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Tag: Asia Economy

  • I’d be surprised if the Reserve Bank of Australia doesn’t hike rates, portfolio manager says

    I’d be surprised if the Reserve Bank of Australia doesn’t hike rates, portfolio manager says

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    Ben Clark of TMS Capital says the market is expecting it to hike one or two more times.

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  • IMF chief says there’s no significant slowdown in lending and the Fed may need to do more

    IMF chief says there’s no significant slowdown in lending and the Fed may need to do more

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    Georgieva says she had to work “twice as hard” to be equal to her male colleagues.

    Drew Angerer / Staff / Getty Images

    The International Monetary Fund has yet to see enough banks pulling back on lending that would cause the U.S. Federal Reserve to change course with its rate-hiking cycle.

    “We don’t yet see a significant slowdown in lending. There is some, but not on the scale that would lead to the Fed stepping back,” the IMF’s Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva told CNBC’s Karen Tso Saturday in Dubrovnik, Croatia.

    The Federal Reserve in a May banks report warned that lenders are worried about conditions ahead, as trouble in mid-sized financial institutions in the U.S. caused banks to tighten lending standards for households and businesses.

    The Fed’s loan officers added that they expect the issues to continue over the next year due to lowered growth forecasts and concerns over deposit outflows and reduced tolerance for risk.

    Georgieva told CNBC: “I cannot stress enough that we are in an exceptionally uncertain environment. Therefore pay attention to trends and be agile, adjusting should the trends change.”

    The IMF’s commentary on the pace of a slowdown in global lending comes after its Chief Economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas told CNBC in April that banks are now situated in a “more precarious situation” that would pose a risk to the international organization’s world growth forecast of 2.8% for this year.

    A majority of major global central banks, including the U.S. Federal Reserve, have tightened their monetary policy aggressively to tame soaring inflation. Meanwhile, the world’s global debt has swelled to a near-record high of $305 trillion, according to the Institute of International Finance. The IIF said in its May report that high debt levels and interest rates have led to further concerns about leverage in the financial system.

    ‘A little bit more’

    As the IMF is yet to see a significant slowdown in lending that would prompt the Fed to reverse its course, Georgieva said that combined with a resilient U.S. jobs report on Friday, that it could hike further.

    “The pressure that comes from incomes going up and in unemployment being still very, very low, means that the Fed will have to stay the course and perhaps in our view, they may need to do a little bit more,” she said.

    She projected the U.S. unemployment rate to go beyond 4%, up to 4.5%, from more rate hikes by the Fed after the rate rose to 3.7% in May, marking the highest since October 2022.

    On the U.S. government passing a debt ceiling bill that was signed by President Joe Biden over the weekend, she said: “what has been agreed, in the context [that] it was agreed, is broadly speaking, a good outcome.”

    “Where the problem lies is that repetitive debate around the debt ceiling, in our view, is not very helpful. There is space to rethink how to go about it,” she added.

    — CNBC’s Jeff Cox, Elliot Smith contributed to this report

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  • China’s recovery is relying on an improvement in the labor market: UBS Investment Research

    China’s recovery is relying on an improvement in the labor market: UBS Investment Research

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    Wang Tao from UBS Investment Research says slow improvement in the labor market, and property market fundamentals are weighing on the Chinese economic recovery.

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    Fri, Jun 2 202312:46 AM EDT

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  • Singapore overtakes Hong Kong as the most expensive Asia-Pacific city for private homes

    Singapore overtakes Hong Kong as the most expensive Asia-Pacific city for private homes

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    Modern and luxury smart homes in Singapore, seen from above during a hot summer day at the Keppel Bay Yacht Marina area in the city centre.

    Tobiasjo | E+ | Getty Images

    Singapore’s private homes are now the most expensive in Asia-Pacific, having overtaken Hong Kong, according to a new report.

    Data from the Home Attainability Index from the Urban Land Institute (ULI) Asia Pacific Centre for Housing showed the median price of Singapore’s private homes was $1.2 million in 2022, compared to Hong Kong’s $1.16 million.

    Private rental homes in Singapore also had the highest monthly rent in the region at $2,600 — “far exceeding” other cities such as Sydney, Melbourne and Hong Kong, according to the report. 

    The report drew on government statistics from 45 cities in nine markets in Asia-Pacific — while measuring home attainability for both home ownership and home rentals in relation to the median income of households.

    Hong Kong vs. Singapore

    Home prices in Hong Kong “dropped substantially” in 2022, ULI said, citing the significant increase in mortgage interest rates as Hong Kong keeps pace with the U.S. Federal Reserve.

    In October, Hong Kong’s home prices plunged to a five-year low as interest rate hikes pushed up borrowing costs. 

    Earlier this month, Hong Kong’s monetary authority raised the base interest rate to 5.5%, after the U.S. central bank hiked the fed funds rate to 5% to 5.25%

    The ULI report said “a net outflow of population” and “less optimistic view” on the local property market also brought Hong Kong’s median home price down by 8.7% — from 2021’s $1.27 million to about $1.16 million in 2022. 

    Hang Lung Properties says Hong Kong property recovery will not be 'V-shaped'

    Meanwhile, Singapore’s private homes overtook Hong Kong’s as the most expensive in Asia-Pacific, with the median price increasing over 8% in the past year, said the report.

    Just last month, Singapore raised taxes for property purchases amid concerns that surging prices “could run ahead of economic fundamentals.”

    Most expensive cities for private homes in Asia-Pacific

    City Median housing price per unit
    Singapore $1,200,087
    Hong Kong $1,155,760
    Sydney $980,209
    Melbourne $716,200
    Shenzhen $626,964

    Source: Urban Land Institute Asia Pacific Centre for Housing

    In a new round of cooling measures, the Singapore government said local and foreign buyers of residential properties will have to pay higher taxes, known locally as additional buyers’ stamp duties. 

    However, the report added that Hong Kong’s private homes are still the most expensive on a per square meter basis — costing $19,768 and “well over twice” the median figures for Singapore, Shenzhen and Beijing. 

    Rental prices 

    Singapore’s private rental homes have the highest monthly rent in the region, having increased by nearly 30% in 2022. 

    ULI attributed the increase in rent and home prices to various factors such as an increase in migrants, a slowdown in building completion and young professionals moving out of their multi-generational family homes for more space and freedom. 

    Most expensive cities for private rental in Asia-Pacific

    City Median monthly rent per unit
    Singapore $2,596
    Sydney houses $1,958
    Sydney apartments $1,732
    Hong Kong $1,686
    Brisbane houses $1,657

    Source: Urban Land Institute Asia Pacific Centre for Housing

    Private home prices saw a decline in Sydney and Melbourne as more people moved back to regional cities and an “unprecedented” 11 interest rate hikes in 12 months, the report added.

