ReportWire

Tag: Stock markets

  • China is considering countermeasures to Biden’s executive order

    China is considering countermeasures to Biden’s executive order

    Chinese and U.S. flags flutter near The Bund, before U.S. trade delegation meet their Chinese counterparts for talks in Shanghai, China July 30, 2019.

    Aly Song | Reuters

    BEIJING — China’s Ministry of Commerce signaled Thursday it would respond, if needed, to the Biden administration’s executive order to restrict U.S. investments in advanced Chinese technology.

    China’s Ministry of Commerce has met with businesses to understand the order’s impact, spokesperson Shu Jueting said in Mandarin, translated by CNBC.

    “On that basis, we are making a comprehensive assessment of the executive order’s impact, and will take necessary countermeasures based on the assessment’s results,” Shu said.

    U.S. President Joe Biden last week signed an executive order aimed at restricting U.S. investments into Chinese semiconductors, quantum computing and artificial intelligence companies over national security concerns.

    The Treasury is mostly responsible for implementation, and is currently gathering public comments in order to form a draft regulation.

    When asked about U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo’s plans to visit China, Shu declined to confirm a time, but said the two countries remained in close communication.

    Source link

  • Target shares pop nearly 3% after earnings. Here’s what the pros say to do next

    Target shares pop nearly 3% after earnings. Here’s what the pros say to do next

    Source link

  • Pride Month backlash hurt Target’s sales. They fell for the first time in six years | CNN Business

    Pride Month backlash hurt Target’s sales. They fell for the first time in six years | CNN Business


    New York
    CNN
     — 

    Target’s quarterly sales fell for the first time in six years as consumers pulled back on discretionary goods and fierce right-wing backlash to Target’s Pride Month collection took a toll on the brand.

    Target’s sales at stores open for at least one year dropped 5.4% last quarter, including a 10.5% drop online. The company also cut its annual sales forecast.

    Target’s foot traffic dropped 4.8% last quarter, “likely a function of a mix that skews too discretionary, as well as the Pride merchandise issues,” Michael Baker, an analyst at DA Davidson, said in a note to clients.

    Still, Target’s profit came in higher than Wall Street’s expectations, and the stock rose 5% during early trading Wednesday. Heading into Wednesday, Target’s stock dropped 27% over the past year.

    Target was one of the strongest-performing retailers during the pandemic as consumers flocked to stores and its website while stuck at home. But Target has slipped as consumers change their spending patterns.

    Americans are spending more on experiences, including concerts and movies, and less on nonessential items. Home Depot

    (HD)
    said Tuesday that consumers took on fewer major home renovation projects.

    Target

    (TGT)
    is over-exposed to non-essential merchandise compared to competitors such as Walmart

    (WMT)
    and Costco

    (COST)
    . More than half of Target

    (TGT)
    ’s merchandise is discretionary – clothing, home decor, electronics, toys, party supplies and other non-essentials. The company in recent years has added more food and essentials to its stores.

    “Consumers are choosing to increase spending on services like leisure, travel, entertainment and food away from home, putting near-term pressure on discretionary products,” CEO Brian Cornell said on a call with analysts Wednesday.

    Cornell said that store theft and safety have also become bigger concerns.

    “Safety incidents associated with [theft] are moving in the wrong direction,” Cornell said. “During the first 5 months of this year, our stores saw a 120% increase in theft incidents involving violence or threats of violence.”

    Target has been embroiled in the political culture wars over gender and sexual orientation.

    Beginning in May, Target also faced a homophobic campaign that went viral on social media over its annual Pride Month clothing collection. Fueled by far-right personalities, the anti-LGBTQ campaign spread misleading information about the Pride Month products.

    The campaign became hostile, with violent threats levied against Target employees and instances of damaged products and displays in stores. Target said on May 24 that it was removing certain items that caused the most “volatile” reaction from opponents to protect its workers’ safety.

    But Target’s response frustrated supporters of gay and transgender rights, who said the company caved to bigoted pressure.

    “The strong reaction to this year’s Pride assortment” impacted sales during the quarter, Christina Hennington, Target’s chief growth officer, said Wednesday.

    Target will adjust its Pride Month collection next year, including potential changes to timing, placement in stores and the mix of brands it sells.

