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It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so (Mark Twain)

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THE DAILY EDGE: 24 NOVEMBER 2023

Party smile BLACK FRIDAY SALE! Gift with a bow

Every service I subscribe to is currently offering Thanksgiving discounts.

Seeking to better my “competition”, after 15 years, here’s the first ever Edge and Odds Thanksgiving sale.

Money Any new or existing subscriber, any new reader or non-reader, even anybody with zero interest in the blog, will get 50% off the regular price which, remarkably, has not changed in 15 years!

This offer will remain valid until next Thanksgiving and will be retroactive to January 3rd, 2009, the launch date, even for those who found me later, or never found me.

And for my numerous non-American readers, for fairness sake, they will be allowed to apply the very same discount, no discrimination, during any other holiday period of their choice, valid until any other holiday period of their choice, and retroactive as far back as they wish.

To take advantage of this offer, simply do nothing. The discount will be automatically applied to your account, even if you don’t have one.

Please allow a reasonable number of days, weeks or months. We have been short-staffed here since day one.

The problem is that I only hire on a profit-sharing scheme and that has yet to appeal to anybody since I still refuse to embellish the blog with ads and pop-ups.

*****

Red rose My real Thanksgiving! Red rose

Sincere thanks are hereby given to all of you who have helped the blog with donations, large or small, occasional or regular.

I truly appreciate your mark of appreciation and altruistic generosity given that you are a minority helping all Edge and Odds readers.

Getting older, slower and sloppier, busy with 5 children and 11 grand-children, some in other biz with me (or rather me with them), and being short-staffed for reasons given or not above, I often cannot find the time/energy to send a thank you note. I apologize and I will try to improve on that even though I know I should not commit to that.

Rightly or wrongly, I always decide to work on the blog rather than use time to send thank you notes.

But here it is: Marc, Larry, Rick, Patrick, Joseph, Denis, John, Steven, Richard, David, just to name some of the recent donators, I hereby sincerely thank you all and salute your generosity.

To all other free riders, thank you for reading me, a very nice compliment in itself.

Denis

Breaking News!

Red rose Sincere thanks to Jack and Eric. Truly appreciated!

*****

FLASH PMIs

Eurozone: Employment falls for first time in almost three years as eurozone downturn continues

The seasonally adjusted HCOB Flash Eurozone Composite PMI Output Index posted 47.1 in November to signal a sixth consecutive monthly reduction in business activity across the euro area’s private sector. Although solid, the rate of contraction eased from that seen in October, when the headline index had been at a near three-year low of 46.5.

image

Manufacturing production was down for the eighth month running, and at a rapid pace, albeit one that was the least marked since May. Meanwhile, services activity decreased for the fourth successive month, but at a modest and softer pace.

The overall reduction in business activity was again mainly a symptom of falling new orders. As has been the case in each month since June, companies in the eurozone reported a decline in new business. The latest reduction was marked, but the softest in four months amid weaker falls in both manufacturing and services. New export orders, including intra-euro area trade, continued to decrease rapidly.

With new orders down, companies again depleted their outstanding business midway through the final quarter. Backlogs of work decreased for the eighth month running, and at a marked pace that was only slightly weaker than that recorded in the previous survey period.

The fall in employment was the first in just under three years, but only marginal. The overall reduction was driven by manufacturing where jobs were cut to the largest extent since August 2020. In contrast, service providers continued to expand their staffing levels. That said, the rate of job creation in services was slight and the slowest in three months.

As well as scaling back employment, manufacturers also cut their purchasing activity rapidly and lowered inventories of both purchases and finished goods. The current sequence of falling input buying has now been extended to 17 months. (…)

Eurozone companies recorded a further increase in input costs, often as a result of higher wages in the service sector. The overall rise was the fastest since May and broadly in line with the average since the series began in 1998. (…) While services input prices continued to increase rapidly, a further sharp decrease in input costs was seen in manufacturing, with the pace of reduction marginally quicker than that seen in October.

