many activities and have a profound impact’ on the broader economy and financial system.”

Bubble and Mania Watch:

June 28 – Reuters (Marc Jones and Rodrigo Campos): “The unstoppable march of the mega caps, sloth-like central bank pivots, political palpitations aplenty and M&A is back - the first half of 2024 has been another whirlwind in world markets. Forecasts for a global interest-rate-cutting frenzy may not have materialized, but Nvidia and the rest of the Magnificent 7 soared another $3.6 trillion in market value. MSCI's 47-country world stocks index has clocked up a punchy 11% since January. Good yes, but nowhere near the 30% leap of team tech, or the frankly eye-popping 150% gain of chip champ Nvidia.”

June 27 – Financial Times (George Steer): “Banks including Goldman Sachs, Citigroup and UBS this month upgraded their end-of-year forecasts for the S&P 500 index, which has hit successive record highs during its surge of about 15% so far this year, driven by a small group of soaring AI stocks. Faced with a growing number of investors convinced that the rally will continue, the few remaining bearish strategists say their contrarian views are proving an increasingly difficult sell. ‘This rally has been tough and we’re having a hard time convincing [clients] to be bearish,’ said Barry Bannister, chief equity strategist at Stifel. ‘There’s a wall of money that’s willing to buy the market at any price and embrace fanatical thinking. People are bubbled up right now, they think the sky is the limit,’ added Bannister…”

June 27 – Financial Times (Hugo Cox): “Three weeks ago, Charlie Jenkins was approached by a couple who, after 18 months of searching for the right holiday home in the Mediterranean, had finally found the perfect place: now they needed to buy it before anyone else could. Arranging a mortgage would take too long, they figured... Could Jenkins, head of asset finance at SPF Private Clients, find them a £1.5mn loan, as soon as possible? Among their possessions was a valuable art collection, worth roughly £5mn. After a few calls, Jenkins had an offer of the full amount secured against some of the paintings… In recent years, as the value of many collectable assets has risen, the industry for lending against them has grown. From fine art, luxury watches, and investment portfolios to yachts, jets and classic cars, the very rich are taking a close look at trophy assets as a means to raise cash. ‘The most common lending is against an investment portfolio,” says Hina Bhudia, of Knight Frank Finance’s private office in London.”

Global Banking Watch:

June 26 – Wall Street Journal (Andrew Ackerman): “Big U.S. banks passed their latest annual stress test, with the Federal Reserve finding they would be able to continue lending to households and businesses in a severe recession, even while suffering steeper losses than last year’s tests. This year’s exercise measured the 31 biggest banks’ ability to maintain strong capital levels in a hypothetical recession marked by double-digit unemployment and a severe stock-market decline. The banks would collectively lose nearly $685 billion in the Fed’s imaginary worst-case recession... That would be more than last year, but all the banks would still remain above their minimum capital requirements.”

June 24 – New York Times (Matthew Goldstein): “Some Wall Street banks, worried that landlords of vacant and struggling office buildings won’t be able to pay off their mortgages, have begun offloading their portfolios of commercial real estate loans hoping to cut their losses. It’s an early but telling sign of the broader distress brewing in the commercial real estate market, which is hurting from the twin punches of high interest rates, which make it harder to refinance loans, and low occupancy rates for office buildings — an outcome of the pandemic.”

U.S./Russia/China/Europe Watch:

June 27 – Reuters (Guy Faulconbridge): “Russia is considering a possible downgrading of relations with the West due to the deeper involvement of the United States and its allies in the Ukraine war, but no decision had yet been taken, the Kremlin said… A downgrading of relations - or even breaking them off - would illustrate the gravity of the confrontation between Russia and the West over Ukraine after an escalation in tensions over the war in recent months.”

June 28 – Reuters (Ethan Wang, Ella Cao and Bernard Orr): “China urged the United States on Friday to stop tolerating and supporting ‘provocations’ by the Philippines, after Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell expressed concern about Beijing's ‘destabilizing actions in the South China Sea’. China and the Philippines have recently traded accusations over ‘dangerous and illegal maneuvers’ affecting their respective vessels in the area around the Second Thomas Shoal, a disputed atoll in the busy waterway.”

