Rabu, 07 Agustus 2019

Investors try to figure out Trump's trade war endgame: 'I can't even tell you what victory is' - CNBC

President Donald Trump's trade war comes with an aggressive and clear-cut strategy but a fuzzy endgame, namely that it's unclear just what victory would look like.

True, there are lofty ambitions: a world without tariffs, a "level playing field" with China where goods would flow freely between the two nations, and the promise of untethered growth thanks to the opening of new markets and the end to the theft of intellectual property.

But what that really would mean for the economy is squishy.

Would there truly be a stronger U.S. or just a weakened China? If American companies had full access to Chinese markets, would there really be that much to gain? And what are the costs between here and there?

In a CNBC interview Tuesday, White House economic advisor Larry Kudlow somewhat quantified what the White House is looking for as it cranks up the trade tensions with China and looks for an agreement it deems favorable to U.S. interests.

"The president has said numerous times his ultimate goal with respect to the world trading system is zero tariffs, zero non-tariff trading barriers and zero subsidies," said Kudlow, director of the National Economic Council. "There are considerable benefits to truly free and lawful trading. There are consumer benefits and business benefits on both sides."

'You have to be strategic'

In raw numbers, Kudlow tossed out a dollar figure of $600 billion "if we were able to reclaim what we have lost" in intellectual property theft. The number likely came from an oft-cited 2017 estimate from the Commission on the Theft of American Intellectual Property, which put the price tag in the $225 billion to $600 billion range.

"The president is a transformative president. He's rebuilding the American economy and we've had some considerable success. These things are not easy, and that includes trade imbalances," Kudlow added. "So what we're trying to do is have fair, freer, reciprocal trading with China."

What that looks like, though, is anybody's guess.

Trade uncertainty already has cut a swath across the U.S. financial landscape. Corporate earnings have wobbled as multinationals watch their profits fall away due to higher costs and upset supply chains, while Wall Street has sustained a rough patch of volatility that has sent the major stock market averages off nearly 5% apiece over the past month.

Trump, meanwhile, continues to hammer away at China without ever specifically delineating what the results could be after he gets his deal. He's frequently promised an economy that would grow well in excess of 3% a year, but the tariffs thus far have only acted as a drag.

"If you want to be successful, you have to be strategic," Steven Blitz, chief U.S. economist at TS Lombard. "Be very clear what the point is, how you want to get it, what is the victory. Because the fact is, you're asking this question and I can't even tell you what victory is."

Despite a generally positive view on the Trump economy, the president has not enjoyed as much favor on the trade war. A recent Quinnipiac University national poll showed that while 71% viewed the economy as in either excellent or good shape, just 40% approved of Trump's trade policies, while 48% opposed.

Business leaders also have voiced concerns, as earnings conference calls have been filled with CEOs bracing for tariff fallout.

"It's really about putting some of the things he broke back together again," Blitz said. "His heart is in the right place, but the execution is proving somewhat clumsy. We've lost the narrative of the final objective. Because how do you know you've gotten free trade?"

Tariffs are hurting China, and at least theoretically the U.S. could change supply chains and push China to the periphery of world commerce, as in the Maoist era. However, that still wouldn't guarantee a free-trade environment that would take U.S. growth to another level.

"You're creating a disruption, but all you're really doing is potentially weakening the Chinese economy," Blitz said. "But to what effect? It's a good question."

Pain before gain

For business owners with interests in China, there are some clear objectives: to not have the Chinese force U.S companies to transfer their technology secrets, a more equal tariff structure and the ability, without government interference, to expand their operations.

"I need the end game with this administration to end up with access to the Chinese market and protection of my IP," Kevin O'Leary, an investor, business owner and star of "Shark Tank," told CNBC. "Those are two things I want, and until we get that I don't care how much soybeans they buy, it's irrelevant. What we need is a level playing field."

O'Leary said that if the impasse is settled in a positive way, he'll be investing heavily, launching "at least" 30 products and hiring "hundreds of people" to expand lines. He also said there will be big benefits for the stock market.

"The upside is immense for the S&P if we get this deal done," he said. "Keep squeezing their heads. Don't stop."

Still, nervousness remains as clarity stays elusive.

Getting to a final goal like O'Leary outlined could involve sustained pain for those farmers he mentioned, as well as for the rest of the economy that would labor under a protracted battle.

DWS Group speculated that China may want to wait out the negotiations to see what happens in the 2020 election. The firm added that market volatility could have "a certain disciplining effect" that would force a deal, but not without harm.

