Senin, 11 November 2019

UK economy avoids recession with third-quarter growth rebound - CNBC

An employee works on an engine production line at a Ford factory on January 13, 2015

Carl Court | Getty Images News | Getty Images

The British economy has avoided slipping into a technical recession, after official data Monday, showed the third-quarter gross domestic product (GDP) at 0.3%.

The data marks a rebound from the second-quarter gross domestic product (GDP) which contracted by 0.2%.

On a year-on-year basis, third-quarter growth slowed to 1%. This marked the slowest rate of expansion since the first three months of 2010.

On a month-to-month measure, September GDP alone marked a 0.1% contraction. Manufacturing data for September revealed a 0.4% contraction from August and a 1.8% fall from September 2019.

Both figures were a touch worse than a consensus of forecasts collated by Reuters.

Services output for September came in flat at 0.0% month-on-month and up 1.3% year-on-year. Industrial output and construction activity for the month also contracted from August figures.

There was very little initial reaction in the pound-versus-dollar trade. Just prior to the decision, sterling was trading at $1.2804 and this dipped to $1.2797 after the data drop.

Speaking to CNBC's Street Signs on Monday, Ross Walker, Head of UK & European Economics at Natwest Markets, said the figures were "slightly disappointing."

Walker said there had been some modest growth in retails sales and he had hoped this might prop growth up a little more.

"Underlying growth in the U.K. is clearly below trend," he said before adding that when accounting for Brexit-related swings in production, the data looked "a little bit tepid." 

The Bank of England said last week that trend growth in the U.K. was currently about half of that in 2018.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.cnbc.com/2019/11/11/uk-economy-avoids-recession-with-third-quarter-growth-rebound.html

2019-11-11 09:31:00Z
52780432851375

Asian markets drop on US-China trade disappointment and Hong Kong violence - CNN

Hong Kong's Hang Seng (HSI) dropped 2.1% at midday, accelerating earlier losses. China's Shanghai Composite (SHCOMP) declined 1.3%. South Korea's Kospi (KOSPI) slumped 0.5%. Japan's Nikkei (N225) edged down 0.3%.
The losses in Hong Kong came as traffic stalled and clashes broke out across the city. A traffic officer shot a protester early Monday morning, according to a police source.
Five months of mass demonstrations have disrupted Hong Kong's economy and plunged the financial hub into its first recession in a decade. The city's real estate stocks were hit particularly hard on Monday, with big property developers like Swire Pacific, Wharf Real Estate, Sun Hung Kai Properties and New World Development all dropping more than 4%.
Monday was also the first opportunity that markets in Asia had to respond to comments from US President Donald Trump, who said Friday in the United States that he has yet to agree to wiping tariffs. That undercut a statement from China's Commerce Ministry that indicated openness to such a concession as part of the first phase of a trade deal between the two countries.
"They'd like to have a rollback," Trump said. "I haven't agreed to anything. China would like to get somewhat of a rollback, not a complete rollback because they know I won't do it."
A day earlier, a spokesman for China's Ministry of Commerce told reporters that US and Chinese negotiators had discussed rolling back tariffs, saying the rollbacks could happen even before a "phase one" trade deal is signed.
Despite Trump's remarks, Wall Street ended last week at record highs.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.cnn.com/2019/11/10/investing/asian-market-latest/index.html

2019-11-11 06:01:00Z
52780431397468

Alibaba breaks Singles Day record of more than $30 billion in sales and climbing - CNBC

A screen shows the gross merchandise volume, a measure of sales, after 12 minutes 49 seconds of Singles Day sales, as it reaches about 7,147,554,107 USD in Hangzhou in China's eastern Zhejiang province early on November 11, 2019.

AFP | Getty Images

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba set a new sales record on Singles Day, the world's largest 24-hour shopping event.

Gross merchandise value (GMV), a figure that shows sales across Alibaba's various shopping platforms, surpassed last year's 213.5 billion yuan record (nearly $30.5 billion) on Monday afternoon local time, and kept rising through the rest of the day.