    But houses and apartments across Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane saw an increase in the median monthly rent.

    Sydney’s house rentals cost a monthly average of $1,958 while apartment rentals were at $1,732.

    “There has been a reversal of population movement back to capital cities since the end of Covid-19 in 2022. This was likely one of the reasons for the increase in median rent in the country,” David Faulkner, ULI’s president for Asia-Pacific told CNBC.

    Home attainability

    Despite Singapore’s private homes being the most expensive in the region, the city state also has the highest homeownership rate at 89.3%. 

    That’s in spite of a 7.9% increase of median HDB prices from 2021 to 2022, with the ratio of median HDB price to median annual income also rising from 4.5 to 4.7. HDB, or the Housing Development Board, is Singapore’s public housing authority.

    For private homes in Singapore, the ratio is 13.7. 

    How rent control policies affect housing affordability

    “In general, homeownership is considered unaffordable when the ratio of the median home price to median annual household income exceeds five,” said the report. 

    “By this standard, only Singapore’s Housing Development Board (HDB) units and apartment units in Melbourne and Brisbane, Australia, are considered affordable.” 

    Where homes are most unaffordable in Asia-Pacific

    City Median home price to median annual household income ratio
    Shenzhen, China 35
    Ho Chi Minh, Vietnam 32.5
    Beijing, China 29.3
    Da Nang, Vietnam 26.7
    Hong Kong, China 26.5

    Source: Urban Land Institute Asia Pacific Centre for Housing

    Similar to last year’s index, mainland Chinese cities have among the lowest ranks in terms of home attainability. 

    The report noted that the homeownership rate in China has “declined substantially” in the past 10 years.

    “The cities’ home attainability is directly tied to the amount of new housing supply relative to increase in population,” it added. 

    “For Shenzhen, its population increased by more than 7 million in the 12-year period from 2010 to 2022 … yet its new housing stock increased by only 31 million square meters, the smallest increase [among Chinese cities] during the same period.”

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  • Australian banks have shied away from investment opportunities in share market: Investment advisor

    Australian banks have shied away from investment opportunities in share market: Investment advisor

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    Adam Dawes of Shaw and Partners Australian banks are mainly “deposit takers” and “home loan takers,” but the Commonwealth Bank of Australia is “looking to be better placed.”

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  • U.S. review of China tariffs won’t depend on trade ‘breakthrough:’ deputy U.S. trade representative

    U.S. review of China tariffs won’t depend on trade ‘breakthrough:’ deputy U.S. trade representative

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    A Chinese and US national flag hang on a fence at an international school in Beijing on December 6, 2018. (Photo by Fred DUFOUR / AFP) (Photo by FRED DUFOUR/AFP via Getty Images)

    Fred Dufour | Afp | Getty Images

    The United States is taking an analytical approach to its review of whether to keep tariffs on Chinese goods in place and will not base outcomes on any “breakthrough” in U.S.-China trade relations, Deputy U.S. Trade Representative Sarah Bianchi told Reuters.

    The Biden administration is not assuming any such breakthrough will happen, but will continue dialogue with China at various levels, Bianchi said in an interview on Saturday as a ministerial meeting of the U.S.-led Indo Pacific Economic Framework talks wrapped up.

    “We are conducting the review from an analytical perspective. We’re not base-casing any breakthrough in the trade relationship” with China as part of the review, Bianchi said. “We’re not assuming that that will happen.”

    Instead, USTR is continuing to study industry and stakeholder comments on the duties consulting with the U.S. Commerce Department, the Treasury and other agencies to determine which categories make strategic sense, she said.

    “We’re taking a look at what’s economically sound,” added Bianchi, who oversees USTR’s engagement in Asia.

    Former U.S. President Donald Trump imposed the tariffs in 2018 and 2019 on thousands of imports from China valued at some $370 billion at the time, after a “Section 301” investigation found that China was misappropriating U.S. intellectual property and coercing U.S. companies to transfer sensitive technology to do business.

    The duties currently range from 7.5% on many consumer goods to 25% on vehicles, industrial components, semiconductors and other electronics. Among the major categories that escaped tariffs were cellphones, laptop computers and videogame consoles.

    The review was required by Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 four years after the tariffs were first imposed and it started with initial notification steps in May 2022. Bianchi declined to say when the review would be completed, but added that this was “reasonable” by the end of 2023.

    Tariff exclusions on 352 import categories from China were extended by USTR at the end of 2022 for another nine months and are now set to expire on Sept. 30. Some trade experts in Washington view that date as a possible decision point in the tariff review.

    Inflation arguments

    As the review got underway last May, some Biden administration officials argued in favor of lifting some of the tariffs as the Biden administration struggled to contain high inflation.

    U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen that eliminating “non-strategic” tariffs would reduce costs for specific goods, while Trade Representative Katherine Tai argued that the duties represent “significant leverage” over China.

    Bianchi noted that inflation-related discussions over the tariffs have died down as inflation has eased.

    Chinese Commerce Minister Wang Wentao raised objections the Section 301 tariffs as an issue of concern during a meeting with Tai in Detroit on the sidelines of an Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation trade meeting.

    Wang’s meeting with Tai and Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo the day before were the first cabinet-level exchanges between Washington and Beijing in months amid a series of trade and national security setbacks, including the U.S. downing of a Chinese spy balloon that transited the continental U.S.

    Bianchi said it was important to the global economy for the U.S. and China to maintain a healthy dialogue, even if they disagree.

    “These are the two largest economies in the world and we need to be talking at different levels, even if they’re difficult conversations,” she said.

    “On trade right now, there aren’t many similar perspectives,” she said of the U.S. and China. “I’m not sure where it will lead, but I think the conversations will continue to be a difficult, but I think it’s important that we have them.” 

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  • Consumers are starting to fire up China’s pandemic-battered economy, two ETF experts find

    Consumers are starting to fire up China’s pandemic-battered economy, two ETF experts find

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    China’s pandemic-battered economy is starting to see consumers open their wallets wider, according to KraneShares’ Brendan Ahern.

    “We’re seeing the incremental rebound from the Chinese consumer,” the firm’s chief investment officer told “ETF Edge” this week. “[But] it’s not like turning on a light switch.”

    The National Bureau of Statistics of China reports retail sales have been increasing since last November.

    Ahern, who’s involved with the firm’s China-focused ETFs, expects quarterly earnings for Chinese companies to improve with each consecutive quarter — a forecast that may already be unfolding.

