Jumat, 05 Juli 2019

German factory orders sink on drop in foreign demand - Financial Times

A key gauge of the health of Germany’s manufacturing industry sank by far more than expected in May, amid a steep drop-off in foreign demand that is hitting factories across the eurozone and raising expectations that the European Central Bank will revive its crisis-era stimulus.

Manufacturing orders in Germany dropped 2.2 per cent month-on-month in May, and were down 8.6 per cent from the same month in 2018. A Reuters poll of economists had forecast a fall of 0.1 per cent.

The publication of the data sparked a fresh fall in government borrowing costs as markets priced in the likelihood of more monetary easing from the ECB. Germany’s 10-year Bund yield traded near historic lows of minus 0.4 per cent on Friday, after the release of the data.

The global trade slowdown has dealt a severe blow to manufacturers in the single currency area, with Germany’s €1.6tn export machine being hit particularly hard. A poll of purchasing managers published this week suggested that levels of activity had continued to shrink in June.

“Today’s figures do not bode well for the short-term prospects for the German economy,” said Ralph Solveen, an economist at Commerzbank, who added that the report underlines “our expectation that the German economy shrank in the second quarter and that hopes of a noticeable improvement in the third are dwindling”.

The scale and duration of the problems have raised fears among policymakers that the woes of the region’s factories will begin to infect other parts of the economy, including the dominant services sector that is more reliant on domestic demand.

The wider economy has held up well in the face of the manufacturing slowdown; unemployment in Europe’s largest economy is close to post-reunification lows. But there are signs the German labour market is weakening, although the evidence is inconclusive.

Any increase in unemployment is likely to weigh on consumer spending.

Departing ECB president Mario Draghi is widely expected to launch fresh policy stimulus, including interest rate cuts and further bond purchases, during his final months in office. The bank’s governing council next meets on July 25.

“German factory orders have brought us closer to ECB action at the July meeting,” said Carsten Brzeski, economist at ING. “If industrial data next week are equally dreadful, it is hard to see the ECB not acting. Mr Draghi increased expectations so strongly that no reaction to another set of disappointing data would be counter-effective.”

In a sign of how far investors’ expectations of central bank action have shifted, the market value of negative-yielding debt globally this week reached a record high of $13tn, according to data from Barclays.

The figure represents a dramatic increase from $8.3tn at the end of last year. The negative yield means that investors who purchase the Bunds and hold them to maturity will receive less in repayment and regular coupon payments than their initial investment.

Germany’s factory sector has been among the hardest hit by the sharp slowdown in global trade stoked by the US-China trade war. Sluggish growth across some of its major trading partners, such as Turkey, has also weighed on what was until recently the eurozone’s economic powerhouse.

Foreign orders at German manufacturers slumped 4.3 per cent in May, on a month-over-month basis, according to surveys of purchasing managers. Orders from the eurozone were off 1.7 per cent, and those outside the bloc tumbled 5.7 per cent. Domestic orders rose 0.7 per cent. 

“Manufacturers have, at least according to the PMIs, been able to maintain production growth in excess of the flow of new orders recently by clearing work backlogs,” said Claus Vistesen, chief eurozone economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics. “But that can’t go on indefinitely.”

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.ft.com/content/7256af74-9eed-11e9-9c06-a4640c9feebb

2019-07-05 08:03:00Z
CAIiEBMVLugopn9Lr7fLe5iLEn8qFwgEKg8IACoHCAow-4fWBzD4z0gwwtp6

Dow futures lower as markets await key jobs data - CNBC

U.S. stock index futures pointed to a slightly mixed open on Friday as investors focused on the release of key jobs data.

At 03:33 a.m. ET, Dow futures were down 11 points, implying a muted open. Futures on S&P 500 and Nasdaq traded in opposite directions.

Market focus is largely attuned to nonfarm payrolls and unemployment data, expected at 08:30 a.m. ET on Friday. Nonfarm payrolls are predicted to have risen by 160,000 in June, compared to 75,000 in May, according to a Reuters poll.

A weaker-than-expected figure could increase bets that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates at its meeting on July 30 and 31. The central bank opened the door to easier monetary policy last month by stating it will "act as appropriate" to maintain the current economic expansion.

Meanwhile, geopolitical tensions in the Middle East continue to dominate after the British Royal Marines seized a large Iranian oil tanker Thursday for trying to take oil to Syria in violation of EU sanctions, evoking fury in Tehran.

Oil prices were mixed in morning trade, with the international benchmark Brent crude futures contract flat at $63.30 per barrel, while U.S crude futures slipped 1.01% to $56.76 per barrel.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.cnbc.com/2019/07/05/stock-market-us-markets-await-key-jobs-data.html

2019-07-05 07:13:23Z
CAIiEDqmvjViOS81UVzGs-SK-kYqGQgEKhAIACoHCAow2Nb3CjDivdcCMJ_d7gU

Ready for faux fish? - Business News - Castanet.net

The arrival of plant-based meats at chains including A&W and Tim Hortons is just the first step towards mainstream sustainable eating for Blair Bullus.

The Vancouver flexitarian and businessman has his eye on the next frontier: Fish and seafood alternatives that — like Beyond Burger and Impossible Foods — mimic the look and taste of the real thing for pescatarians not quite ready to give up sashimi.