It was the 11th edition of the annual Singles Day event — also called the Double 11 shopping festival because it falls on Nov. 11. During the 24-hour period, which began at midnight in Singapore and Hong Kong, Alibaba offered huge discounts across its e-commerce sites such as Tmall.

Alibaba's Singles Day sales last year exceeded the spending by consumers during any single U.S. shopping holiday such as Black Friday or Cyber Monday.

To help boost sales, Alibaba expanded the number of discounted items available in this year's event and put a heavy emphasis on livestreaming via its platforms to help sell goods. Live streaming has become a big part of the shopping experience on Chinese e-commerce sites.

Online personalities often speak to their followers and talk about products as well. On Wednesday, Kim Kardashian did a livestream announcing her fragrance brand KKW will be available for sale on Tmall.

Alibaba's new Singles Day record comes as it faces a slowing Chinese economy and stiff competition from domestic rivals. While Alibaba is the name often associated with the mega shopping event, competitors JD.com and Pinduoduo all offer their own sales. JD.com was already offering some Double 11 discounts before the actual day. Even Southeast Asia's e-commerce platforms have jumped on the bandwagon.

The day got off to a strong start for Alibaba. GMV hit $12.01 billion in the first hour. Within an hour and a half, Alibaba's sales exceeded the total reached on Singles Day in 2016.

Some of the top-selling products early in the day included the 5G version of Huawei's Mate 30 Pro smartphone, as well as Apple's iPhone 11 Pro and Pro Max.

Amid the ongoing U.S.-China trade war, there was some concern that American brands could get the cold shoulder from Chinese consumers. But this was not the case.

The U.S. was the second country by GMV in terms of countries selling to China.

Jacob Cooke, CEO of WPIC, an e-commerce tech and marketing firm which helps foreign brands sell in China, told CNBC that jewelry and apparel were the most popular product categories from American retailers.

He said everything his company has managed is "way up over last year."

"There is no downturn there. There is no evidence there is sentiment decline for U.S. brands," Cooke told CNBC.

This is breaking news. Please check back for updates.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.cnbc.com/2019/11/11/alibaba-singles-day-2019-record-sales-on-biggest-shopping-day.html

2019-11-11 08:33:00Z
CAIiEMUsVwEgDguvWVLo_oxrn8wqGQgEKhAIACoHCAow2Nb3CjDivdcCMMPf7gU

Minggu, 10 November 2019

The Stage Is Set For Oil Price Volatility On November 18th - OilPrice.com

With China’s Fourth Plenum meeting of its ruling Communist Party having ended in October and the U.S. 2020 presidential election campaign gathering pace, both sides have their reasons to unveil some sort of progress in the long-running trade war between them. Such an announcement had been expected around the time of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation meetings scheduled for 16-17 of November but when Chile cancelled the event the timing has become more fluid. The recent tentative statements that U.S. and China will roll back tariffs on each other’s goods incrementally as they continue to negotiate a broader trade deal were sufficient to push crude oil futures lower for a short while. However, the reality is that any announced trade deal between the two sides in the current political environment will be short-lived, fractious, and volatile for all asset classes, including oil.

For China, the next date that will be of key concern is the 18th of November, the point at which the licensing that permits China’s Huawei Technologies to buy components from U.S. companies to supply existing customers is set to expire. This follows the U.S. government’s blacklisting of Huawei in May on the allegations that the Chinese technology giant is involved in activities contrary to U.S. national security or foreign policy interests. At the same time, the U.S. added another 46 Huawei affiliates to the ‘Entity List’ (to a total of more than 100 Huawei entities) that comprises companies effectively banned from doing businesses with U.S. firms. “Such is the centrality of U.S. semiconductor firms in manufacturing chains that a ban by Washington could effectively cut off global semiconductor supplies,” Rory Green, Asia economist for TS Lombard told OilPrice.com earlier this week. “The result would be a modern day equivalent to the Japan oil embargo that was imposed by the U.S. [on August 1941, in response to Japanese actions in then-Indochina] and that was a key prompt for the attack on Pearl Harbour,” he said. “For hawks in the Chinese government, the U.S. actions against Huawei and its related companies would be very near to a declaration of war and if the U.S. does not grant another extension to the Huawei ban then the bad feeling this will generate in China will be enormous,” he added. Related: The World’s Biggest EV Market Braces For Another Crippling Blow