    “The reaction is a signal for us to pause, adapt and learn,” she said.

    Other brands, such as Bud Light, have faced right-wing backlash over attempts to be more inclusive.

    America’s former top-selling beer has targeted by right-wing media and anti-trans commentators since April, after sponsoring transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney.

    The controversy cost Bud Light’s parent company about $395 million in lost US sales and Bud Light lost its top beer spot to Modelo.

    Source link

  • Top Buffett stock bulks ups its carbon capture business as demand grows for this technology

    Top Buffett stock bulks ups its carbon capture business as demand grows for this technology

    Source link

  • China may ‘miss the 5%’ growth target this year as downside risks spread

    China may ‘miss the 5%’ growth target this year as downside risks spread

    A man looks at his smartphone inside a mall in Beijing on August 15, 2023.

    Greg Baker | Afp | Getty Images

    BEIJING — Without more stimulus, China is increasingly likely to miss its growth target of around 5% this year, economists said.

    The country on Tuesday suspended releases of data on youth unemployment, which had recently soared to records. Other data for July showed a broad slowdown, worsened by the property market slump.

    “Prolonged weakness in property construction will add to destocking pressures in the industrial space and depress consumption demand as well,” Tao Wang, head of Asia economics and chief China economist at UBS Investment Bank, said in a note.

    “In such a case, economic momentum may stay subdued in the rest of the year and China may miss this year’s growth target of around 5%,” she said. “Deflation pressures could persist longer in such a scenario. The economy would then warrant much stronger or unconventional policies to revive.”

    China is the world’s second-largest economy, and accounted for nearly 18% of global GDP in 2022, according to World Bank data.

    Beijing should play the role of lender of last resort to support some major developers and financial institutions in trouble, and should play the role of spender of last resort to boost aggregate demand.

    “In our view, Beijing should play the role of lender of last resort to support some major developers and financial institutions in trouble, and should play the role of spender of last resort to boost aggregate demand,” Nomura’s Chief China Economist Ting Lu and a team said in a report Tuesday.

    “We also see bigger downside risk to our 4.9% y-o-y growth forecast for both Q3 and Q4, and it is increasingly possible that annual GDP growth this year will miss the 5.0% mark,” the report said.

    Headline risk

    Beijing has acknowledged economic challenges and signaled more policy support. The People’s Bank of China unexpectedly cut key rates on Tuesday.

    But the moves need time to take effect and haven’t been enough to bolster market confidence so far, especially as worrisome headlines pick up.

    “In August, contagion fears around property developers and default risk in the trust industry have also pushed sentiment lower, setting a higher bar for stimulus to be effective,” said Louise Loo, lead economist at Oxford Economics.

    A firmer policy shift could come in the fourth quarter, when a top-level meeting known as the “Third Plenum” is expected to be held, Loo said.

    Once-healthy giant developer Country Garden is now on the brink of default. In other news this month, Zhongrong International Trust missed payments to three mainland China-listed companies, according to disclosures accessed via Wind Information.

    The current weakness of localities’ finances prevents Beijing from utilizing fiscal policy to support the economy.

    Zhongrong did not immediately respond to a CNBC request for comment. Its website warned in a notice dated Aug. 13 of fraudulent claims that it was no longer able to operate.

    Even if all of Zhongrong’s 630 billion yuan ($86.5 billion) in assets — plus leverage — were in trouble, that’s “not a systemically threatening number” for China’s 21 trillion yuan trust industry and 315 trillion yuan banking system, Xiangrong Yu, Citi’s chief China economist said in a note.

    He added the trust firm and its parent company are “much less connected in the financial system compared with previous cases such as Baoshang Bank and Anbang Group.”

    Growth vs. national security

    Chinese authorities’ initial crackdown on real estate developers in 2020 was an attempt to curb their high reliance on growth. Beijing emphasized this year that defusing financial risks is one of its priorities. This year, the country is also in the process of reorganizing its financial regulatory bodies.

    As local government debt remained high, cash levels have fallen, according to a Rhodium report in June. It noted regional authorities have spent money to buy land, to fill demand that once came from developers.

    “The current weakness of localities’ finances prevents Beijing from utilizing fiscal policy to support the economy,” Rhodium analysts said.