These divergent trends were also evident with regards to selling prices, which increased in services but fell in manufacturing. Factory output prices were down for the seventh straight month as firms passed on cost savings to customers amid sharply falling demand, while services charge inflation intensified to a three-month high. Overall, output prices increased solidly in November, with the rate of inflation ticking up from October.

The Eurozone economy is stuck in the mud. Over the last four to five months, the manufacturing and services sectors have both been experiencing a relatively constant contraction pace. Considering the flash PMI numbers for November in our nowcast model indicates the potential for a second consecutive quarter of shrinking GDP. This would align with the commonly accepted criterion for a technical recession.

Across much of Europe, we continue to expect slow growth and/or another stalls-peed recession in the coming quarters.

 image image

image

(…) Overall, we expect some economic normalization between the U.S. and Europe in 2024. Simply stated, the U.S., with its huge fiscal impulse (which is why its ratings are falling) is probably over-earning at the same time that Europe is under-earning.

Indeed, the U.S. fiscal impulse has driven what appears to be an unsustainable gap in consumption between it and Europe in recent quarters. We expect this gap to narrow next year.

However, it is not just that the U.S. faces tougher year-on-year growth comparisons. Rather, we now think that Europe will begin to spend more of its excess savings, as falling inflation supports real disposable income and monetary policy potentially becomes less restrictive (see below on rates). In addition, job growth remains solid, and vacancy rates (the number of job vacancies over current employment) are at three percent in the Eurozone (vs. a long-term average of 1.7%), hovering just off highs since the data began to be tracked in 2004.

That said, there are some more structural forces at work that are denting longer-term business pyschology in Europe. In addition to higher rates and higher fuel costs in a country like Germany (which over indexed to natural gas versus nuclear under former Chancellor Merkel), Europe’s industrial sector is also feeling the structural slowdown that China is experiencing, as Chinese nominal GDP growth dips by two-thirds to seven percent, from 21% just a few years ago.

Unfortunately, this overhang will not likely reverse course overnight. Meanwhile, NIMBY (not in my back yard) attitudes and regulations are slowing the pace of development in key European real estate markets and infrastructure development projects.

Finally, unlike in 2011 (when I joined KKR, and most governments were strong majorities that could get legislation through with minimal resistance), politicians today in Europe are hamstrung by coalitions that are deeply divided on key issues such as immigration, Russia/Ukraine, taxes, and labor representation.

Importantly, Germany is not alone. Several of the traditional steady growers across the region, including the U.K. and Netherlands, will need to overcome a sluggish global economy and continued high energy and other input costs amid high inflation. At the same time, the Nordic region is still feeling the adverse effect of over-stimulating its housing market.

By comparison, we see countries such as Spain and Greece, which were much maligned during the 2011 austerity campaign in Europe, actually performing better this cycle (helped by Europe’s Recovery and Resilience Facility).

Central Bank Policy

While the Bank of England will likely not tighten further, it may also not be able to cut rates too quickly, either. The exit of 55+ year-old workers from the labor force post-COVID, less dynamic immigration, and higher input costs have led to a meaningful negative supply shock with inflationary implications.

So, consistent with this, Huw Pill, the Bank of England’s Chief Economist, has said that UK policy rates may follow a Table Mountain path (a reference to the long flat mountain overlooking Cape Town, South Africa) pointing to a higher for longer approach, as opposed to a Matterhorn-type interest rate cycle (quick acceleration up followed by rapid rate cuts on the way down).

Meanwhile (and on a more positive note), it does feel like the ECB could turn more dovish faster than in the United States or in the United Kingdom. President Lagarde has noted that one of her key indicators that track what she calls persistent inflation is improving, and in fact has already fallen back to 2.1%.

True, this measure of inflation excludes volatile components like food and energy, but this suggests we are potentially returning to a point where the ECB needs to weigh the weakening core inflation measures as much as the volatile headline measures. As such, we would not be surprised to see the ECB easing as soon as the second quarter of 2024. (…)

The European macro and market environment remains highly complex, harking back to the ‘Adult Swim Only’ days of 2016. Simply stated, now is not the time to make a macro bet on a sharp recovery in Europe; it is unlikely to come through, despite what we believe will be a more dovish ECB in 2024.