De-globalization and Iron Curtain Watch:

June 28 – Bloomberg: “Chinese leader Xi Jinping called for the Global South to have a greater say in international affairs, stepping up his efforts to challenge US influence around the world. Developing nations should ‘be at the forefront of promoting the building of a community with a shared future for mankind,’ Xi said… The countries ‘need to work together to be a stabilizing force for peace’ and contribute to resolving conflicts around the world… In a veiled swipe at the US, Xi said the world ‘should never be allowed to listen to whoever has a strong arm.’”

June 25 – Financial Times (Madeleine Speed and Susannah Savage): “The world is headed for ‘food wars’ as geopolitical tensions and climate change push countries into conflict over waning supplies, said one of the world’s largest agricultural commodity traders. ‘We have fought many wars over oil. We will fight bigger wars over food and water,’ said Sunny Verghese, chief executive of Olam Agri, a Singapore-based agricultural trading house. Speaking at the Redburn Atlantic and Rothschild consumer conference last week, Verghese warned that trade barriers imposed by governments seeking to shore up domestic food stocks had exacerbated food inflation.”

Inflation Watch:

June 28 – CNBC (Jeff Cox): “An important economic measure for the Federal Reserve showed… inflation during May slowed to its lowest annual rate in more than three years. The core personal consumption expenditures price index increased just a seasonally adjusted 0.1% for the month and was up 2.6% from a year ago, the latter number down 0.2 percentage point from the April level… May marked the lowest annual rate since March 2021, which was the first time in this economic cycle that inflation topped the Fed’s 2% target. Including food and energy, headline inflation was flat on the month and also up 2.6% on an annual basis.”

June 27 – Reuters (Renee Hickman): “The price of a July Fourth cookout will be 5% higher in 2024 than the previous year, according to a survey from the U.S. Farm Bureau… The farmer and rancher organization said an Independence Day cookout for 10 people will cost an average of $71.22 this year versus $67.73 in 2023.”

June 25 – Bloomberg (Swati Pandey): “Australia’s inflation accelerated faster than expected for a third straight month in May, sending the currency higher as traders boosted bets that the Reserve Bank will resume raising interest rates at its next meeting. The monthly consumer price indicator climbed 4% from a year earlier, exceeding economists’ estimate of 3.8%... The trimmed mean core measure… advanced to 4.4% versus 4.1% a month earlier.”

Biden Administration Watch:

June 30 - New York Times (Katie Rogers and Peter Baker): “President Biden is trying to figure out how to tamp down Democratic anxiety after last week’s disastrous debate performance. President Biden’s family is urging him to stay in the race and keep fighting despite last week’s disastrous debate performance, even as some members of his clan privately expressed exasperation at how he was prepared for the event by his staff… Mr. Biden huddled with his wife, children and grandchildren at Camp David while he tried to figure out how to tamp down Democratic anxiety. While his relatives were acutely aware of how poorly he did against former President Donald J. Trump, they argued that he could still show the country that he remains capable of serving for another four years.”

June 27 – Wall Street Journal (Michael R. Gordon): “A Biden administration push to curtail worsening border clashes between Israel and Hezbollah in southern Lebanon is running into major headwinds because of the difficulty the U.S. faces in arranging a cease-fire in Gaza, U.S. officials say. The connections between the two fronts underscore the diplomatic conundrum facing the White House as it seeks to prevent a full-scale war that could draw in Iran and broaden the fighting well beyond Gaza. The White House insists that de-escalation along Israel’s northern frontier can’t be conditional on an elusive cease-fire in Gaza and is mounting a major diplomatic effort to defuse tensions in the north after weeks of unsuccessful pressure on Hamas to agree to a halt in the fighting in the south.”

Federal Reserve Watch:

June 28 – Bloomberg (Craig Torres and William Horobin): “Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond President Thomas Barkin said the inflation battle still hasn’t been won, and the US economy is likely to remain resilient as long as unemployment remains low and asset valuations high. ‘The US economy, particularly its consumer, has been much more resilient to rate increases than most expected and is likely to stay so as long as valuations remain elevated, and unemployment remains low,’ Barkin said…”

June 25 – Financial Times (Claire Jones): “A top Federal Reserve official has backed more interest rate rises if inflation sticks at its current level, saying immigration and aggressive fiscal stimulus are likely to keep US prices rising more quickly than in other rich economies. Michelle Bowman, one of the Fed’s governors and a voter on its rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee, said she remained ‘willing to raise’ borrowing costs again ‘should progress on inflation stall or even reverse’.”