It's still a nascent movement, but Bullus points to faux experiments that have popped up in recent years, ranging from chickpea-based "tuna" to carefully carved smoked carrot "salmon."

Bullus' company Top Tier Foods Inc. actually sells quinoa, including an especially sticky variety designed to replace rice in vegan sushi rolls that otherwise don't have the protein and omega-3 fatty acids of fish.

It's available at the Quebec City-based chain Yuzu Sushi where customers can pair it with faux ahi tuna — a coral-red facsimile carved out of Roma tomatoes. Known as Ahimi, it's made by New York's Ocean Hugger Foods.

Bullus doesn't expect to fool sushi eaters with the combination, but he hopes it can at least assuage any nutritional and environmental concerns by those who ditch fish.

"It's just becoming easier to make those decisions so you don't necessarily have to give up sushi or you don't have to necessarily give up your salmon and avocado roll," Bullus says.

"You're going to have an alternative that has the same mouth-feel as what you're used to."

Whether the average omnivore is ready to give up their salmon and shrimp has yet to really be tested.

Efforts to produce realistic sushi-grade varieties are dwarfed by the research, funding and marketing push behind plant-based and lab-grown beef, says Bruce Friedrich, co-founder and executive director of the Good Food Institute.

Nevertheless, he says seafood alternatives are just as necessary, describing the environmental impact of commercial fishing as "at least as bad as cattle-ranching" and akin to "the strip-mining of our oceans." He also lambastes aquaculture for its use of antibiotics



from Business - Latest - Google News https://ift.tt/2KYDp6T
via IFTTT
July 04, 2019 at 10:26PM

Oil Markets Not Impressed By Small Crude Draw | OilPrice.com - OilPrice.com

A day after the American Petroleum Institute’s estimated a 5-million-barrel crude oil inventory draw and failed to reverse oil prices’ fall, the Energy Information Administration failed at that, too by reporting only a moderate draw.

The authority reported a draw of 1.1 million barrels for the week to June 28, after a draw of 12.8 million barrels for the previous week—an inventory change of such magnitude it strengthened prices for the rest of the week.

At 468.5 million barrels, U.S. crude oil inventories were 5 percent above the upper limit of the five-year average, the EIA also said, adding refineries processed 17.3 million bpd last week, unchanged from the previous week’s daily processing rate.

Gasoline inventories shed 1.6 million barrels last week, with production averaging 9.9 million bpd. This compared with an inventory draw of 1 million barrels the week before and average daily production 10.5 million bpd.

In distillate fuels, the EIA reported an inventory build of 1.4 million barrels for the last week of June, with production standing at 5.3 million bpd. A week earlier, distillate fuel inventories fell by 2.4 million barrels and production was the same at 5.3 million bpd.

Last week, the EIA said U.S. crude oil production had surged to 12.16 million bpd during May, a record-high cementing the country’s place as the world’s top crude oil producers. While in line with the Trump administration’s energy dominance strategy and in favor of drivers, the news is not particularly good for the companies that made this level of production possible.

Most shale oil companies are burning cash with only a handful of them generating a positive cash flow. This casts a shadow over the long-term sustainability of the industry, which basically needs to keep pumping to pay its debts right now, according to some industry insiders.

One thing is certain, however: rising U.S. production will continue to keep a lid on international oil prices as last evidence by traders’ indifference to OPEC+’s announcement of a nine-month extension of their production cuts.

By Irina Slav or OIlprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com:



from Business - Latest - Google News https://ift.tt/2Xnpucr
via IFTTT
July 03, 2019 at 09:40PM

Canopy Growth's Bruce Linton amassed more than $200-million during his time as company's co-CEO - The Globe and Mail

TREB says home sales up 10.4 per cent in June, average price up three per cent - Yahoo Canada Finance

Kamis, 04 Juli 2019

Toronto home sales up 10% for the month of June, TREB says - CBC.ca

The Toronto Real Estate Board says home sales were up 10.4 per cent in June compared with last year as the market continued a moderate spring rebound.

It says the Greater Toronto Area saw 8,860 sales through the Multiple Listing Service system in the month, up from 8,024 in the same month last year.

The rise in sales, combined with a very slight dip in new listings, helped push the average selling price up three per cent to $832,703.

Sales data for the month falls roughly in line with trends for the first half of the year, which saw sales up 8.5 per cent and the average selling price climb 2.4 per cent.

"Buyers started moving off the sidelines in the spring, as evidenced by strong year-over-year price growth," said TREB chief market analyst Jason Mercer in a statement.

"Because we saw virtually no change in the number of new listings, market conditions tightened and price growth picked up, especially for more higher density home types."

Average condo selling prices have climbed five per cent so far this year, townhouse prices up 2.7 per cent, semi-detatched homes up 4.5 per cent, while detached home prices have dipped 0.8 per cent.

For June, condo prices climbed 5.2 per cent as sales dropped 3.2 per cent, while detached home prices dipped 1.4 per cent as sales rose 18.6 per cent.

New listings for June totalled 15,816, down 0.4 per cent from last year.



from Business - Latest - Google News https://ift.tt/2xx5oSC
via IFTTT
July 04, 2019 at 11:13PM