    Tech giants Baidu and Tencent beat revenue expectations for the fiscal first quarter of 2023. Alibaba, on the other hand, missed revenue estimates.

    “We’re actually hearing that for many of the companies … in the management calls, they’re speaking to how Q2 already is outpacing Q1, which outpaced Q4 of last year,” Ahern said.

    China’s reopening is also anticipated to have a positive impact on the airline industry.

    Singapore Airlines, Japan’s All Nippon Airways and Japan Airlines all noted demand from China as a factor in future earnings while reporting net profits earlier this month for the financial year ended March 2023.

    GraniteShares’ Will Rhind sees a similar growth trajectory.

    “Domestic travel [is] rebounding … but we’ve yet to see that from the international sector,” the ETF provider’s CEO said. “It will come, but maybe just not yet.”

    Rhind told CNBC in a special interview later in the week that international travel from China could start to rebound this summer following a sluggish start.

    His forecast comes as a government-backed epidemiologist said the country’s new Covid wave could infect 65 million a week by the end of next month.

    Rhind believes the recent Covid surge won’t affect the reopening’s trajectory, adding past lockdowns seen across China are “very, very much unlikely to be repeated.”

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  • China’s industrial profits tumble 18% in April as demand sputters

    China’s industrial profits tumble 18% in April as demand sputters

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    Employees work on an electronics production line on Feb. 2, 2023, at a factory in Longyan, Fujian province in China.

    China News Service | China News Service | Getty Images

    Profits at China’s industrial firms slumped in the first four months of 2023, official data showed on Saturday, as companies continued to struggle with margin pressures and soft demand amid a faltering economic recovery.

    Profits fell 20.6% in January-April from a year earlier, compared with a 21.4% decline in the first three months, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

    In April alone, industrial firms posted a 18.2% drop in profit year-on-year, according to the NBS, which only occasionally gives monthly figures. Profits shrank 19.2% in March.

    “Overall, today’s data shows that industrial enterprises, especially private and equity-owned enterprises, continue to be affected by a combination of unfavourable factors such as the base effect, short-term pressure on the economic recovery and the downward trend of PPI (producer prices),” said Bruce Pang, chief economist at Jones Lang Lasalle.

    Chinese companies are struggling with both weak demand at home and softening demand in the country’s major export markets. Producer deflation deepened in April, with the producer price index (PPI) falling at the fastest clip since May 2020.

    Lenovo, the world’s largest PC maker, said this week that quarterly revenue and profit tanked in January-March and it had cut 8% to 9% of its workforce to reduce costs, as global demand for personal computers (PCs) continued to slump.

    Producers of steel and other industrial metals are also hurting. Prices for steel reinforcing bars used in construction hit the lowest level in three years this week, and only a third of the country’s mills are currently operating at a profit, according to consultancy Mysteel.

    “There is still some pressure felt in May due to the difference between the purchase and sales prices, with steel prices falling in the month because of the slower-than-expected demand recovery,” Baosteel, a subsidiary of the world’s largest steelmaker-China Baowu Steel Group, said in an investor interactive platform on May 22.

    Foreign firms saw their profits slide 16.2% in January-April from a year earlier, while private-sector firms recorded a 22.5% plunge, according to a breakdown of the data.

    Profits sagged for 27 of 41 major industrial sectors during the period, with the ferrous metal smelting and rolling processing industry reporting the biggest slump at 99.4%.

    In the next stage, China will focus on restoring and expanding demand, further improve the level of production and marketing, and boost business confidence, NBS statistician Sun Xiao said.

    The grim profit readings came after a batch of April economic indicators, spanning industrial output, retail sales and property investment, suggested that a recovery in the world’s second-largest economy is losing momentum.

    Beijing has set a modest growth target of around 5% for this year. Signs of a brisk recovery in the wake of the country’s abrupt end of Covid curbs late last year had prompted many institutions including the World Bank to raise their China growth estimates for 2023.

    Nonetheless, some investment banks have recently lowered their 2023 China growth forecasts after the April data disappointment, with Nomura ratcheting down its prediction to 5.5% from 5.9% previously and Barclays revising its view down to 5.3% from 5.6%.

    Earlier this month, Premier Li Qiang vowed more targeted measures to expand domestic demand and stabilize external demand in an effort to promote a sustained economic rebound.

    Industrial profit numbers cover firms with annual revenues of at least 20 million yuan ($2.89 million) from their main operations.

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  • U.S., China’s top commerce officials meet to discuss trade concerns

    U.S., China’s top commerce officials meet to discuss trade concerns

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    The U.S. and China flags stand behind a microphone at the U.S. Embassy in Beijing on April 9, 2009.

    Frederic J. Brown | AFP | Getty Images

    U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo sat down with her Chinese counterpart Wang Wentao in Washington D.C. on Thursday to discuss “concerns” surrounding bilateral trade.

    Marking the first cabinet-level exchange between the two countries in months, the U.S. talked about American companies operating in China.

    According to a readout by the Commerce Department, “The two had candid and substantive discussions on issues relating to the U.S.-China commercial relationship, including the overall environment in both countries for trade and investment and areas for potential cooperation.”

    Raimondo also “raised concerns about the recent spate of PRC [People’s Republic of China] actions taken against U.S. companies operating in the PRC,” it said.

    The bilateral exchange between Raimondo and Wang comes as market observers keep a close eye on whether the U.S. will curb American investments into China, as relations between the world’s largest economies sour.

    Read more about China from CNBC Pro

    The Group of Seven leaders met Hiroshima over the weekend, and vowed to “de-risk and diversify” from Chinese reliance, adding that some of Beijing’s practices “distort the global economy.”

    The high-level talks come as China reportedly conducted inspections on U.S. audit firms in the mainland over national security breaches.

    Earlier this week, China announced it will ban some purchases of products from U.S. memory chipmaker Micron — barring operators of “critical information infrastructure” in China after a security review conducted by the Cyberspace Administration of China.

    In response, the U.S. Commerce Department’s spokesperson said, “We firmly oppose restrictions that have no basis in fact.” He said the department will engage with the Chinese government to “detail” its position and seek clarity.

    In the release published by China’s Ministry of Commerce after his meeting with Raimondo, Wang also raised concerns over U.S. policies on semiconductors and export controls.

    “The two sides agreed to establish communication channels to maintain and strengthen exchanges on specific economic and trade concerns and cooperation matters,” it said.

    Wang is expected to meet U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai during his visit to the U.S. where he is set to attend the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation trade ministers’ meeting.