Japan: Private sector activity stalls in November

The headline au Jibun Bank Flash Japan Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index™ (PMI)® fell from 48.7 in October to 48.1 in November to the strongest deterioration in Japanese manufacturing business conditions since February.

imageBoth output and new orders were scaled back further in the latest survey period, with the rate of reduction in incoming business accelerating slightly on the month.

In line with the trend for new orders, pressure on capacity continued to ease as signalled by the strongest decrease in backlogs for eight months. In turn, Japanese manufacturers reduced staffing levels for the second successive month.

The au Jibun Bank Flash Japan Services Business Activity Index was little-changed at 51.7 in November, following a final reading of 51.6 in October. This signalled a sustained yet modest expansion in business activity in Japan’s service sector, which was the second-weakest recorded in 2023 to date.

The pace of expansion in incoming business picked up slightly midway through the fourth quarter, and was also modest overall. Moreover, November data indicated renewed pressure on capacity, as outstanding business rose at the steepest rate in five months.

Firms also signalled the strongest degree of positive sentiment regarding the year-ahead outlook for activity since August. Meanwhile, the pace of input cost inflation eased to the softest since the start of 2022.

image

Clock The U.S. flash PMI is out later today.

Canada’s Real-Estate Market Stumbles as Rate Hikes Bite Stall in new-build condominium market is likely to have far-reaching implications for Canada’s economy

Several major real-estate developers are defaulting on loans, buyers are having trouble closing on units, and dozens of condominium projects are being shelved. The effects could linger for years, turning housing, once the engine that drove the Canadian economy, into a brake that stalls growth, say developers, real-estate brokers and economists.

“It’s bad,” said Daniel Foch, a Toronto-based real-estate broker and analyst. “The people who are losing are losing really, really big.” (…)

According to Urbanation, a Toronto-based real-estate-research firm, sales of new-build condominiums, which had been going up and being sold at a breakneck pace around the city in recent years, hit a nearly 20-year low during the third quarter of the year. Forty projects that were expected to launch this year remain stalled as developers wait for conditions to improve, said Shaun Hildebrand, Urbanation’s chief executive. In healthier markets, it is rare to see any developments pause, he said. (…)

In Vancouver, another Canadian market where housing prices had skyrocketed, more properties are being listed, while sales have fallen. Sales were 30% below their 10-year average, “which tells us that demand is not as strong as we might expect this time of year,” said the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver. Benchmark prices in October fell 1.2% in Vancouver compared with the prior three months, but rose 4.4% from a year ago, according to the real-estate board.

The Toronto Regional Real Estate Board reported in October that third-quarter condominium listings jumped 29% from a year ago, while sales rose only 6.2%. Average prices fell 0.5%.

Canada relies heavily on its real-estate sector to power the economy. Housing investment in Canada as a share of gross domestic product reached 8.9% in 2022, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, much higher than the 4.8% on average for the 38 member countries in the OECD. (…)

Mark Morris, a real-estate lawyer who oversees title transfers between buyers and sellers, said an increasing number of people are trying to unload new-build condo units they agreed to buy years ago but are only now closing. The value of the condo projects has fallen, putting buyers “underwater,” meaning the value of their mortgage is less than what they agreed to pay for the unit and they can’t make up the difference. In some cases, buyers are simply defaulting on their deals. (…)

According to the Canadian Real Estate Association, home prices have risen more than 7% since January, although they are down almost 20% from their peak in February 2022. (…)

Canada’s housing agency estimated in a report this month that homeowners will need to renew a total of 675 billion Canadian dollars, or the equivalent of about $490 billion, of mortgage loans in 2024 and 2025. Those renewals will cause monthly mortgage payments to rise between 30% to 40%, equal to about 15 billion Canadian dollars a year diverted from consumption and savings toward debt repayment. (…)

  • Canada: Home sales plummet in October as affordability remains an issue (NBF)

On a seasonally adjusted basis, home sales dropped 5.6% from September to October, a fourth monthly contraction in a row and the sharpest slowdown in sales since June 2022. On the supply side, new listings decreased 2.3% in October, a first decline in seven months.