June 25 – Bloomberg (Amara Omeokwe): “Federal Reserve Governor Michelle Bowman said she sees a number of upside risks to the inflation outlook, and reiterated the need to keep borrowing costs elevated for some time. ‘We are still not yet at the point where it is appropriate to lower the policy rate,’ Bowman said… ‘Given the risks and uncertainties regarding my economic outlook, I will remain cautious in my approach to considering future changes in the stance of policy.’ In a moderated discussion following her speech, the Fed governor said she doesn’t project any interest-rate cuts this year…”

U.S. Economic Bubble Watch:

June 28 – Wall Street Journal (Carol Ryan): “If you locked in a dirt-cheap mortgage when interest rates were low, congratulations for being one of the winners in America’s skewed housing market. Renters, realtors and recruiters are among those getting the raw end of the deal. High interest rates have had an unexpected impact on U.S. housing. Instead of triggering a fall in home prices, as happened with commercial real estate, costlier mortgages have pushed residential values higher. The value of the median existing home rose to a record $419,300 in May… Before the pandemic, it was $270,000. Blame the ‘lock-in’ effect of ultracheap mortgages secured when interest rates were low, which are trapping owners in their homes. It is an unforeseen consequence of years of easy money. Two-thirds of outstanding U.S. mortgages have a rate below 4%, according to Morgan Stanley’s housing strategist Jim Egan.”

June 28 – Wall Street Journal (Margot Amouyal): “More people are set to fly in the U.S. this Friday than ever before. That was also true on Sunday. And in late May. Over three million should make their way through airport security Friday to kick off a stretch of record-breaking travel around the July 4 holiday, according to the Transportation Security Administration. Seven of the 10 busiest air-travel days in the history of the TSA happened between May 23 and June 27. Fliers reset the record again last Sunday, when just under three million passed through U.S. airports. The numbers are still climbing. More than 32 million people are projected to fly between Thursday and July 8, a 5.4% rise over last year’s Independence Day holiday…”

June 25 – CNBC (Diana Olick): “Home prices set another record in April, even as mortgage rates rose and the supply of homes for sale increased. Usually, under those circumstances, prices would weaken, but today’s housing market is unlike any other in recent history. Prices in April rose 6.3% compared with the year-earlier month, according to the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller National Home Price Index. It marks the second straight month that the national index jumped at least 1% over its previous all-time high… It feeds into what is now one of the least affordable housing markets in U.S. history for both homeownership and renting… Home prices are now 47% higher than they were in early 2020, with the median sale price now five times the median household income...”

June 26 – Reuters (Lucia Mutikani): “Sales of new U.S. single-family homes dropped to a six-month low in May as a jump in mortgage rates weighed on demand, offering more evidence that the housing market recovery was faltering… Supply was the highest in more than 16 years… New home sales declined 11.3% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 619,000 units last month, the lowest level since November... The percentage-based drop was the biggest since September 2022. The sales pace for April was revised up to 698,000 units, a nine-month high, from a previously reported 634,000 units.”

Fixed-Income Watch:

June 26 – Financial Times (Harriet Clarfelt and Antoine Gara): “US companies have been able to reprice almost $400bn of debt at lower interest rates this year due to booming investor appetite for junk loans, in an easing of financing conditions for corporate America. Even before the Federal Reserve cuts interest rates from a 23-year high, a number of borrowers in the US leveraged loan market have benefited from the equivalent of two quarter-point Fed cuts, according to strategists at Goldman Sachs. The $391bn of so-called repricing deals is the highest ever at this point in the year, according to… PitchBook LCD going back to 2002, equal to more than a quarter of the $1.34tn leveraged loan market.”