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  • HDFC-HDFC Bank merger: It’s progressing very well, says HDFC CEO

    HDFC-HDFC Bank merger: It’s progressing very well, says HDFC CEO

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    Keki Mistry of the housing finance company says the merger should be completed by early July.

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  • Indian banks are among those in the best shape, says asset management firm

    Indian banks are among those in the best shape, says asset management firm

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    Radhika Gupta of Edelweiss Asset Management discusses two areas of interest in its portfolio.

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  • China’s Lenovo shrugs off concerns that global PC market is shrinking

    China’s Lenovo shrugs off concerns that global PC market is shrinking

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    Revenues for the world’s largest PC-maker Lenovo fell for a third consecutive quarter as global demand for personal computers continue to slump, but the company is not worried, says CFO Wong Wai-Ming.

    “We are number one in PC. Clearly, when the market actually returns back to more normal, we will definitely be growing,” Wong Wai-Ming, CFO of Lenovo, told CNBC.

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    He added that the company is actually seeing higher growth in other businesses such as infrastructure solutions and services.

    In its latest earnings report on Wednesday, Lenovo said it expects “the PC market will return to growth” in the second half 2023.

    The company posted a revenue decline in the January to March quarter. Revenue in the quarter amounted to $12.63 billion, down 24% from a year ago and marked the third consecutive quarter of year-on-year decline.

    “Fiscal year Q4 was the most challenging quarter of the year given pressures from both the PC market and the global economy,” said Lenovo in the earnings report.

    Read more about tech and crypto from CNBC Pro

    But the CFO is optimistic that its non-PC businesses — devices, infrastructure solutions as well as solutions & services — can help diversify the business.

    “Our revenue on a full year basis in fact didn’t actually drop that much because the other two business groups have been driving significant growth in part by the infrastructure business. The margin has also been mitigated or compensated by our significant growth in our services business,” said Wong.

    Lenovo’s non-PC businesses grew 7% and now consist of nearly 40% of total revenue for the full year through March. The other 60% of revenue still comes from the PC business.

    “Our non-PC businesses’ revenue mix increased to nearly 40%. Our clear strategy is working, and our operation is resilient, even in the face of global uncertainties,” said Yuanqing Yang, chairman and CEO of Lenovo Group during the earnings call. “Going forward, we will continue to invest in [research and development] to capture the next wave of growth opportunities, so we are well prepared for the future.”

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    U.S.-China chip tensions have no 'material impact' on Lenovo's business, says CFO

    Lenovo’s devices revenue declined 33% year-to-year in the first quarter.

    But Wong is optimistic about artificial intelligence driving the firm’s devices business. The acceleration of digitization, AI and chatbots “actually require devices” to leverage them, Wong told CNBC.

    “Eventually we will have three major business growth driving the revenue rather than what we had in the past — just having PC as our primary driver. We will over time have three business groups driving profitability,” said Wong.

    Lenovo’s shares were down 1.8% in Thursday morning trade.

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  • Japan and South Korea have a lot at stake in a free and open South China Sea

    Japan and South Korea have a lot at stake in a free and open South China Sea

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    China has so far not acted in an aggressive manner toward shipping in the South China Sea, but the very potential of action creates a clear threat to the economies of Japan and South Korea.

    Kazuhiro Nogi | AFP | Getty Images

    The following commentary is from Kevin Klowden, chief global strategist of Milken Institute.

    News coverage of the weekend’s Group of Seven meetings focused on Ukraine, but China’s rising global presence was the other big topic on the G7 agenda. For two of East Asia’s biggest economies, in particular, the implications of that rise are critically important.

    China wants to be the great military and political power of East Asia. Nowhere is that more evident than in President Xi Jinping’s “nine-dash” declaration, through which Beijing claims sovereignty over almost all the South China Sea. And of all the countries with cause to be concerned about that claim, perhaps none have more on the line than Japan and South Korea.

    Most of the world is focused on the resource and military implications of Chinese claims to the islands in the region, and Beijing’s development of what is becoming the world’s largest navy. For Japan and South Korea, the threat to their supply chains and energy imports is a far more real and present issue.

    In particular, Japan and South Korea are concerned about Chinese declarations which invoke not only the right to inspect cargo, but also the ability to restrict traffic. Neither Japan nor South Korea has any political interest in the ownership of the Spratly Islands, or in China replacing the United States as a dominant naval power. However, they have a strong economic stake in moving their energy imports and manufacturing components without fear of restriction. Even in a non-wartime situation, China has taken the position that the South China Sea is a controlled territory rather than open international waters under Chinese guardianship.

    China has so far not acted in an aggressive manner toward shipping in the sea, but the very potential of action creates a clear threat to the economies of Japan and South Korea. China wouldn’t even have to directly stop vessels — it could merely electronically track specific cargo, or carry out inspections or diversions. Such actions would raise the specter of unpredictability and significantly rising costs.

    For Japan and South Korea, the role taken by the United States in the post-World War II period was far less disruptive, not only because of their alliance but, more importantly, because the United States acted as a guarantor of free trade and protected movement through the corridor.

    Linking the two countries to trading partners in Southeast Asia, India, and beyond is going to increase rather than decrease in importance.

    Kevin Klowden

    Milken Institute

    Few people outside Japan or South Korea focus on or understand just how significant the South China Sea is when it comes to regional and even global energy supplies. Significantly, the sea is estimated to carry 30% of the world’s crude oil, supplying China and providing a vital lifeline for the energy-dependent economies of South Korea and Japan.

    For Japan, the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and subsequent nuclear accident at Fukushima only exacerbated that dependence. The resulting curtailment of Japan’s nuclear program has left the country dependent on energy imports, with as much as 98% of Japanese oil coming from the Middle East.

    In many ways, South Korea is even more dependent on energy imports than Japan, making oil and natural gas imports especially significant.

    The South China Sea is important in more than just energy. It also serves as a key passageway for Japan and South Korea’s global supply chains. Estimates suggest that the sea carries between 20% and 33% of global trade; for Japan, that figure reaches as much as 40%.

    As global supply chains regionalize, the role of the South China Sea in the Japanese and South Korean economies will only grow. Linking the two countries to trading partners in Southeast Asia, India, and beyond is going to increase rather than decrease in importance.

    Japan and South Korea have been able to rely on the stability of the South China Sea as a conduit for driving their economic growth, even as the global political situation has changed over the decades. Significant shifts, including the Vietnam War and the end of the Cold War, haven’t stopped trade in the sea from growing more and more important.

    As the United States balances commitments in Europe, Asia and elsewhere, the three strongest economies of East Asia — China included — all have a vested interest in ensuring the stability of trade, supply chains and energy flows.