This said, China’s economy is currently at a delicate potential inflection point, with economic growth set to drop below the key six per cent psychological level in the fourth quarter and beyond, for the first time in almost 30 years. Moreover, its options to avoid this are much more limited than at any time before. “President Xi Jinping remains convinced that another round of excessive debt creation – which is the upshot of the massive stimulus measures that we’ve seen in the past - could be fatal to China and more importantly to the regime,” Green said. “Additionally, for their part, China’s monetary authorities have been reluctant to cut interest rates, probably because they fear a low interest rate environment is bad for domestic banks, which are under pressure both to restructure their balance sheets and to reduce leverage and funding risks,” he added.

The game-plan right now for China, then, is to continue to make the right sort of placatory noises to the U.S. over broad measures of cooperation whilst actually conceding very little, and waiting to see the outcome of the 2020 U.S. presidential election. This stalling approach by China is the reason why Beijing’s trade negotiating team – according to various off-the-record comments from the U.S. side – talk in ‘general terms of principles and parameters rather than specific policy measures’. “Basically, the Chinese are hoping either that Trump doesn’t win or that he doesn’t win across both Houses [Senate and Representatives], which will limit his room for manoeuvre in future negotiations, but until then China is just playing the game, stringing out the talks and conceding as little as possible whilst trying to get as many tariffs dropped as it can,” said Green.

In the interim, China’s official state-run press agency, Xinhua, stated after the last major U.S.-China meetings in October that agriculture and exchange rates had moved up in the list of topics noted by the Chinese side as having been discussed. Those topics were the last two among the six that emerged out of talks last February, but they moved up into first and third place, respectively, following the October talks, while intellectual property protection remained in second place. “Beijing has always been willing to yield on agriculture purchases and exchange rate policy, as renminbi stability and soybean purchases are actually aligned with China’s national interests, so it is now highly likely these ‘concessions’ will form part of the prospective ‘phase one deal’ that could be signed,” highlighted Green. Related: Canadian Oil Prices Crash After Keystone Spill

The U.S. position is similar to that of China’s, although Trump’s approach is more skewed to political considerations than classical economic ones. Trump needs to de-escalate the trade war with China, at least to the extent that it is no longer perceived to be meaningfully damaging U.S. economic growth. According to the statistics, since World War I, the sitting U.S. president has won re-election 11 times out of 11 if the economy was not in recession within 24 months ahead of an election. Conversely, presidents who went into a re-election campaign with the economy in recession lost five out of seven times. Up until very recently, many of the smarter investment houses were predicting a fifty per cent chance of an outright U.S. recession within the coming 12 months. In recent, weeks, though, this figure has improved in favour of Trump, with Goldman Sachs now putting the risk at 24 per cent, Morgan Stanley ‘around 20’ per cent, and Barclays at less than 10 per cent.

A deal with China – almost no matter how superficial in the first instance - is also key to Trump’s ability to maintain his Republican support in the Senate that he needs to avoid impeachment and he is highly aware of how big the trade war plays in the news and in the markets. During his meeting with China’s Vice Premier, Liu He, Trump said: “Every time there’s a little bad [trade war] news, the market would go down incredibly. Every time there was a little bit of good news, the market would go up incredibly. And yet, other news that was also very big, the market just didn’t really care. They just seemed to care about the deal with [the] USA and China, and that’s okay with me.” On a broader electoral note, being seen to be tough on China is becoming even more appealing to U.S. voters with a recent survey by the non-partisan U.S. think tank, Pew Research Center, in Washington, showing that only 26 per cent of U.S. citizens had a favourable view of China, down from 38% the year before.