Active listing increased by 4.6%, a fourth monthly gain in a row. As a result the number of months of inventory (active-listings to sales) increased from 3.7 in September to 4.1 in October and is now roughly back in line with its pre-pandemic level.

image

Confused smile China Weighs Unprecedented Builder Support With First-Ever Unsecured Loans Officials are making most forceful push yet to end debt crisis

As part of a package of new measures to backstop the real estate industry, regulators are considering allowing banks to issue so-called working capital loans to some developers, the people said, asking not to be identified discussing a private matter. Unlike other types of loans available to builders that typically require land or assets as collateral, the new financing facility would be unsecured and available for day-to-day operational purposes, potentially freeing up capital for debt repayment, the people said. (…)

Implementation would require regulators to exempt bankers from being held accountable for possible bad loans given the high risks involved, the people said, adding that deliberations are ongoing and subject to change.

If the support measures are approved, they would represent China’s most forceful attempt yet to plug an estimated $446 billion shortfall in funding needed to stabilize the industry and deliver millions of uncompleted homes. President Xi Jinping is also stepping up support for the broader economy, with moves this week indicating increased urgency to stop a downward spiral in the property sector from derailing growth and endangering financial stability. (…)

China’s $57 trillion banking industry has already been battling with shrinking margins and record pile of souring loans as authorities have steadily increased pressure on lenders to shore up the economy and the property sector. Net interest margins at commercial banks dropped to a record 1.73% at the end of September, below the industry’s 1.8% threshold seen as necessary to maintain a reasonable amount of profitability. (…)

At a meeting with top financial regulators last Friday, China’s biggest lenders, brokerages and distressed asset managers were told to meet all “reasonable” funding needs from property firms.

EARNINGS WATCH

Pre-announcements are just about in line with Q3 but are much worse than during Q4’22 at the same time.

In the past 2 weeks, 14 of the 20 new pre-announcements were negative and 5 were positive, a 2.8 N/P ratio. Last week, all 7 were negative.

image

Q4 estimates are now +5.4% vs +11.0% on Oct.1.

Q1’24 are +8.0% vs +9.6%.

Trailing EPS are now $218.73. Full year 2023e: $220.48. Forward 12m EPS: $235.82e. Full year 2024: $245.00e.

American Dream Slips Out of Reach for Most Voters A WSJ/NORC survey offers the latest evidence that Americans are feeling economically fragile and uncertain that the ladder to higher living standards remains sturdy.

Only 36% of voters in a new Wall Street Journal/NORC survey said the American dream still holds true, substantially fewer than the 53% who said so in 2012 and 48% in 2016 in similar surveys of adults by another pollster. When a Wall Street Journal poll last year asked whether people who work hard were likely to get ahead in this country, some 68% said yes—nearly twice the share as in the new poll. (…)

Half of voters in the new poll said that life in America is worse than it was 50 years ago, compared with 30% who said it had gotten better. Asked if they believed that the economic and political system are “stacked against people like me,” half agreed with the statement, while 39% disagreed.

The American dream seemed most remote to young adults and women in the survey. Some 46% of men but only 28% of women said the ideal of advancement for hard work still holds true, as did 48% of voters age 65 or older but only about 28% of those under age 50.

People in both political parties reported a sense of precariousness and disaffection. (…)

The new survey adds to signs of pessimism found in other recent polls. An NBC News survey released this month found that 19% felt confident that life for their children’s generation would be better than for the current one—a record low in the group’s surveys dating to 1990. (…)

Some 35% of voters said they rated the economy as excellent or good, an improvement from the 20% who said so in March and 17% in May of last year. The share rating the economy as “not so good” or poor fell to 65%, compared with 80% or more in the prior two surveys. (…)

THE DAILY EDGE: 22 NOVEMBER 2023

Party smile BLACK FRIDAY SALE! Gift with a bow

Every service I subscribe to is currently offering Thanksgiving discounts.