    For South Korea and Japan, trade remains stable in the South China Sea for now. But with China increasingly looking to assert itself and change the status quo in its favor, it’s essential that both countries ask themselves: How much are they willing and able to concede to China in the region before it becomes untenable? And are they prepared with alternatives that will allow them to compete economically?

    Knowing the answers to those questions and being prepared for a more Chinese-dominant future in the South China Sea is important for all three countries — even if the status quo holds for now.

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  • Isolating China will be ‘impossible and dangerous,’ analyst says, as the G-7 gets tough on Beijing

    Isolating China will be ‘impossible and dangerous,’ analyst says, as the G-7 gets tough on Beijing

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    U.S. President Joe Biden wants to de-risk from China.

    Mandel Ngan | Afp | Getty Images

    The G-7 issued its strongest ever message to China over the weekend, but an analyst warned that isolating Beijing is “impossible” and “dangerous.”

    The world’s largest seven economies agreed at a summit in Hiroshima, Japan, to de-risk and diversify their supply chains away from China, amid concerns of economic coercion. There has been a growing awareness among Western nations that their economies rely heavily on China. The coronavirus pandemic shed light on the intricacies of critical supply chains, but the ongoing war in Ukraine has further exacerbated this reality.

    In a joint statement after the summit, the Group of Seven said: “Our policy approaches are not designed to harm China nor do we seek to thwart China’s economic progress and development. … At the same time, we recognize that economic resilience requires de-risking and diversifying.”

    In the wake of the G-7 announcement, China summoned the Japanese ambassador and ordered companies to stop buying from American chipmaker Micron.

    Giuliano Noci, vice-rector for China for Politecnico di Milano, on Monday told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” that the G-7 showed a “unitarian” perspective against China.

    “[President Joe] Biden spoke in terms of de-risking and not in terms of decoupling. Decoupling was the magic word of the United States still a month ago, but it is very clear that, given the role played by the Chinese market for several products, given the level of intertwines among supply chains, it is almost impossible to decouple,” Noci said.

    De-risking refers to easing some of the dependencies on China, rather than totally breaking the relationship.

    “It should be clear that isolating China will be not only, on the one hand, impossible but also, on the other hand, dangerous,” Noci said.

    The shift from the Biden administration perhaps highlights the realization that it would take a great deal of effort and economic pain to separate its economy from that of China.

    Figures from the United States Census Bureau showed that the U.S. recorded a trade deficit in goods with China of about $383 billion in 2022. The data from last year showed a record high in trade between the nations and is evidence of the difficulties of separating their economies.

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    G-7 leaders went further in expressing their concerns about the situation in the East and South China Seas and in supporting a “no change” in the status quo of Taiwan.

    “There is no legal basis for China’s expansive maritime claims in the South China Sea, and we oppose China’s militarization activities in the region,” they said.

    Speaking to CNBC, Noci said, “we are going beyond a unipolar world” that had the U.S. as its superpower, and entering a bipolar or multipolar world.

    British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said China was the world’s greatest challenge to security and prosperity. The Chinese Embassy in London described this as “malicious slanders in disregard of the facts,” according to Reuters.

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  • China chip stocks rally after Beijing said U.S. chip giant Micron is ‘major security risk’

    China chip stocks rally after Beijing said U.S. chip giant Micron is ‘major security risk’

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    Micron Technology Double-Data-Rate Synchronous Random-Access Memory (SDRAM) chip

    Tomohiro Ohsumi | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    China’s chip stocks rallied on Monday morning following Beijing’s announcement to bar some purchases of products from U.S. memory chipmaker Micron.

    China’s Cyberspace Administration barred operators of “critical information infrastructure” in China from buying products from the U.S. chip giant following a security review conducted by the Cyberspace Administration of China.

    Chinese authorities said Micron products have failed its network security review, and cited “serious potential network security issues.” The firm poses a “major security risk” to China’s critical information infrastructure supply chain and affects [its] national security,” a statement said.

    Shares of Chinese chipmakers largely rose on Monday following the move: Hong Kong-listed Hua Hong Semiconductor rose as much as 3.14% on Monday, while SMIC rose 2.64%.

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    Other memory chip producers in mainland China such as GigaDevice Semiconductor and Ingenic semiconductor jumped 3.74% and 8.08% respectively.

    In response to Beijing’s announcement, the U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo told the Wall Street Journal, “We firmly oppose restrictions that have no basis in fact.” The commerce department will engage with the Chinese government to “detail” its position and seek further clarity, he added.

    Raimondo said the U.S. will engage with its key allies to address Beijing’s actions, and that such measures will cause “distortions of the memory chip market.”

    This comes as the U.S. reportedly urged South Korean chipmakers not to fill the shortfalls in China if Beijing’s ban comes into effect, the Financial Times reported.

    Shares of South Korean chipmakers SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics, both Micron rivals, rose on Monday morning.

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  • China-Taiwan tensions could grip 2024 election as Musk, Buffett and Dalio sound alarms

    China-Taiwan tensions could grip 2024 election as Musk, Buffett and Dalio sound alarms

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    Chinese tourists walk past an installation depicting Taiwan (R) and mainland China at a tourist area on Pingtan island, the closest point to Taiwan, in China’s southeast Fujian province on April 6, 2023.

    Greg Baker | AFP | Getty Images

    Fraying U.S.-China relations and rising tensions over Taiwan have influential business leaders such as Elon Musk and Warren Buffett sounding alarms about a possible invasion – a matter that will likely loom over the 2024 election.

    China is already bound to be a major issue in the U.S. campaign as President Xi Jinping pushes to expand his nation’s power. China’s policy regarding Taiwan, the world’s leader in the semiconductor industry, could end up making it an even bigger focus.

    The cross-strait strife has already provoked commentary from some top contenders in the Republican presidential primary race who have stressed the need to deter a possible Chinese invasion invasion of the island. Taiwan is also a topic of discussion during this week’s Group of Seven meeting in Japan, which President Joe Biden is attending.

    Xi has made Taiwan “reunification” a focal point of his agenda and Beijing has ramped up hostilities against the island, putting a spotlight on its importance to the global economy and conjuring fears of a major international conflict that could eclipse Russia’s devastating war in Ukraine.

    “The official policy of China is that Taiwan should be integrated. One does not need to read between the lines, one can simply read the lines,” Tesla CEO Musk said in an interview Tuesday with CNBC’s David Faber.

    “So I think there’s a certain — there’s some inevitability to the situation,” Musk said, adding that it would be bad for “any company in the world.”