China Watch:

June 25 – Financial Times (Chen Long): “China’s real estate recession is three years old, and many investors are wondering when it will bottom out. By many measures, we have witnessed one of the greatest housing market corrections in economic history… On a rolling 12-month basis, China’s new home sales have fallen to 850mn square metres, or roughly 8.5mn apartment units… That is half the level of three years ago. The floor space of construction starts has fallen to 620mn sq m, two-thirds below the peak in early 2021. The share of real estate and construction activities has shrunk to 12.9% of GDP in 2023, the lowest since 2009, from 15.2% in 2020… On average, prices have come down by about 20% across China over the past three years, according to official and third-party data.”

June 23 – Wall Street Journal: “China’s foreign direct investment fell further in May, extending a streak of declines for the 12th straight month… China attracted 412.51 billion yuan ($56.81bn) worth of foreign direct investment in the January to May period, down 28.2% from the same period last year… That widened from the 27.9% drop recorded for the first four months of the year. The metric has been falling since June 2023.”

June 24 – Bloomberg: “China’s fiscal revenue shrank at the fastest pace in more than a year, fueling expectations that the government could make another rare mid-year budget revision to aid an economic recovery. Total revenues… fell 4.1% during January-May from last year to 11.36 trillion yuan ($1.6 trillion). That’s the steepest drop since February 2023…”

June 27 – Bloomberg: “The era of big paychecks for Chinese financiers is fast coming to an end as some of the industry’s biggest companies impose strict new limits to comply with President Xi Jinping’s ‘common prosperity’ campaign. The nation’s largest financial conglomerates have asked senior staff to forgo deferred bonuses and in some cases return pay from previous years to comply with a pre-tax cap of 2.9 million yuan ($400,000)… Vilified by Beijing as ‘hedonists’ over their lavish lifestyles, top-earning finance workers including investment bankers and fund managers have been among the hardest hit by Xi’s push for a more equal distribution of wealth. The $66 trillion financial industry has fallen under tighter Communist Party control, with banks and brokerages slashing pay and other perks.”

June 25 – Bloomberg (Shawna Kwan and Low De Wei): “In many parts of China, the warehouses and industrial parks that used to be a magnet for international investors are grappling with a surprising slowdown in business activity. Logistics hubs that were built in anticipation of a long-lasting boom in e-commerce, manufacturing and food storage are losing tenants, forcing building owners to slash rents and shorten lease terms… Average vacancy rates at logistics properties in east and north China are approaching 20%, the highest in years, according to real estate consultancies. More warehouses are being built, which is making the problem worse. ‘We are looking at a supply glut in logistics and industrial properties in China,’ said Xavier Lee, an equity analyst at Morningstar…”

June 26 – Reuters (Qiaoyi Li and Ryan Woo): “China's industrial profits rose at a sharply slower pace in May, official data showed on Thursday, underlining the struggles faced by the world's second-largest economy as weak domestic demand crimps overall growth. Earnings rose 0.7% year-on-year last month after a 4% increase in April while gains over the first five months also eased to 3.4% from 4.3% in the January-April period…”

June 24 – Bloomberg (Dorothy Ma and Pearl Liu): “A Hong Kong court has given Chinese developer Kaisa Group Holdings Ltd. seven more weeks to work on its debt restructuring plan in order to avoid being liquidated, but also warned this might be the company’s last chance. The amount of debt being restructured amounts to nearly $13 Billion…”

June 27 – Reuters: “China's treasury futures leapt to fresh highs on Thursday, while long-dated yields skirted record lows, as investors continued to plough money into bonds, shrugging off repeated warnings about risk from the central bank. Assets of Chinese bond mutual funds ballooned to a record 6.5 trillion yuan ($894.3bn) in May, up 40% from a year earlier… The rise reflects how lower deposit rates are steering savings into fixed income products amid stock market volatility.”

Central Bank Watch:

June 27 – Bloomberg (Daniel Hornak): “European Central Bank Governing Council member Peter Kazimir said one more reduction in borrowing costs is likely in 2024. ‘I think we could expect one more interest-rate cut this year,” the Slovak official said... ‘I still see a significant risk of rising inflation, which may not fully align with our expectations. I expect this pressure of possible price increases mainly from wage growth.’”