    Markets see any policy delay from China as policy inaction, economist says

    For many, especially overseas investors, prolonged apparent inaction can affirm the Chinese government has firmly shifted its priorities as well.

    “A tepid response to the cratering housing market would indicate that the top leadership’s reduced emphasis on economic growth — in favor of priorities like national security and technological self-sufficiency — is more far-reaching than we anticipated,” Gabriel Wildau, managing director at consulting firm Teneo, said in a report Tuesday.

    “Our base case is that policymakers will significantly escalate housing stimulus in coming months, leading to improving sales and construction volumes by year end,” Wildau said.

    Read more about China from CNBC Pro

    Many of China’s recent troubles are not necessarily new. China has been in a multi-year process to try to improve the long-term sustainability of its economy, and shift away from reliance on investment into sectors such as infrastructure and real estate, and toward consumption.

    “The challenge for policymakers is to calibrate stimulus that avoids an economic hard-landing on one hand, but that also smoothly transitions property and investments to their nascent downtrend on the other,” said Loo from Oxford Economics.

    “In the years to come, China’s emerging strategic sectors — including green economy sectors, digital economy, advanced and semiconductor manufacturing — will continue to be the ones to watch as China transitions to new growth drivers,” Loo said.

    She pointed out that high-tech manufacturing’s year-to-date average year-on-year growth of 7.4% has outpaced industrial production’s roughly 3.8% pace.

    Source link

  • Banks are well capitalized, says former Wells Fargo CEO

    Banks are well capitalized, says former Wells Fargo CEO

    Share

    Dick Kovacevich, former Wells Fargo CEO, joins ‘Squawk on the Street’ to discuss Fitch’s warning of potential bank downgrades, the solution to the banks’ positions, and what a Fitch downgrade would do to banks.

    04:42

    Tue, Aug 15 202312:16 PM EDT

    Source link

  • China reports big data miss in July, stops releasing youth unemployment numbers

    China reports big data miss in July, stops releasing youth unemployment numbers

    China’s massive real estate market has struggled after decades of debt-fueled, rapid growth.

    Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    BEIJING — China reported July data that broadly missed expectations. The National Bureau of Statistics report also did not include the unemployment figure for young people, which has soared to record highs in recent months.

    Retail sales rose by 2.5% in July from a year ago, below expectations for a 4.5% increase, according to analysts polled by Reuters.

    Industrial production rose by 3.7% in July from a year ago, below the 4.4% increase analysts had expected.

    Fixed asset investment rose by 3.4% for the first seven months of the year from a year ago, below the 3.8% forecast by the Reuters poll.

    The urban unemployment rate ticked up to 5.3% in July from 5.2% in June.

    We must intensify the role of macro policies in regulating the economy and make solid efforts to expand domestic demand, shore up confidence and prevent risks.

    National Bureau of Statistics

    Contrary to prior reports, the latest release did not break down unemployment by age. The age 16 to 24 category has seen unemployment far above the overall jobless rate, reaching a record high of 21.3% in June.

    A spokesperson for the National Bureau of Statistics said the bureau is suspending the youth unemployment number release due to economic and social changes, and is reassessing its methodology.

    On a year-to-date basis, real estate investment fell by 8.5% from a year ago as of July, a greater decline than as of June.

    Online retail sales of physical goods rose by 6.6% in July from a year ago, a sharp slowdown from double-digit increases in recent months, according to CNBC calculations of official data.

    Within retail sales, catering saw the biggest increase of 15.8%, while sports and entertainment products saw a 2.6% year-on-year increase. Big-ticket items such as autos and home appliances saw sales declines in July from a year ago.

    Jewelry saw sales drop by 10% during that time.

    Retail sales posted the slowest growth since a decline in December, according to official data.

    The statistics bureau noted an “intricate and complicated” situation overseas and domestically, and “insufficient” domestic demand.

    “We must intensify the role of macro policies in regulating the economy and make solid efforts to expand domestic demand, shore up confidence and prevent risks,” the bureau said in an English-language release.

    Slowing growth, deflation concerns

    After an initial rebound from the pandemic earlier this year, China’s economy has come to grips with long-standing problems and slowing global demand for its products.