"This suggests that a sensible compromise might yet be reached in the longer term, but that the way there may well cause some headaches for investors," DWS said in a note. "The risk that the conflict takes on a momentum of its own and gets out of control has risen significantly."



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August 07, 2019 at 11:46PM

Vegan Beyond Meat burgers are just ultra-processed patties that can be bad for our health - National Post

SNC-Lavalin cleared to close $3.25B sale of stake in 407 toll highway - BNNBloomberg.ca

Canada Pension Plan Investment Board is set to become the controlling shareholder in the 407 International Inc. highway after an Ontario court ruled in its favor, allowing it to buy a stake from embattled engineering firm SNC-Lavalin Group Inc. (SNC.TO)

SNC-Lavalin agreed to sell a 10.01 per cent stake in the Toronto toll road for as much as $3.25 billion in cash to the Canadian pension fund, the Montreal-based engineering company said in a statement Wednesday.

The court ruling marks the end of a conflict among the shareholders of the 108-kilometer (67-mile) highway. SNC announced in April it had agreed to sell the stake to OMERS, another Canadian pension fund. Spanish builder Ferrovial SA and CPPIB stepped in to exercise their rights to match the OMERS offer. The court ruled that Ferrovial had waived its right of first refusal through a prior agreement, paving the way for CPPIB to increase its stake to 50.1 per cent, from 40 per cent. Ferrovial’s Cintra unit will still own 43 per cent, with SNC’s stake cut to 7 per cent following the sale.

SNC-Lavalin will get $3.25 billion in gross proceeds, of which $3 billion will be paid at the closing date and $250 million over 10 years, conditional on financial results for the 407 ETR, SNC said in the statement.

Net proceeds will be used to reduce SNC’s leverage. SNC’s stock plunged to a 15-year low Tuesday after its largest shareholder said the firm’s performance is of “growing concern” following a series of profit warnings.

SNC’s shares rose as much as 8.1 per cent to $17.68 at 12:16 a.m. in Toronto. The stock has declined 62 per cent this year.



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August 07, 2019 at 11:59PM

Trump blasts Fed 'incompetence' as his trade war roils stock markets again - CBC News

FedEx severs ties with Amazon - CTV News


Joseph Pisani , The Associated Press
Published Wednesday, August 7, 2019 10:18AM EDT
Last Updated Wednesday, August 7, 2019 1:23PM EDT

NEW YORK -- FedEx will no longer make ground deliveries for Amazon as the online shopping giant builds its own fleet and becomes more of a threat to delivery companies.

The announcement Wednesday comes two months after FedEx already terminated its air delivery contract with Amazon. FedEx said dumping Amazon is part of its plan to go after more e-commerce deliveries from other companies.

Traditional retailers like Walmart and Target want to sell more of their goods online, which in turn allows FedEx to distance itself from Amazon.com without suffering the same competitive damage it might once have.

"This does not come as a surprise to us," Citi Research analyst Christian Wetherbee said in a note to clients. "The company is clearly trying to move away from its partnership with Amazon and we believe it is using this move as a selling point to win new non-Amazon business."

At the same time, Amazon is growing its own fleet of air and ground transportation, giving it more control of how its packages are delivered while reducing its reliance on FedEx, UPS and the U.S. Postal Service. The Seattle-based company has been leasing jets, building package-sorting hubs at airports and has launched a program that lets contractors start businesses delivering packages in vans stamped with the Amazon logo.

Last month, FedEx warned for the first time in a government filing that Amazon's fledging delivery business could lower prices, hurt its revenue and "negatively impact our financial condition and results of operations."

It was a departure from previous statements by FedEx officials -- and those at UPS -- who have long downplayed the idea that Amazon could become a competitor in the delivery business. They noted that it took many years and billions of dollars for their companies to build extensive, worldwide networks of planes and delivery trucks.

"I mean, we look at Amazon as a wonderful company and service, and they're a good customer of ours," said FedEx Chairman and CEO Fred Smith during an earnings call in December. "We don't see them as a peer competitor at this point in time. For many reasons, we think it is doubtful that that will be the case."

Amazon doesn't say how much of its packages flow through FedEx, but it's likely a much smaller amount compared to UPS and the U.S. Postal Service. FedEx said that Amazon made up just 1.3% of its total revenue in 2018, or about $850 million.

Amazon said in a statement Wednesday that "FedEx has been a great partner over the years and we appreciate all their work delivering packages to our customers."