Seeking to better my “competition”, after 15 years, here’s the first ever Edge and Odds Thanksgiving sale.

Money Any new or existing subscriber, any new reader or non-reader, even anybody with zero interest in the blog, will get 50% off the regular price which, remarkably, has not change in 15 years!

This offer will remain valid until next Thanksgiving and will be retroactive to January 3rd, 2009, the launch date, even for those who found me later, or never found me.

And for my numerous non-American readers, for fairness sake, they will be allowed to apply the very same discount, no discrimination, during any other holiday period of their choice, valid until any other holiday period of their choice, and retroactive as far back as they wish.

To take advantage of this offer, simply do nothing. The discount will be automatically applied to your account, even if you don’t have one.

Please allow a reasonable number of days, weeks or months. We have been short-staffed here since day one.

The problem is that I only hire on a profit-sharing scheme and that has yet to appeal to anybody since I still refuse to embellish the blog with ads and pop-ups.

*****

Red rose My real Thanksgiving! Red rose

Sincere thanks are hereby given to all of you who have helped the blog with donations, large or small, occasional or regular.

I truly appreciate your mark of appreciation and altruistic generosity given that you are a minority helping all Edge and Odds readers.

Getting older, slower and sloppier, busy with 5 children and 11 grand-children, some in other biz with me (or rather me with them), and being short-staffed for reasons given or not above, I often cannot find the time/energy to send a thank you note. I apologize and I will try to improve on that even though I know I should not commit to that.

Rightly or wrongly, I always decide to work on the blog rather than use time to send thank you notes.

But here it is: Marc, Larry, Rick, Patrick, Joseph, Denis, John, Steven, Richard, David, just to name some of the recent donators, I hereby sincerely thank you all and salute your generosity.

To all other free riders, thank you for reading me, a very nice compliment in itself.

Denis

*****

The Fed Wants More Evidence Before Changing Rate Stance Officials highlighted risks of stronger-than-anticipated inflation and weaker-than-expected growth at their recent meeting

Federal Reserve officials were unwilling to conclude they were done raising interest rates when they decided earlier this month to extend a pause in rate increases.

But minutes of their most recent policy meeting suggested they might be comfortable holding rates steady for at least the rest of the year.

“All participants agreed that the committee was in a position to proceed carefully,” said the minutes of the Oct. 31-Nov. 1 meeting released on Tuesday. “Participants expected that the data arriving in coming months would help clarify the extent to which” a slowdown in inflation was continuing amid higher borrowing costs, the minutes said.

Since officials last met, none have made a strong case to lift rates at their next meeting, Dec. 12-13, even though several have said it was too soon to change their view that another rate increase is more likely than a rate cut.

The minutes said officials then generally saw the risks of raising rates too much versus raising them too little as better balanced than earlier this year. They continued to see risks of higher-than-expected inflation and lower-than-expected growth, the minutes said. (…)

The minutes said officials needed to see more evidence to “be confident that inflation is clearly on a path” to the Fed’s 2% target, which is calculated using a separate inflation gauge from the Commerce Department. (…)

Home Sales Fell to a New 13-Year Low in October

Existing-home sales for the full year in 2023 are on track to be the lowest since at least 2011, according to economist forecasts.

Existing-home sales, which make up most of the housing market, decreased 4.1% in October from the prior month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 3.79 million, the lowest rate since August 2010, the National Association of Realtors said Tuesday. October sales fell 14.6% from a year earlier. Sales have been near 2010 levels in recent months. (…)

The national median existing-home price rose 3.4% in October from a year earlier to $391,800, NAR said. (…)

Nationally, there were 1.15 million homes for sale or under contract at the end of October, up 1.8% from September and down 5.7% from October 2022, NAR said. That was the lowest inventory level for any October in data going back to 1999, Yun said. At the current sales pace, there was a 3.6-month supply of homes on the market at the end of October. (…)

The typical home sold in October was on the market for 23 days, up from 21 days a year earlier, NAR said. (…)

About 29% of October existing-home sales were purchased in cash, up from 26% in the same month a year ago, NAR said. (…)

(CalculatedRisk)

Shoppers Are Dipping Into Their Savings This Holiday Season Data company sees higher spending in November and December

Spending will rise 0.4% on a monthly basis during the holidays, according to an economic outlook from Caden, a data platform that pays 50,000 users to track their real-time spending. While that’s lower than recent months, it shows that consumption is still on the rise.