    Exports plunged by 14.5% year-on-year in July, following a 12.4% drop in June. Factory activity contracted for a fourth-straight month in July, according to an official survey.

    Domestic demand has remained muted outside of summer tourism. Imports fell by 12.4% year-on-year in July and have mostly declined each month from the same period in 2022.

    The consumer price index fell in July, adding to growing worries about deflation.

    Weighing on the economy is an ongoing slump in the massive real estate sector. Property market troubles have come to the forefront again with developer Country Garden now on the brink of default.

    Top leaders in late July signaled a shift away from its crackdown on real estate speculation. Authorities have announced a raft of measures to boost consumption, private sector investment and foreign investment.

    But the overall approach to additional stimulus has been cautious, especially in real estate.

    Read more about China from CNBC Pro

    “Beijing has already done some things to ease the tensions in the property sector, but it has been too slow and too little, in our view,” Ting Lu, chief China economist at Nomura said in a note Monday.

    “We believe that at some point in time Beijing will be compelled to take more measures to stem the downward spiral.”

    Factory activity in July picked up to its highest since March, while core CPI, that strips out food and energy prices, actually posted its fastest increase in July since January.

    This is breaking news. Please check back for updates.

    Source link

  • Nvidia stock jumps 7% after Morgan Stanley says chipmaker benefits from ‘massive shift’ in A.I.

    Nvidia stock jumps 7% after Morgan Stanley says chipmaker benefits from ‘massive shift’ in A.I.

    Jen-Hsun Huang, CEO, Nvidia

    David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    As long as companies are interested in generative artificial intelligence, Nvidia stands to benefit.

    Nvidia shares closed up more than 7% on Monday, underscoring how investors believe the company’s graphics processing units, or GPUs, will continue to be the most popular computer chips used to power massive large language models that can generate compelling text.

    Morgan Stanley released an analyst note Monday reiterating that Nvidia continues to be a “Top Pick” coming off the company’s most recent earnings report, in which it offered a better-than-expected forecast.

    “We think the recent selloff is a good entry point, as despite supply constraints, we still expect a meaningful beat and raise quarter — and, more importantly, strong visibility over the next 3-4 quarters,” the Morgan Stanley analysts wrote. “Nvidia remains our Top Pick, with a backdrop of the massive shift in spending towards AI, and a fairly exceptional supply demand imbalance that should persist for the next several quarters.”

    Nvidia, now valued at over $1 trillion, bested all other companies during this year’s tech rebound following a market slump in 2022, with the chip giant’s shares up nearly 200% so far in 2023.

    Although Nvidia shares dropped a little more than 10% this month, partly attributed to supply constraints and ongoing concerns over the broader economy and whether it will experience a significant rebound, the Morgan Stanley analysts predict that Nvidia will benefit in the long run.

    “The bottom line is that this is a very positive situation, October numbers are entirely gated by supply, and the upper end of the buy side consensus has been reined in,” the analysts wrote. “We see numbers are going up at least enough that this stock will trade at P/Es more similar to the upper end of semis, with material upside still ahead.”

    Nvidia’s stock has tripled this year. The company will announce second-quarter results Aug. 23.

    Source link

  • US Steel receiving acquisition offers as company promises to maximize stockholder value | CNN Business

    US Steel receiving acquisition offers as company promises to maximize stockholder value | CNN Business


    New York
    CNN
     — 

    United States Steel Corp. (X) is considering a sale after fielding acquisition offers, according to a Sunday press release from the company.

    The steel producer is under a formal review process after “receiving multiple unsolicited proposals” for both specific assets and the entire firm, the release announced.

    “U. S. Steel’s Board and management team are committed to maximizing value for our stockholders, and to that end, we have commenced a comprehensive and thorough review of strategic alternatives,” wrote David Burritt, U. S. Steel’s CEO. “The Board is taking a measured approach to considering these proposals, including seeking more information in order to evaluate proposals that are preliminary and subject to ongoing due diligence and review.”

    There is currently no set timeline or end date for the review process.