Besides building its own delivery business, the online retailer wants to drop off packages to its shopper's doorsteps even faster, which is proving to be a bigger expense than expected. Last month, Amazon admitted it would cost more than the $800 million it had said it would spend to switch its Prime two-day delivery promise to one-day delivery. The higher costs were related to reconfiguring its warehouses and moving products and goods to facilities that were closer to its customers.

Analysts said FedEx would still have a role in moving some Amazon packages, but it would be an even smaller part of its business.

"This will make it not worth mentioning," said Stifel analyst David Ross in a note to clients.

--------

AP Business Writers Michelle Chapman in Newark, New Jersey, and David Koenig in Dallas also contributed to this story.



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August 08, 2019

The global trade war has morphed into a currency war — and markets are tanking - INSIDER

  • The trade war has increasingly become focused on currencies, with the recent spat with China over the yuan in the spotlight.
  • The Chinese currency's fluctuation spelled disaster for global equities. Then, when China fixed the yuan higher than where experts expected, markets rebounded.
  • The volatility will likely continue if currency remains in the forefront of the global dispute, but could do long term damage on the global economy.
  • Read more on Markets Insider.

President Donald Trump's trade war has increasingly revolved around the role of global currencies.

It's a shift he's ushered along by crying foul on alleged currency manipulation. And there have even been reports that he's considered doing it with the US dollar.

Now, amid an ongoing spat with China, the currency war is again front-and-center as the global trade dispute rages. It ultimately amounts to a race to the bottom as countries try to push the value of their currencies lower than competitors in order to gain an advantage in trade. This is also why Trump has said he wants a weaker US dollar.

This runs counter to how countries are supposed to work together in order to achieve a balanced economy. When cooperation breaks down, global markets feel the negative effects. That's exactly what's played out around the world over a series of months — and experts are getting increasingly worried that there's no end in sight.

"The market is going to be very volatile," Dan Ikenson, director of the Herbert A. Stiefel Center for Trade Policy Studies at the Cato Institute told Markets Insider. "A trade war that was supposed to be easy to win seems like it's going to be hanging around for a long time."

The immediate damage a currency war can inflict has been clear in recent days. US equities slid to their worst performance of 2019 Monday — erasing billions of dollars in wealth— when China let the yuan fall below a key psychological threshold. The plunge also marked the currency's lowest level since 2008.

Meanwhile, the Cboe Volatility Index — or VIX, commonly known as the stock market's fear gauge — jumped 32% in a single day. The weakness also extended into major European and Asian indexes. Sharp fluctuations also struck the bond market as 10-year Treasury yields plummeted, pushing the yield curve — a closely watched recession indicator — to its most inverted level since 2007.

Then, on Tuesday, markets stabilized when the People's Bank of China set the daily yuan rate higher than expected and said it did not manipulate the currency after a formal accusation from the US Treasury Department.

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The two-day takeaway is clear: currency shenanigans are going to negatively impact market sentiment. And considering the matter is largely unresolved, it's likely that there will be much more volatility in the currency market that finds its way into other asset classes. Many — including Trump— now think the ordeal could last until 2020.

"The markets now are going to be hanging on everything that's stated on trade negotiations," so there will be fluctuations depending on signs of progress, Dom Catrambone, CEO of Whitford Asset Management told Markets Insider. "Now I think people need to be watching their portfolios."

Further, China isn't the only global power Trump has fought. The President also accused his European counterparts of manipulating their currency when the European Central Bank suggested in June it may lower interest rates and purchase another round of assets to offset a slowing economy.

Trump did cool European tensions slightly when he made a deal to increase US beef exports to the EU — a move also designed to support American farmers that are hurt by the China tariffs. But even when announcing the agreement, he spooked European officials when he made a joke about levying tariffs on cars from Europe.

While currency devaluation seems to be the latest bargaining chip in the global trade dispute, the long term impacts of weaker currencies in the US and abroad could be "really bad," Catrambone said.

After all, a strong currency tends to be good for both consumers and consumption. And Ikenson thinks prolonged weakness in the greenback could usher in the next big economic collapse.

"A weaker currency could be inflationary and recessionary" over time, he said.

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2019-08-07 14:15:00Z
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Dow set to sink as tumbling Treasury yields raise ‘fear factor’ of trade war - MarketWatch

U.S. stocks tumbled sharply at the open Wednesday, relinquishing the previous session’s healthy rebound and them some, as a number of global central banks adopted easy-money policies in the face of an intensifying trade conflict between Beijing and Washington.

How did benchmarks perform?

The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, -2.07% fell nearly 568 points, or 2.2%, to 25,459, the S&P 500 index SPX, -1.74% lost 54 points, or 1.9%, at 2,826. Meanwhile, the Nasdaq Composite Index COMP, -1.54%  shed 1.6% to 7,705, a drop of 128 points.