By Simon Watkins for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com:



from Business - Latest - Google News https://ift.tt/2K6x1by
via IFTTT
November 11, 2019 at 07:00AM

China's Singles' Day sales on course for new record - DW (English)

China's biggest online shopping festival, Singles' Day, got underway at Sunday midnight local time, with e-commerce giant Alibaba saying 84 billion yuan ($12 billion) worth of goods were sold in the first hour, compared with 69 billion yuan last year.

It took only 63 minutes and 59 seconds for sales to hit 100 billion yuan ($14.3 billion). The first billion yuan was spent in the first 68 seconds, according to Alibaba.

Singles' Day has broken sales records every year in its 10-year history. Total sales last year amounted to more than $30 billion, which beats the revenue taken by US retailers on Black Friday and Cyber Monday combined.

A new record is expected again this year, despite a slowing economy partly due to the US-China trade war.

However, the 27% sales growth from 2017 to 2018 was the lowest since the event began in 2009, leading Alibaba, with its main e-commerce platforms Taobao and Tmall, to search for new ways to stimulate consumers' purchasing desires this time round.

Read more: Why Amazon struggled to beat Alibaba online in China

Environmental problems

The event is named after the calendar date 11/11, with the four ones seen as symbolizing the state of being single. It started out on Chinese campuses as a celebration of the unmarried or unpartnered lifestyle.

This year, the 24-hour shopping fest kicked off with a performance by US pop star Taylor Swift.

Singles' Day is taking place this year for the first time without Alibaba co-founder Jack Ma, who resigned as chairman in September.

In the past, the event has been criticized by environmentalist groups for the large amount of packaging waste generated by the online sales.

Read more:Who is Alibaba's next chairman Daniel Zhang? 

ed, tj/stb (Reuters, dpa)

Every evening, DW's editors send out a selection of the day's hard news and quality feature journalism. You can sign up to receive it directly here.



from Business - Latest - Google News https://ift.tt/2Oc8R0T
via IFTTT
November 11, 2019 at 01:10PM

Canadians tighten their belts on holiday spending - Toronto Sun

It’s beginning to look a lot like … bah, humbug!

Christmas shopping is predicted to be down this year as more and more Canadians begin to sweat their personal debt.

How to handle the holidays and remain fiscally responsible?

What will save your bacon (and your bank account) over the festive season is making a budget.

And sticking to it.

With Black Friday looming — yes, it’s increasingly a thing in Canada, even though it’s tied to U.S. Thanksgiving — savvy shoppers are making a list and checking it twice.

According to a recent study by Equifax Canada, more than half of all Canadians (55%) say they’ll spend less on holiday gifts and celebrations this year.

A poll of some 1,500 Canadians suggests that women are leading the charge at watching their pocketbooks this season, with 61% said they’ll be spending less, compared to 48% of men who said the same.

As Canadians take on more debt every year and whispers of recession get a little louder, it’s maybe no surprise that people are starting to tighten their belts.

The rule of thumb on debt, according to Statistics Canada, is that Canadians owe $1.77 for every after-tax dollar they earn.

(Equifax has previously reported that total debt-per-consumer rose 1.9% at the end of the second quarter this year.)

Going more grinch than Santa this season is mainly the choice of younger adults, especially those aged 35 to 44.

That’s the age group that has expressed the most anxiety about debt levels.

The good news is that most of the people surveyed (58%) said they intended to create a holiday budget to keep everything on track.

And well they might. Bankruptcies have had a big uptick this year and, according to Julie Kuzmic, Equifax Canada’s Director of Consumer Advocacy, “Even credit card spending growth has tailed off in 2019.”

She says prudent holiday spending is a good thing — it shows Canadians are trying to avoid taking on additional debt.