    Tesla just last month announced plans to open a new factory in Shanghai that will build “Megapack” batteries.

    Musk’s remarks came one day after Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway revealed in a filing that it has completely abandoned its recently acquired stake in Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., once worth more than $4 billion. The world’s largest chipmaker, based in Hsinchu, Taiwan, produces the majority of the advanced semiconductors used by top tech companies like Apple, Amazon, Google, Qualcomm and more.

    Buffett said in recent weeks that the geopolitical strife over Taiwan was “certainly a consideration” in his decision to offload the shares over the last two fiscal quarters. And in an analyst call earlier this month, Buffett said that while the company was “marvelous,” he had “reevaluated” his position “in the light of certain things that were going on.”

    “I feel better about the capital that we’ve got deployed in Japan than Taiwan. And I wish it weren’t so, but I think that’s a reality,” he said.

    Meanwhile, Ray Dalio, founder of hedge fund titan Bridgewater Associates, in late April wrote a lengthy post on LinkedIn warning that the U.S. and China were on the “brink of war” — though he specified that that could mean a war of sanctions rather than military might.

    The apparent worries from the three members of Forbes’ list of the world’s richest people come “a little late to the party,” Longview Global senior policy analyst Dewardric McNeal said in an interview with CNBC.

    “It’s frustrating to me,” McNeal said. “We’ve been talking about this for years, and we’ve also been trying to warn against being overly dependent on China as your source for selling products [and] manufacturing products.”

    He also noted that Berkshire Hathaway still holds stock in BYD, an electric car maker based in Shenzhen, China. “Quite frankly, it is advantageous for China to scare investors away from Taiwan and damage or taint that economy, because that is one of the scenarios [in which] that they could bring Taiwan to heel without an armed intervention,” McNeal said.

    Buffett’s company has sold more than half the stake in BYD it held as of last year.

    “I don’t think an attack is imminent, but that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t be using this time to plan,” McNeal said. “And what I often see is businesses sort of talking beyond the point, hoping — hope is not a strategy — that this won’t happen.”

    The U.S. policy on Taiwan

    U.S. intelligence officials have said Xi is pushing China’s military to be ready to seize Taiwan by 2027. China is “likely preparing for a contingency to unify Taiwan with the [People’s Republic of China] by force,” the Pentagon said in 2021.

    China asserts Taiwan, a self-governing democracy, is part of its territory. It has pushed to absorb the island under the banner of “one country, two systems,” a status rejected by Taiwan’s government in Taipei.

    Beijing in recent years has steadily ramped up its pressure over Taiwan on economic and military fronts. It flexed its might as recently as last month by conducting large combat drills near Taiwan, while vowing to crack down on any hints of Taiwanese independence.

    China has not ruled out using force to take control of Taiwan.

    Taiwan’s recent interactions with the U.S. have provoked aggressive reactions from China. After then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., visited Taipei last summer, China launched missiles over Taiwan and cut off some diplomatic channels with the U.S.

    A meeting in California last month between Taiwan’s president, Tsai Ing-wen, and current House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., prompted more threats and fury from Beijing.

    McCarthy meeting Taiwan leader clearly about increased aggression from China, says Dewardric McNeal

    Even in a political climate where both major U.S. parties have been critical of China and wary of its encroaching global influence, leaders have tread carefully around the volatile subject of Taiwan. The U.S. has officially recognized a “One China” policy — that Taiwan is a part of the mainland — for more than four decades, and China has vowed to sever diplomatic ties with countries that seek official diplomacy with Taiwan.

    While Pelosi spoke of America’s interest in preserving Taiwan’s democracy on her trip to Taipei, she stressed in a Washington Post op-ed at the time that her visit “in no way contradicts the long-standing one-China policy.”

    Biden was seen to break with America’s longstanding stance on Taiwan when he said last year that U.S. forces would defend the island if it was attacked by China. The White House, however, maintains the U.S. policy on Taiwan is unchanged.

    2024 contenders weigh in

    Dalio predicted that the brinksmanship between the two superpowers will grow more aggressive over the next 18 months, in part because the 2024 U.S. election cycle could usher in a swell of anti-Chinese rhetoric.

    There’s little doubt that China will a major topic on the campaign trail. At least three Republicans who are seen as potential presidential candidates — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin and former United Nations Ambassador John Bolton — have recently embarked on trips to Asia, including Taiwan, to meet with allied leaders.

    Meanwhile, U.S. lawmakers at every level have produced an array of legislation seeking to reverse China’s growing influence, some of which has drawn accusations of fearmongering. And some of the potential presidential contenders have already weighed in with calls to meet Chinese aggression with strength.

    “Xi clearly wants to take Taiwan at some point,” DeSantis said in an interview with Nikkei while in Japan. “He’s got a certain time horizon. He could be emboldened to maybe shorten that horizon. But I think ultimately what I think China respects is strength,” DeSantis said.

    DeSantis had drawn criticism for a previous foray into geopolitics when he described Russia’s war in Ukraine as a “territorial dispute.” His views on U.S. policy toward Taiwan, in contrast, were more vague.

    Former Vice President Mike Pence: The last thing we ought to do is raise taxes

    “I think our policy should really be to shape the environment in such a way that really deters them from doing that,” DeSantis said of a potential Chinese invasion of Taiwan. “I think if they think the costs are going to outweigh whatever benefits, then I do think that they would hold off. That should be our goal.”

    DeSantis, who is gearing up to formally announce his presidential campaign next week, is seen as former President Donald Trump‘s top rival for the Republican nomination.

    Trump said last year that he expected China to invade Taiwan because Beijing is “seeing that our leaders are incompetent,” referring to the Biden administration.

    Former Vice President Mike Pence, who says he will make his own decision about running for president by next month, said in April that the U.S. should increase sales of military hardware to Taiwan, “so that the Chinese will have to count the cost before they make any move against that nation.”

    In an interview Wednesday on CNBC’s “Squawk Box,” Pence cited the cross-strait tensions as an argument against cutting U.S. military spending.

    “At a time when China is literally floating a new battleship every month and continuing military provocations across the Asia-Pacific and Russia’s waging an unprovoked war in Eastern Europe, the last thing we ought to be doing is cutting defense spending,” he said.

    Former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley, who launched her presidential campaign in February, said in a statement to CNBC, “American resolve matters to China.”

    “They are watching what we do in Ukraine. If we abandon our friends in Ukraine, as some want us to do, it will only encourage China to attack our friends in Taiwan,” Haley said.

    ‘Like trying to separate conjoined twins’

    But the political will to defend Taiwan in a Chinese invasion may clash with economic forces.