On Tuesday, the Dow rose 311.78 points, or 1.2%, to end at 26,029.52, while the S&P 500 index climbed 37.03 points, or 1.3%, to close at 2.881.77, while the Nasdaq Composite Index COMP, -1.54% surged 107.23 points, or 1.4%, to finish at 7,833.27.

What’s driving the market?

Equity markets looked set to fall at the start of trade on Wednesday, with stocks giving up gains as U.S. Treasury and European government bonds plumbed fresh lows. The 10-year Treasury TMUBMUSD10Y, -5.42%  fell below 1.70%, falling to an intraday nadir at 1.60%, around the lowest since late 2016, while comparable German bonds TMBMKDE-10Y, -12.61%  hit a record low at negative 0.59%.

“A sharp decline in yields as the 10-year note falls under 1.65%. This is raising the ‘Fear Factor’ over the impact of the trade war on the economy,” Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Spartan Capital Securities told MarketWatch.

Adding to market jitters is growing fears of a recession in the U.S. against a weaken economic backdrop throughout the globe.

Central bank’s in India and New Zealand (as well as the Thailand) lowered their domestic interest rates to levels that are lower than had been expected, highlighting anxieties centered on the health of the world-wide economy.

India’s central bank cut its key interest rate for the fourth consecutive time, reducing the repo rate by 0.35% to 5.40% to shore up the economy, while New Zealand’s central bank cut its benchmark interest rate to an all-time low of 1% on Wednesday.

For a second day in a row, the People’s Bank of China set the official midpoint reference for yuan at 6.9996 in Asian hours, but the level approaches the key level of 7, widely viewed as a line in the sand for the currency. The PBOC fixes the currency daily and allows it to move up to 2 percentage points on either side of its midpoint.

A breach of that level on Monday, interpreted by some as an intentional weakening of its currency, helped to ignite a global stock market selloff and slump in bond yields, but markets have so far stabilized, despite the prospect of an uncertain timeline for a Sino-American trade resolution.

Losses for the stock-index futures before the opening bell Wednesday accelerated after President Donald Trump tweeted that the U.S’s “problem is not China - We are stronger than ever, money is pouring into the U.S. while China is losing companies by the thousands to other countries, and their currency is under siege - Our problem is a Federal Reserve that is too..... proud to admit their mistake of acting too fast and tightening too much (and that I was right!).

The president said, the central bank “must cut rates bigger and faster, and stop their ridiculous quantitative tightening NOW,” he tweeted:

Read: Why a falling Chinese yuan crushed the stock market and intensified the trade war

Also see: Why the ‘tail risk of a currency war can’t be ruled out’ as U.S.-China tensions mount

Which stocks are in focus?

The Walt Disney Co. DIS, -6.17% on Tuesday said beginning Nov. 12, when the entertainment giant’s ambitious streaming service makes its debut, U.S. consumers will be able to subscribe to a streaming bundle of Disney+, ESPN+ and advertising-supported Hulu for $12.99 a month. Disney shares were down 6.5% l after missing estimates for earnings.

Lumber Liquidators Holdings Inc. LL, -16.02%  reduced its full-year comparable stores outlook to “approximately flat.” Lumber Liquidators shares were falling 14% at the open.

Shares of CVS Health Corp. CVS, +5.77% rose 5.1% Wednesday after the drugstore chain reported earnings that topped Wall Street expectations.

Office Depot Inc.’s stock ODP, -6.29% rose 0.9% after the business supply retailer reported second-quarter earnings that beat expectations.

Read: September rate cut ‘fully priced’, with Trump tariff tweets seen pushing Fed to take more action

What other assets are in focus?

Gold for December delivery GCZ19, +1.75%  aimed for a fourth straight gain, breaching a psychological level above $1,500 per ounce.

Oil futures sank. U.S. oil prices CLU19, -3.64%  fell 2.9% at $52.08 a barrel, after gaining 1.9% on the New York Mercantile Exchange on Tuesday.

In Asia, Japan’s Nikkei 225 Index NIK, -0.33% fell 0.3%, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index HSI, +0.08% HSI, +0.08% ended virtually unchanged, adding less than 0.1%, while the CS1 300 index 000300, -0.41% dropped 0.4%.

The pan-European Stoxx 600 SXXP, -0.14%, meanwhile, headed 0.4% lower Wednesday, giving up a sharpy early gain.

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2019-08-07 13:17:00Z
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