June 29 – Bloomberg (Zoe Schneeweiss): “European Central Bank Governing Council member Robert Holzmann warned that inflation’s tenacity is being miscalculated… ‘I truly believe that it’s being underestimated how sticky inflation is,’ he was cited as saying. The hawkish Austrian central banker was the sole dissenter against the ECB’s June interest-rate cut, something Holzman has since justified by saying that a data-dependent policy stance must adhere to signals from incoming economic data.”

Global Bubble Watch:

June 27 – Reuters (Lisa Barrington and Jeslyn Lerh): “Congestion at Singapore's container port is at its worst since the COVID-19 pandemic, a sign of how prolonged vessel re-routing to avoid Red Sea attacks has disrupted global ocean shipping - with bottlenecks also appearing in other Asian and European ports. Retailers, manufacturers and other industries that rely on massive box ships are again battling surging rates, port backups and shortages of empty containers, even as many consumer-oriented firms look to build inventories heading into the peak year-end shopping season. Global port congestion has reached an 18-month high, with 60% of ships waiting at anchor located in Asia, maritime data firm Linerlytica said...”

June 26 – New York Times (Patricia Cohen and Keith Bradsher): “The immediate trigger for the raging protest that gripped Kenya’s capital on Tuesday was a raft of proposed tax increases — additional shillings that ordinary citizens would owe their government. The underlying cause, though, are the billions of dollars their government owes its creditors. Kenya has the fastest growing economy in Africa and a vibrant business center. But its government is desperate to stave off default. The country’s staggering $80 billion in domestic and foreign public debt accounts for nearly three-quarters of Kenya’s entire economic output…”

Europe Watch:

June 25 – Bloomberg (Jorge Valero and Michael Nienaber): “The German government and its allies are succeeding in their efforts to block plans for new joint borrowing to finance critical European Union projects like defense. So-called defense bonds are likely to be off the table when European leaders gather Thursday to discuss their top priorities for the next five years… The push to shut down debate on shared debt has been helped by the turmoil in France, said the officials…”

Japan Watch:

June 25 – Reuters (Leika Kihara): “The Bank of Japan is dropping signals its quantitative tightening (QT) plan in July could be bigger than markets think, and may even be accompanied by an interest rate hike, as it steps up a steady retreat from its still-huge monetary stimulus. Hawkish hints delivered over the past week highlight the pressure the central bank faces in the wake of renewed yen falls, which could push inflation well above its 2% target by raising import costs.”

June 27 – Bloomberg (Erica Yokoyama): “Inflation in Tokyo picked up in June on the back of higher energy prices and industrial output rose more than expected in May, likely keeping the Bank of Japan on track to consider an interest rate hike as early as July. Consumer prices excluding fresh food rose 2.1% in the capital, accelerating from 1.9% in May… Tokyo’s figures are leading indicators of the national data to be released in July. In a separate set of data, Japan’s factory output rose 2.8% in May from April, beating the consensus call for 2% growth…”

June 27 – Reuters (Yoshifumi Takemoto): “Japanese retail sales rose 3.0% in May from a year earlier… That was above the median market forecast for a 2.0% rise.”

Emerging Market Watch:

June 28 – Bloomberg (Srinivasan Sivabalan, Carolina Wilson and Leda Alvim): “Latin America has flipped from emerging-market investors’ most-favored region to their least loved in just six weeks. Volatility began to creep back into foreign exchange markets in mid-May, leading them to question favorites like the Mexican peso and Brazilian real. Now, those positions have all but fallen apart, with the region leading global losses. The main issue is politics. Leaders have floated policy changes that investors worry will lead to overspending, scuppering the stability that drew many to the area.”

June 24 – Bloomberg (Maya Averbuch): “Mexico’s inflation accelerated more than expected in early June to move further above the central bank’s target… Consumer prices rose 4.78% in the first two weeks of the month from a year earlier, above the 4.73% median estimate…”

June 27 – Reuters (Daniel Ramos): “Bolivian armed forces pulled back from the presidential palace in La Paz on Wednesday evening and a general was arrested after President Luis Arce slammed a ‘coup’ attempt against the government and called for international support. Earlier in the day, military units led by General Juan Jose Zuniga, recently stripped of his military command, had gathered in the central Plaza Murillo square, home to the presidential palace and Congress. A Reuters witness saw an armored vehicle ram a door of the presidential palace and soldiers rush in.”