    This is a developing story

    Source link

  • This Spanish bank has ripped more than 30% higher this year. BofA sees even more gains ahead

    This Spanish bank has ripped more than 30% higher this year. BofA sees even more gains ahead

    Source link

  • Amazon shares can rally more than 65% as cloud revenue growth reaccelerates, Redburn says

    Amazon shares can rally more than 65% as cloud revenue growth reaccelerates, Redburn says

    Source link

  • What Biden’s executive order means for U.S. investors in China

    What Biden’s executive order means for U.S. investors in China

    The U.S. and Chinese flags hang outside the Goldman Sachs headquarters in New York on Dec. 16, 2008.

    Chris Hondros | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    BEIJING — The Biden administration’s long-awaited executive order on U.S. investments in Chinese companies leaves open plenty of questions on how it will be implemented.

    Its 45-day public comment period gives U.S. investors significant potential to influence any final regulation, analysts said.

    “The executive order obviously gives an outline of what the program’s scope is going to be like,” said Brian P. Curran, a partner, global regulatory at law firm Hogan Lovells in Washington, D.C.

    “It’s not even a proposed rule. It’s not a final rule.”

    U.S. President Joe Biden on Wednesday signed an executive order aimed at restricting U.S. investments into Chinese semiconductor, quantum computing and artificial intelligence companies over national security concerns.

    Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen is mostly responsible for determining the details. Her department has published a fact sheet and a lengthy “Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking” with specific questions it would like more information on.

    Businesses can share information confidentially as needed, according to the advanced notice, which is set to be formally published on Monday. The notice said it is only a means for sharing the Treasury’s initial considerations, and will be followed by draft regulations.

    “The final scope of the restriction, to be defined by the Treasury Department after public consultations, including with U.S. investors in China, will be critical for the enforcement of the order,” said Winston Ma, an adjunct professor at NYU Law and a former managing director of CIC.

    So what’s banned?

    This week’s announcements don’t explicitly prohibit U.S. investments into Chinese businesses, but the documents indicate what policymakers are focused on.

    The U.S. transactions potentially covered include:

    • Acquisition of equity interests such as via mergers and acquisitions, private equity and venture capital;
    • Greenfield investment;
    • Joint ventures;
    • Certain debt financing transactions.

    The forthcoming regulations are not set to take effect retroactively, the Treasury said. But the Treasury said it may request information about transactions completed or agreed to since the issuance of the executive order.

    “We’ve been advising clients leading up to the issuance of the executive order, it does make sense to look at your exposure to the kinds of transactions that have the potential to be covered by the regime,” Curran said.

    Any plans to invest in the sectors named in the public materials should come under additional consideration of the risks and how to manage them, he said.

    Biden's exec. order on China is much more narrow than originally conceived: Michelle Caruso-Cabrera

    Here are the sectors of concern:

    Semiconductors — Treasury is considering a ban on tech that enables production or improvement of advanced integrated circuits; design, fabrication and packaging capabilities for advanced integrated circuits; and installation, or sale to third-party customers, of certain supercomputers.

    Treasury is also considering a notification requirement for transactions involving the design, fabrication and packaging of other integrated circuits.

    The U.S. government is concerned about tech that will “underpin military innovations,” the advance notice said.

    Quantum computing — Treasury is considering a ban on transactions involving the production of quantum computers, sensors and systems.

    However, the Treasury said it is considering not to require investors to notify it of transactions in this sector.

    The U.S. government is concerned about quantum information technologies that could “compromise encryption and other cybersecurity controls and jeopardize military communications,” the notice said.

    Artificial intelligence — Treasury is considering a ban on U.S. investments into the development of software using AI systems designed for exclusive military, government intelligence or mass-surveillance use.

    The Treasury said it may also require U.S. persons to notify it if undertaking transactions involved with AI systems for cybersecurity applications, digital forensics tools, control of robotic systems and facial recognition, among others.

    However, the Treasury said its intent is not to touch entities that develop AI systems only for consumer applications and other uses that don’t have national security consequences.

    What’s allowed

    The Treasury said it expects to exclude certain investments into publicly-traded securities or exchange-traded funds.

    The following transactions are not set to be included by forthcoming regulation:

    • University-to-university research collaborations
    • Contracts to buy raw materials
    • Intellectual property licensing
    • Bank lending and payment processing
    • Underwriting
    • Debt rating
    • Prime brokerage
    • Global custody
    • Stock research

    What’s next

    The Treasury is asking for written comments on its advanced notice by Sept. 28.