Higher outlays are predominantly being fueled by personal savings instead of debt, Caden’s findings show. The trend “is a response to the economic reality that people’s incomes are struggling to keep pace with the escalating costs of goods and services due to inflation,” according to a summary of the study’s findings from the company. Leftover balances from the economic stimulus packages of the pandemic have encouraged consumers, according to John Roa, Caden’s chief executive officer.

The problem is that this trend won’t last.

“The question is when the party runs out and those savings run out, where is it going?” Roa said. “We are seeing a paycheck-to-paycheck world. It’s not going to take long for that to dwindle.” (…)

From my Nov. 6 post Really Slowing?

Could savings save the day? Unlikely this time.

The savings rate fell to 3.4% in September, meaningfully lower than the 6.5% pre-pandemic average. It has very, very, very rarely, been lower…

image

…but even more rarely if we also account for consumer interest payments.

This next chart plots personal expenditures plus interest payments as a % of disposable income. It was 95.4% in September, very uncomfortably high looking at the last 30 years and significantly higher than pre-pandemic levels.

image

Total spending has already unusually diverged from disposable income (left chart) which is now 4% lower than expenditures. Whatever excess savings (deposits) remain, they are illusory since their purchasing power has been totally eroded by inflation.

image image

  • Best Buy’s sales slumped as demand for consumer electronics wanes. (Reuters)
  • American Eagle and Abercrombie & Fitch also provided cautious guidance [yesterday] following similar remarks from other retailers that recently reported earnings. (Ed Yardeni)
Chicago Fed: Economic Growth Declined in October

The Chicago Fed National Activity Index (CFNAI) dropped to -0.49 in October from -0.02 in September. All four broad categories of indicators used to construct the index decreased from September and all four categories made negative contributions in October. (…)

The next chart highlights the +0.7 and -0.7 levels. The two callouts explain the significance of these parameters according to the Chicago Fed. (…)

CFNAI with Recession parameters

Bloomberg

Canada’s inflation rate slowed to 3.1% in October, but rents surge

The Consumer Price Index rose 3.1 per cent in October from a year earlier, down from 3.8 per cent in September, Statistics Canada said Tuesday in a report. The result matched analysts’ expectations and was largely driven by gasoline prices, which tumbled 6.4 per cent over the month. Adjusted for seasonality, the CPI fell 0.1 per cent on a monthly basis. (…)

Prices for services rose at an annual pace of 4.6 per cent in October, accelerating from 3.9 per cent in September. (…)

Rents jumped by an annual rate of 8.2 per cent in October, up from 7.3 per cent in September. (This was the largest 12-month increase since Statscan changed its methodology for tracking rents in early 2019.) (…)

Excluding housing costs, the CPI increased by just 1.9 per cent annually in October. (…)

Goldman Sachs:

Excluding food and energy, CPI edged up by 0.2pp to +3.4% yoy. BoC-preferred CPI-Trim and CPI-Median declined respectively to +3.5% and +3.6% on a yoy basis and to +3.2% and +2.7% on a three-month average annualized basis.

On a seasonally adjusted monthly basis, headline CPI inflation declined to -0.1% in October from +0.1% in September. Monthly CPI inflation ex food and energy rose to +0.3% (vs. +0.2%), reflecting an acceleration in rent inflation, one-off adjustments in property charges, and an uptick in travel-related categories from low levels.

Today’s print confirmed the stepdown in sequential underlying inflation and should keep the BoC on hold in December and 2024H1.

NBF:

Canada’s record housing supply imbalance, caused by an unprecedented increase in the working-age population (874,000 people over the past twelve months), means that there is currently only one housing start for every 4.2 people entering the working-age population, a 5 standard deviation from the historical ratio of 1 housing unit started for every 1.8 people.