It’s interesting to note that the picture is somewhat different south of the border.

According to a Deloitte forecast, U.S. holiday sales are predicted to increase between 4.5 and 5% for the stretch between November and January, adding up to a 1.1 trillion spend for the season.

That’s a lot of eggnog.

Online sales are expected to grow 14% to 18% over last year.

Those projections of growth, according to Deloitte’s U.S. economic forecaster, Daniel Bachman, are due in part to a healthy labour market.

“Near record-low unemployment rates, coupled with continued monthly job creation, may encourage people to spend more during the holiday season. The economy is still growing, albeit at a slower rate. Additionally, we continue to see consumer confidence elevated, which also helps boost holiday spending.”

Anne Jardine, a retail and marketing specialist based in Washington, D.C.  agrees that holiday shopping will likely be robust.

“There will be spending,” she says.

However, Jardine reckons it may be partly motivated by the current sense of crisis worldwide.

“People will take the ‘Eat, drink and be merry, for tomorrow we may die,’ route,” she says.  “I think folks are feeling in a crisis whether it is global climate change, Brexit, demonstrations from Hong Kong to Santiago or an America teetering on the brink.”

For Jardine, the more interesting question is not whether people will shop, but what, exactly, they will buy. 

“Things of substance by the millennials? Alcohol and chocolates like WW2? Great escapes and experience driven items?”

Maybe, speculates Jardine, people will buy anything that offers an escape from current reality.

“In times of stress, the emotional takes over from the rational.”



from Business - Latest - Google News https://ift.tt/33K1yEd
via IFTTT
November 11, 2019 at 01:36AM

Jobs miss keeps door open for Bank of Canada to cut rates - BNNBloomberg.ca

Canada’s labour market slipped after two straight months of strength, sending the currency lower and providing the Bank of Canada with more ammunition if it decides to cut interest rates at its next meeting.

The country lost 1,800 jobs in October, Statistics Canada said Friday in Ottawa, versus economist expectations for a 15,000 uptick in employment. It was the first month of job losses since July and comes on the heels of a 135,000 job gain over the prior two months. The unemployment rate held steady at 5.5 per cent.

While the Bank of Canada left the door open for a rate cut last week after citing ongoing trade tensions weighing on global growth, it’s held off from easing monetary policy in part because of strength in the labor market that’s driving household consumption. That view isn’t likely to be altered by one month of data, but could change if a pattern of a cooling jobs market emerges going forward.

Embedded Image

“The overall trend in employment is still respectable so I don’t think it will by itself push BOC to an immediate cut, but the risks are clearly rising,” Vassili Serebriakov, FX strategist at UBS Securities LLC, said by email.

The Canadian dollar dropped on the report, falling 0.3 per cent to $1.3170 per U.S. dollar at 11:03 a.m. in Toronto trading. Yields on Canadian two-year bonds were down nearly three basis points to 1.58 per cent.

Full-time positions fell by 16,100, while part-time increased 14,300. The unemployment rate held steady at 5.5%, matching the median forecast, and wage gains accelerated. Election-related hiring helped offset a some of the declines with the public-sector adding 28,700 jobs despite a drop in private-sector and self-employment.

Embedded Image

Friday’s jobs report was the second weak indicator of the week. Trade figures Tuesday were also disappointing, missing forecasts on lower exports. Markets have priced in a 24 per cent chance policy makers led by Governor Stephen Poloz will cut interest rates next month.

There were, however, bright spots in the October labor force survey. Wage gains for permanent employees quickened to 4.4 per cent on the year, a sign that tightness in the jobs market is boosting pay. Hours worked advanced 1.3 per cent from a year earlier, matching last month’s pace.

--With assistance from Erik Hertzberg.

poll image

By what age do you expect to retire?

Total Results: 0



from Business - Latest - Google News https://ift.tt/2O0HUgd
via IFTTT
November 09, 2019 at 01:08AM