Leveraged Speculation Watch:

June 27 – Bloomberg (Michael Msika): “In a month when Nvidia Corp. briefly became the world’s largest company, hedge funds were ‘aggressively’ selling tech stocks, according to analysis from Goldman Sachs... This month’s net selling in the US tech sector is on track to be the largest on record going back in data since 2017, according to Goldman’s prime brokerage data. Semiconductor and semiconductor equipment stocks were the ones offloaded the most by hedge funds, followed by software and internet stocks.”

Social, Political, Environmental, Cybersecurity Instability Watch:

June 25 – Axios (Andrew Freedman): “Extreme wildfire events during the past two decades more than doubled in frequency and magnitude globally, with the six worst seasons occurring during the past seven years, a new study found. Why it matters: Intense wildfires — as measured by satellites — are more difficult to fight, emit vast quantities of greenhouse gases and noxious smoke, and can cause disastrous consequences for communities… The new study, published… in the journal Nature Ecology and Evolution, found that the biggest upward trends in extreme wildfires are in temperate conifer biomes, such as in the western U.S., along with the boreal forests that ring the Arctic region.”

Geopolitical Watch:

June 25 – Financial Times (Editorial Board): “For years, China has asserted its claims over the South China Sea — a quest for control that is an affront to neighbours’ security, to global commerce and, according to a tribunal in The Hague, to international law. Yet Beijing has been adroit: using ‘salami-slicing’ tactics to expand its influence by incrementally building military installations, but never doing so at a pace that would force Washington to take military action. Recent spats with the Philippines, however, suggest that opposition to Beijing is rising. President Ferdinand Marcos Jr has directed his navy to better secure the Second Thomas Shoal, a contested reef that is far closer to the Philippines than to China… Beijing has, in turn, become more aggressive. Its paramilitary vessels have rammed Philippine ships and sprayed them with water cannons. Its coast guard has threatened Manila’s boats with knives and hatchets.”

June 25 – Financial Times (Demetri Sevastopulo): “The Philippine ambassador to Washington has warned that a conflict with China over a contested reef in the South China Sea could engulf countries across the Indo-Pacific, raising the spectre of a possible nuclear war. Jose Manuel Romualdez said the dispute with China over the Second Thomas Shoal had created an incendiary situation. In recent months, the Chinese coast guard has violently blocked Philippine boats from carrying out supply missions to marines stationed on the Sierra Madre, a marooned ship on the reef. ‘It’s the most dangerous time… weapons of mass destruction are very real,’ Romualdez told the Financial Times... ‘You have several countries, major powers that have large arsenals of nuclear power.’”

June 27 – Reuters (Neil Jerome Morales and Mikhail Flores): “The Philippines needs to do more than protest China's ‘illegal action’ against its navy during a routine resupply mission in the South China Sea last week, President Ferdinand Marcos Jr said… A Philippine sailor was injured on June 17 after what the Southeast Asian nation's military called ‘intentional-high speed ramming’ by the Chinese Coast Guard, an assertion China has disputed, saying the actions were lawful.”

June 28 – Reuters (Neil Jerome Morales and Mikhail Flores): “Japan and the Philippines' foreign and defence ministers will meet in Manila next month for talks that could include a breakthrough defence pact that would allow their military forces to visit each other's soil. Japanese foreign minister Yoko Kamikawa and Defence Minister Minoru Kihara will meet their Philippine counterparts on July 8 for a 2+2 meeting, Manila's foreign ministry said…”

June 29 – Reuters (Parisa Hafezi): “A moderate lawmaker will face Iran supreme leader’s protege in a run-off presidential election on July 5 after… no candidate secured enough votes in the first round of voting. Friday's vote to replace Ebrahim Raisi after his death in a helicopter crash came down to a tight race between a low-profile lawmaker Massoud Pezeshkian, the sole moderate in a field of four candidates, and former Revolutionary Guards member Saeed Jalili.”