Under these circumstances, people have no choice but to bid up the price of a dwindling inventory of rental units. The current divergence between rental inflation (8.2%) and CPI inflation (3.1%) is the highest in over 60 years.

As today’s Hot Chart shows, there is no precedent for the peak in rental inflation to exceed the peak in headline inflation. Unless Ottawa revises its immigration quotas downward, we don’t expect much relief for the 37% of Canadian households that rent.

image

In the USA where immigration is not as problematic:

image

Eurozone property debts worse than pre-financial crisis, warn ECB

Commercial property companies in the eurozone have worse debts than they had before the global financial crisis in 2008, the European Central Bank (ECB) has said, as it warned the sector could struggle for years under the weight of high interest rates.

A commercial real estate boom is now unravelling in countries like Germany and Sweden, the ECB outlined in a report that examines the impact of the currency bloc’s record high interest rates, which stand at 4pc.

It said eurozone banks have around 10pc of loans exposed to the commercial property sector, which is grappling with declining profitability as it faces “a higher likelihood of facing debt servicing challenges” compared to the residential market, which is supported by a strong employment. (…)

The report added that commercial property could “play a significant amplifying role in the event of broader market stress” as larger firms grapple with debt levels “close to or above pre-global financial crisis levels”.

It comes as deep cracks emerged in the property market of the eurozone’s largest economy, Germany, where the construction of one of the country’s tallest buildings has suddenly halted midway after the developer stopped paying its builder. (…)

Germany’s emergency spending freeze is blocking funds for next-generation auto-industry and steel plants, jeopardizing the push to re-engineer Europe’s economic engine.

Berlin halted new spending authorizations this week after Germany’s top court ruled that some €60 billion ($65.7 billion) can’t be transferred into a green-technology fund. The money was earmarked for a range of projects including decarbonizing steel production and major semiconductor works led by Intel, TSMC and Infineon.

Sweden’s Northvolt AB was also due to receive part of pledged subsides from the climate fund for an EV battery plant in northern Germany, according to two people familiar with the situation. (…)

Germany is forecast to be the weakest alongside Italy among major euro-zone nations this year, and the spending issues are sowing further uncertainty. (…)

Last week’s ruling cast doubt on Germany’s entire financing plans, and senior officials have canceled some public appearances to deal with the upheaval. (…)

China Growth Accelerates in November China Services Looking Good. Manufacturing Lagging

The Chinese economy appears to be on the move again. Significant growth is evident in the Services sector. And Manufacturing, despite some companies still impacted by the after effects of Covid, is becoming more positive about the future.

China Growth Accelerates in November

The Services sector results from the latest Sales Managers Survey are very positive. The Market Growth Index is at a 25 month high. The Sales Growth Index is also up at an 8-month high, but more important, the Index registered a very high reading of 54.7 indicating rapid month on month expansion.

A recovery in confidence is also evident from the significant growth in November in job recruitment, with the Index now at a 26-month high.

Finally, the overall Services Index, which brings together the various readings from the individual indexes, is also reflecting significant growth, with the November reading at a 21 month high.

The Manufacturing survey results continue to suggest that the sector has problems, with a considerable number of companies citing some Covid related supply problems. But the rising Business Confidence Index, now at an 8-month high, suggests that a resumption of growth is likely in the early part of 2024.

Furthermore, price inflation seems to be a thing of the past, with the Manufacturing Price Index remaining below the 50 “no growth” line. And finally, the overall Sales Managers Manufacturing Index is now over the 50 “no growth” line and into positive territory.

In summary, the Chinese economy has some way to go before it’s growth starts to recall the heady days of 6%+ annual GDP growth. But there seems little doubt that in November, the large Services sector grew rapidly, and the Manufacturing sector is once again off the ground, with growing confidence building in many areas.

The number of Japanese firms planning to expand in China has fallen to less than 30% for the first time, according to a survey published on Tuesday, with economic slowdown, increasing competition and geopolitical tension putting many off.