    “Almost no one realizes that the Chinese economy and the rest of the global economy are like conjoined twins. It would be like trying to separate conjoined twins,” Musk told CNBC on Tuesday. “That’s the severity of the situation. And it’s actually worse for a lot of other companies than it is for Tesla. I mean, I’m not sure where you’re going to get an iPhone, for example.”

    Some CEOs of America’s biggest banks have said they would pull their business from China if directed to do so following an invasion of Taiwan. But Musk’s characterization of the entangled global economy is no exaggeration — and much of the focus has fallen on TSMC.

    “If Taiwan were taken out, we would be like severing our brain, because the world economy will not work without [TSMC] and the chips that come out of Taiwan today,” John Rutledge, chief investment strategist of Safanad, said Wednesday on CNBC’s “Power Lunch” in response to Musk’s comments.

    David Sacks, a research fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, said on CNBC that Apple is in a “very tough position” because the most advanced chips it needs are made in a single building on TSMC’s campus in Taiwan.

    We'd be fooling ourselves if we think we can be self-reliable on chips, says CFR's David Sacks

    The company’s technological edge in the production of semiconductors, which are used in all manner of products from cars to washing machines, has led to it being a potential “single point of failure” for many companies, McNeal said.

    But he also noted that the global reliance on TSMC — including by China, which reportedly depends on the company to provide about 70% of the chips needed to fuel its electronics industry — could act as a sort of bulwark against an invasion.

    A paper from the Stimson Center on Taiwan’s “Silicon Shield” put a fine point on the issue: “Without a doubt, the first Chinese bomb or rocket that should fall on the island would make the supply chain impact of the COVID pandemic seem like a mere hiccup in comparison.”

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    There are nevertheless efforts underway to diversify the industry geographically, including through a $40 billion investment to expand TSMC chip production in Arizona.

    McNeal said the issue should not solely be centered around TSMC and possible supply chain woes.

    “For our Taiwan friends, that message says you don’t give a damn about them, their lives, their safety. You’re only in this for what it means for your bottom line,” he said. “For me personally, that’s not a message that I want to send.”

    CNBC’s Amanda Macias and Michael Bloom contributed to this report.

    Disclosure: Dewardric McNeal is a CNBC contributor.

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  • New Zealand’s finance chief denies pandering to voters’ cost-of-living concerns

    New Zealand’s finance chief denies pandering to voters’ cost-of-living concerns

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    New Zealand’s finance minister has denied the country’s new budget is aimed at placating voters ahead of the country’s next general election in October.

    Asked if the budget was short-term thinking to spend and worry about inflation and high deficits later, Grant Robertson replied: “On no, we’re absolutely doing both of those things at the same time.”

    In an exclusive interview with CNBC on Friday, Robertson said: “I think sometimes finance ministers get accused of doing all sorts of things in election years, but actually I feel my job here is to help New Zealanders through this difficult economic time, but also look to those years ahead with inflation a bit lower.”

    His comments come after New Zealand allocated millions for reconstruction following severe weather events and announced measures aimed at helping people cope with rising cost of living despite a larger-than-expected government deficit.

    The country on Thursday forecast a deficit of 7 billion New Zealand dollars ($4.37 billion) for the year ending June 2023, compared to a forecast last December for a deficit of NZ$3.6 billion.

    New Zealand is also not projected to return to surplus until 2025-2026, a year later than previously forecast. The Treasury sees inflation slowing to 3.3% by mid-2024, from the current blistering 6.7% pace.

    The Reserve Bank of New Zealand has warned that a boost in government spending could add to aggressive inflation that has already seen the central bank increase the official cash rate by 500 basis points since October 2021, Reuters reported.

    “We’ve been pretty targeted and the cost-of-living support that we put out in this budget, particularly as you noted around young families, and support for health costs and so on,” Robertson told CNBC.

    “We very much had in mind to making sure that this budget contributed to inflation coming down.”

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  • We expect 14% credit growth in the coming year, says State Bank of India

    We expect 14% credit growth in the coming year, says State Bank of India

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    Dinesh Khara of the bank says it's hopeful because of infrastructure lending initiatives, among other things.

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  • Alibaba plans to list cloud division as quarterly revenue misses expectations

    Alibaba plans to list cloud division as quarterly revenue misses expectations

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    Alibaba Cloud, the cloud computing subsidiary of Alibaba, unveiled its ChatGPT-style product Tongyi Qianwen during the 2023 Alibaba Cloud Summit on Tuesday morning.

    Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Alibaba announced plans to spin off its cloud division as a separate, publicly traded company, while the Chinese e-commerce titan’s quarterly revenue missed expectations.

    “We are taking concrete steps towards unlocking value from our businesses and are pleased to announce that our board has approved a full spin-off of the Cloud Intelligence Group via a stock dividend distribution to shareholders, with intention for it to become an independent publicly listed company,” company CEO Daniel Zhang said.

    related investing news

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    Alibaba shares were down 2.4% in early U.S. trading, following an initial drop of around 1% shortly after the earnings report was issued, as investors reacted to the company’s results and spinoff plans.

    Here’s how Alibaba did in the quarter, which ended March 31, 2022, compared with Refinitiv consensus estimates: 

    • Revenue: 208.2 billion Chinese yuan ($29.6 billion) vs. 210.2 billion yuan expected, up 2% year on year
    • Non-GAAP diluted earnings per share: 1.34 yuan vs. 2.08 yuan expected, up 35% year on year

    Restructuring effort

    The report is Alibaba’s first since splitting into six units and is also the first whose numbers reflect China’s reopening. The country in December abruptly ended its strict Covid controls, such as lockdowns and travel restrictions.

    In its report for the fiscal fourth quarter, Alibaba said it plans to spin off its cloud division as a newly listed company, subject to restructuring certain assets, liabilities and contracts, and regulatory approvals.

    Alibaba is a major player in cloud computing in its home country and increasingly seeks to compete with established U.S. giants, such as Amazon and Microsoft.

    Dan Ives, an analyst at Wedbush Securities, said Alibaba’s cloud spinoff plan was a “no brainer strategic move that we believe adds to the sum of the parts valuation on BABA.”

    “We believe this was a step in the right direction for the Alibaba story,” Ives told CNBC in emailed comments Thursday.

    The company also announced plans to raise money from outside investors for its international digital commerce group, which includes the Lazada and AliExpress online shopping platforms.

    Alibaba also said it intends to launch an initial public offering for its Cainiao Smart Logistics unit, in which it currently holds a 67% stake. The IPO is slated to complete in the next 12 to 18 months.

