BLACK FRIDAY SALE AT EDGE AND ODDS
I receive so many Black Friday discount offers from content providers, I feel bad not doing the same for my readers. So here it is:
All new or past donators will now have free access to Edge and Odds and be allowed to double their donation, free of charge, yearly!
Readers who subscribe to the Daily Edge will receive it daily in their mailbox, free of charge!
That’s nearly 250 deliveries per year! There surely is something useful once in a while.
And readers who recommend Edge and Odds to a friend will see their subscription extended indefinitely.
That could be 2500 Daily Edges, maybe even more…who knows? It’s been 14 years already.
I know, not that big a deal, but that’s all I can do
What’s a big deal to me is readers supporting the blog with donations. Lately, I have been very bad at taking the time to thank them personally.
Please forgive me Constantin Z., Richard B., Robert K., Joseph T., Joshua F., Jasec, Donald M., David M., Massimo B., Lawrence M., Stephen C.. I hope I forgot nobody. You are truly helping this blog survive during this not so transitory inflation period.
Happy Thanksgiving all!
FLASH PMIs
Eurozone economic contraction eases in November, price pressures cool
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(…) Companies reporting a downturn in business activity typically cited cutbacks to non-essential client spending in response to rising costs and weaker economic conditions. Overall volumes of new work decreased for the fourth month in a row and the rate of decline accelerated to its fastest since January 2021. Survey respondents often commented on subdued business and consumer confidence, alongside softer customer demand due to cost of living pressures and rising interest rates.
Lower volumes of new business from abroad contributed to the deterioration in order books during November, especially in the manufacturing sector. Latest data pointed to the steepest fall in export sales among manufacturing companies since May 2020. (…)
Strong input cost pressures continued in November and the overall rate of inflation eased only slight since October. This was mostly driven by surging energy bills and higher wages, alongside rising import prices due to exchange rate depreciation against the US dollar. Service sector businesses signalled a much steeper rate of input cost inflation than manufacturing firms. Prices charged by UK private sector companies meanwhile increased at the slowest pace since August 2021, which a number of survey respondents attributed to weaker customer demand and greater competitive pressures. (…)
The Bank of France retail survey fell by 3.7% in October showing a significant decline in sales volumes in the month. The decline interrupts a two-month string of sales volumes rising as volumes rose by 0.2% in August and by 2.5% in September.
Across the seven product categories for the month, all of them decline in addition to a decline in all industrial goods sales volume and then overall volume. October was a bad month for French consumers. Food purchases fell by 3.3% in October following declines in three of the four most recent months. Industrial goods sales volumes declined 3.9%, which is only their first to decline in the last three months but the third decline in the last five months.
Among other selected nonfood categories, textile sales volumes fell by 6.1% in October, footwear sales volumes fell by 8.2%, furniture volumes fell by 2.9%, household appliances saw sales volumes fall by 2.5%, electronics volumes fell by 7%, and new auto purchases fell by 9%. The declines across the various categories are relatively large declines for a single month. (…)
German inflation to stay in double digits despite gas price brake, Bundesbank says
Canada Economy Quickens, Upending Forecasts for Tepid Growth
Statistics Canada released advance estimates on Tuesday for retail that showed sales rising 1.5% in October. Separately, the agency said wholesale activity rose 1.3% during the month, while factory sales were up 2%. The agency provided few details, however, and it’s not clear how much rising prices were driving the gains. (…)
The 1.5% increase in retail sales would be the largest since May and followed a small drop in retail sales of 0.5% in September. A big part of the rebound last month may reflect rising gasoline prices, though the statistics agency didn’t provide details of what drove the October number. Retail sales likely benefited from a 9.2% rise in prices for gasoline. (…)
Retail sales were down 1% in the third quarter, or 1.4% in volume terms, Statistics Canada said.
Scholz Pledges to End Germany’s Over-Reliance on China, Russia
Xiaomi’s Revenue Dives 10% After Smartphone Demand Tanks Sales of mobile devices fell 11%, leading declines across business divisions encompassing smart electronics and internet services.
China backs 2 stronger property companies with $16.8bn credit line
@Sino_Market
China Property Developers Outlook 2023 (Fitch)
(…) We expect no material improvement in the operating environment, as homebuyers’ confidence remains fragile amid weak economic prospects and uncertainty surrounding delivery of pre-sold properties. Fitch expects a 0%-5% year-on-year decline in annual contracted sales, underscoring our deteriorating sector outlook.
We believe national home prices will be under moderate pressure across most cities. However, transactions tilting towards higher-tier cities – which typically have higher prices – will alter the primary property sales mix, resulting in broadly stable primary-property average selling price data.
We expect the government to take further steps to stabilise the sector. However, policies aimed at supporting home demand will remain measured and selective, as the government avoids policies that could lead to home-price reflation. The direction of the ‘”zero-Covid” policy and timely delivery of pre-sold homes are also key factors to homebuyers’ sentiment. Effective implementation of recently announced measures to support private developers is also important for liquidity.
China Buys Fewer Chip-Making Machines as US Restrictions Start
China’s purchases of machines to make computer chips fell 27% last month from a year earlier as the US imposed new, sweeping sanctions to try and derail the country’s chip ambitions. (…)
Purchases from major exporters such as Japan and the US were down in October, according to Bloomberg analysis of official trade data released Monday. Shipments from the Netherlands doubled in the month. That is where ASML Holding NV, the leading producer of chip-making equipment, is headquartered. (…)
The new US restrictions only apply to US firms at the moment, and while President Joe Biden’s administration is negotiating with Japan and the Netherlands to try and convince them to limit what can be sold to Chinese firms, Washington doesn’t expect they will agree soon. (…)
It may also be hard for China to try and ramp up purchases of these goods from non-US suppliers anytime soon. Tokyo Electron Ltd said recently it’s operating at near-full capacity, with months-long wait times for equipment delivery.
Credit Suisse Warns of $1.6 Billion Loss After Clients Pull Money The customer outflows come at a precarious time for the bank, which weeks ago launched a sweeping overhaul of its operations.
Switzerland’s No. 2 bank by assets said outflows were around 6% of its total $1.47 trillion assets, or around $88.3 billion, between Sept. 30 and Nov. 11. Customers in its wealth-management arm—its main business serving the world’s rich—removed $66.7 billion from the bank. Credit Suisse in late October said a social-media frenzy around its health was causing large outflows.
The fast pace of withdrawals meant the bank’s liquidity fell below some local-level requirements, the bank said. It said it maintained its required group-level liquidity and funding ratios at all times. Banks must keep enough liquid assets on hand to meet expected cash outflows in a 30-day period, under post-financial-crisis-era rules. (…)
In all, more than $100 billion has left the bank since June, according to Credit Suisse’s filings. It said client balances have stabilized in its Swiss bank and that the outflows have slowed in wealth management, but haven’t reversed. (…)
JPM clients responding to whether they will increase or decrease equity exposure. The question is will they do as they say, especially if FOMO kicks in? (The Market Ear)
JPM
Sequoia Capital Regrets Backing FTX But Defends Vetting Process
(…) Sequoia told its investors that when it initially backed FTX in July 2021, it had reviewed unaudited statements, the person said. In response to a question about audited versus unaudited statements, one of the partners suggested the firm might push its startups to use Big Four accounting firms in the future.