The waning appetite for Japanese businesses to augment operations in Japan’s biggest trade partner, alongside the United States, underscores fraught bilateral ties between the east Asian neighbours.

In an annual survey by the Japan External Trade Organisation, a semi-governmental export promotion agency, 27.7% of 710 companies said they were expecting to expand operations in China in the next a year or two.

The percentage declined from 33.4% last year and 40.9% in 2021.

Some 31 firms attributed their downsizing to economic uncertainty and a sluggish market, while 15 blamed a slump in Japanese auto sales in China, the world’s top car market. (…)

Seven firms also noted rising geopolitical risks, with bilateral relations, rarely smooth, have been particularly strained over recent months.

China last month arrested a Japanese executive, an employee of Japanese drugmaker Astellas Pharma (4503.T), on suspicion of espionage. The arrest has had a chilling effect on business, Japanese officials say. (…)

Country Garden Holdings Co. and Sino-Ocean Group have been included on China’s draft list of 50 developers eligible for a range of financing support, according to people familiar with the matter, signaling a pivot by Beijing to help some of the nation’s most distressed builders.

CIFI Holdings Group Co., another builder that has missed debt payments, was also included on the so-called white list, the people said, asking not to be identified because the matter is private. Regulators are set to finalize the roster and distribute it to banks and other financial institutions within days, the people said, adding that some details could change. (…)

Sunac China Holdings Ltd. secured funding for one of its property units from a government-backed asset manager, in a further sign of support for the beleaguered real estate sector in China.

Shanghai Haolong agreed to a three-year loan of up to 3.5 billion yuan ($490 million) for a homebuilder half-owned by a Sunac subsidiary, according to an exchange filing Tuesday. Haolong is partially backed by China Huarong Asset Management Co., one of China’s biggest bad-debt managers. (…)

Sunac, the nation’s third-largest developer in 2021, was among the developers that defaulted, and this week became one of the first to complete a debt restructuring. The firm won court approval for a plan that covers an estimated $10.2 billion of creditor claims, $5.7 billion of which would be compensated with new dollar bonds. (…)

In Monday’s CHINA IMPLODING? NO, EXPLODING!, I noted President Xi’s first ever visit to the PBOC on Oct. 24 as well as the same day visit of vice premier He Lifeng to the China’s sovereign wealth fund. These were not impromptu courtesy visits, signs of an orchestrated strategy to seriously address the housing crisis.

Binance Founder Pleads Guilty, Steps Down as CEO Changpeng Zhao pleaded guilty to violating criminal U.S. anti-money-laundering requirements. Binance admitted wrongdoing and agreed to pay fines totaling $4.3 billion.

The chief executive of Binance, the largest global cryptocurrency exchange, stepped down and pleaded guilty to violating criminal U.S. anti-money-laundering requirements, in a deal that might preserve the company’s ability to continue operating, according to court documents.

Changpeng Zhao appeared in Seattle federal court Tuesday and entered his plea, according to court records. Prosecutors accused Binance, which Zhao owns, of facilitating transactions with sanctioned groups. Binance encouraged U.S. users to obscure their location so the firm could avoid complying with U.S. anti-money-laundering laws, prosecutors said. (…)

Zhao has agreed to pay a criminal fine of $50 million, although that amount might be reduced based on separate civil penalties he has agreed to pay, court records show. Zhao’s plea agreement isn’t publicly available yet. (…)

Zhao faces a maximum prison sentence of 18 months under federal sentencing guidelines. He will be sentenced at a later date.

The outcome resembles an earlier case that prosecutors brought against the executives of BitMEX, an exchange for trading crypto derivatives that was based in the Seychelles. Its former chief executive, Arthur Hayes, pleaded guilty to violating anti-money-laundering law and was later sentenced to two years of probation, avoiding a possible prison term of six to 12 months. (…)

The deal announced Tuesday doesn’t include a settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which sued Binance and Zhao in June and alleged it violated U.S. investor-protection laws, the people said. Major crypto exchanges such as Binance have decided to litigate with the SEC, believing they can show that cryptocurrencies don’t qualify as the kinds of investments overseen by the SEC. (…)