    Alibaba’s board approved the start of an exploration of listing its Freshippo retail business in the next six to 12 months, the company said.

    Slow start

    The year got off to a tepid start, with overall sales of online physical goods staying weak, bosses of major e-commerce platforms suggested in February.

    Retail sales in China rose by 18.4% in April, according to recent economic data. China’s economy grew 4.5% in the first quarter, achieving the fastest pace in a year. The performance was expected to boost Alibaba’s sales.

    The company operates two of the largest online shopping sites in China: Taobao and Tmall. Despite ann increase in competition, Alibaba’s results remain an important indicator of the world’s second-largest economy.

    China generates almost 50% of the world’s online shopping transactions.

    Alibaba said it saw positive domestic growth momentum in March, after a slow start to the year.

    Overall for the quarter, the company’s Taobao and Tmall platforms saw mid-single-digit declines for their online physical goods orders, but by May, they “turned positive, driven by strong growth of fashion & accessories and healthcare categories,” the company said.

    The Thursday earnings figures are the first since Alibaba announced a substantial overhaul of its organization, splitting the business into several distinct units in a development that several analysts interpreted as signaling an easing in Beijing’s crackdown on tech companies.

    The new company structure is broken down into six divisions: Cloud Intelligence Group, Taobao Tmall Commerce Group, Local Services Group, Cainiao Smart Logistics, Global Digital Commerce Group, and Digital Media and Entertainment Group.

    Generative A.I. in demand

    Meanwhile, China’s regulatory tightening of the past two years on tech has begun to ease, as Beijing’s enforcement of the rules becomes more predictable.

    Some investors are betting on a strong recovery for China’s tech giants. On Tuesday, Michael Burry of “The Big Short” fame boosted his bets on Chinese e-commerce companies Alibaba and JD.com, doubling his stake in Alibaba to $10.2 billion and his JD.com holding to $11 million.

    Alibaba, which developed its own ChatGPT-style generative artificial intelligence tool Tongyi Qianwen earlier this year, said that the system could help expand customer adoption of its cloud computing service.

    So far, Alibaba has seen ample demand for the product, with 2,000 enterprise customers applying for trial access, company management said on the firm’s earnings call.

    The firm is starting work to develop “vertical” models developed by third-party partners and developers but based on the firm’s own Tongyi Qianwen system.

    On Wednesday, Tencent’s president, Martin Lau, said the company has been “making good progress” in building foundation models, the systems which underpin AI chatbots like ChatGPT, after the company reported a solid bounce in revenue.

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  • Global debt nears record highs as rate hikes trigger ‘crisis of adaptation,’ top trade body says

    Global debt nears record highs as rate hikes trigger ‘crisis of adaptation,’ top trade body says

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    HIROSHIMA, JAPAN – MAY 17: People walk beneath a banner promoting the Group of 7 (G7) summit at a shopping street on May 17, 2023 in Hiroshima, Japan. The G7 summit will be held in Hiroshima from 19-22 May. (Photo by Tomohiro Ohsumi/Getty Images)

    Tomohiro Ohsumi | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    The global debt pile grew by $8.3 trillion in the first quarter to a near-record high of $305 trillion as the global economy faced a “crisis of adaptation” to rapid monetary policy tightening by central banks, according to a closely-watched report from the Institute of International Finance.

    The finance industry body said the combination of such high debt levels and rising interest rates has driven up the cost of servicing that debt, triggering concerns about leverage in the financial system.

    Central banks around the world have been hiking interest rates for over a year in a bid to rein in sky-high inflation. The U.S. Federal Reserve earlier this month lifted its fed funds rate to a target range of 5%-5.25%, the highest since August 2007.

    “With financial conditions at their most restrictive levels since the 2008-09 financial crisis, a credit crunch would prompt higher default rates and result in more ‘zombie firms’ — already approaching an estimated 14% of U.S.-listed firms,” the IIF said in its quarterly Global Debt Monitor report late Wednesday.

    The sharp increase in the global debt burden in the three months to the end of March marked a second consecutive quarterly increase following two quarters of steep declines during last year’s run of aggressive monetary policy tightening. Non-financial corporates and the government sector drove much of the rebound.

    “At close to $305 trillion, global debt is now $45 trillion higher than its pre-pandemic level and is expected to continue increasing rapidly: Despite concerns about a potential credit crunch following the recent turmoil in the banking sectors of the U.S. and Switzerland, government borrowing needs remain elevated,” the IIF said.

    The Washington, D.C.-based organization said aging populations, rising health care costs and substantial climate finance gaps are exerting pressure on government balance sheets. National defense spending is expected to increase over the medium term due to heightened geopolitical tensions, which would potentially affect the credit profile of both governments and corporate borrowers, the IIF projected.

    “If this trend continues, it will have significant implications for international debt markets, particularly if interest rates remain higher for longer,” the report noted.

    Total debt in emerging markets hit a new record high of more than $100 trillion, around 250% of GDP, up from $75 trillion in 2019. China, Mexico, Brazil, India and Turkey were the largest upward contributors.

    In developed markets, Japan, the U.S., France and the U.K. posted the sharpest increases over the quarter.

    Banking turmoil and a ‘crisis of adaptation’

    The rapid monetary policy tightening exposed frail liquidity positions in a number of small and mid-sized banks in the U.S. and led to a series of collapses and bailouts in recent months. The ensuing market panic eventually spread to Europe and forced the emergency sale of Swiss giant Credit Suisse to UBS.

    The IIF suggested that corporations have undergone a “crisis of adaptation” to what it termed a “new monetary regime.”

    “Although recent bank failures appear more idiosyncratic than systemic — and U.S. financial institutions carry much less debt (78% of GDP) than in the run-up to the 2007/8 crisis (110% in 2006) — fear of contagion has prompted significant deposit withdrawals from U.S. regional banks,” the IIF said.

    Basic rules of banking seem to be forgotten in the U.S. banking system, says illimity Bank CEO

    “Given the central role of regional banks in credit intermediation in the U.S., worries about their liquidity positions could result in a sharp contraction in lending to some segments, including underbanked households and businesses.”

    This contraction of credit conditions could particularly affect small businesses, the IIF said, along with causing higher default rates and more “zombie firms across the board.”

    Zombie firms are companies with earnings that are sufficient to allow it to continue operating and pay the interest on its debt, but not to pay off the debt, meaning any cash generated is immediately spent on debt. The company is therefore “neither dead nor alive.”

    “We estimate that around 14% of U.S. companies can be considered zombies, with a substantial portion of these in the healthcare and information technology sectors.”

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