    The notice includes wide-ranging requests for data into investment trends. It also asked questions about effective threshold requirements and definitions, and details about the resulting burdens for U.S. investors: “If such limitations existed or were required, how might investment firms change how they raise capital from U.S. investors, if at all?”

    Among the many other questions, the Treasury is asking for areas within the three overarching categories where U.S. investments into Chinese entities would “provide a strategic benefit to the United States, such that continuing such investment would benefit, and not impair, U.S. national security.”

    “There is a lot of opportunity for the public’s comment for what should be covered what should not be covered,” said Anne Salladin, a partner, global regulatory, at Hogan Lovells. “It strikes me as an extraordinarily good opportunity for clients to weigh in on that front.”

    “This has been under consideration by the administration for a couple of years now,” she said. “One of the things that’s important is to take [the regulatory process] at a slow speed to understand what the ramifications are for U.S. businesses.”

    The kind of law that Biden’s [planning], it’s small but it’s important because once the state starts to meddle with these things it creates more dramatic possibilities.

    Jonathan Levy

    Professor, University of Chicago

    Given the lengthy process, forthcoming regulations aren’t expected to take effect until next year.

    However, the niche industry of China-based venture capitalists — which raise funds from U.S. investors to invest in Chinese start-ups, many tech-focused — is already struggling.

    Fewer than 300 unique U.S.-based investors have participated in China-based VC deals since 2016 each year, with just 64 participants so far this year, according to Pitchbook.

    China VC deal activity in the second quarter continued a recent decline, to the lowest since the first quarter of 2017, according to Pitchbook.

    The data showed China VC deal activity with U.S.-only investor participation in artificial intelligence has fallen since the first quarter of 2022. Pitchbook recorded barely any such deals in quantum computing since 2021, while semiconductors saw moderate activity through the first half of this year.

    Read more about China from CNBC Pro

    The industry and political developments also mark a shift in the overall risk environment.

    “The kind of law that Biden’s [planning], it’s small but it’s important because once the state starts to meddle with these things it creates more dramatic possibilities,” said Jonathan Levy, a University of Chicago economic history professor and author of “Ages of American Capitalism: A History of the United States.”

    While he said he doesn’t have any sources within the Biden administration, Levy said the latest developments signal to him that the U.S. government doesn’t want the new economic relationship with China “to consist of U.S. investment funds investing in Chinese high tech because we think high tech is kind of a strategic interest.”

    “I also think more fundamentally, I don’t know what kind of relationship they have in mind, [but] there’s going to be a new order. We want to shape to some degree what that [order] looks like.”

    — CNBC’s Amanda Macias contributed to this report.

    Source link

  • China’s real estate market roiled by default fears again, as Country Garden spooks investors

    China’s real estate market roiled by default fears again, as Country Garden spooks investors

    Pictured here are residential buildings developed by Country Garden Holdings Co. in Baoding, Hebei province, China, on Tuesday, Aug. 1, 2023.

    Qilai Shen | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    BEIJING — Two years after Evergrande’s debt troubles, worries about China’s real estate sector are coming to the forefront again.

    Country Garden, one of the largest non-state-owned developers by sales, has reportedly missed two coupon payments on dollar bonds that were due Sunday. Citing the firm, Reuters said the bonds in question are notes due in February 2026 and August 2030.

    Country Garden did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment on the reports.

    Meanwhile, Dalian Wanda saw its senior vice president Liu Haibo taken away by police after the company’s internal anti-corruption probe, Reuters reported Tuesday, citing a source familiar with the matter. Dalian Wanda did not immediately respond to a CNBC request for comment.

    Hong Kong-listed shares of Country Garden closed more than 1.7% lower on Wednesday, after sharp declines earlier in the week.

    “With China’s total home sales in 1H23 down year-on-year, falling home prices month-on-month across the past few months and faltering economic growth, another developer default (and an extremely large one, at that) is perhaps the last thing the Chinese authorities need right now,” according to Sandra Chow, co-head of Asia Pacific Research for CreditSights, which is owned by Fitch Ratings.

    We are concerned that as big cities lift local property restrictions, it will drain up demand in low tier cities, which account for 70% of national new home sales volume…

    An investor relations representative for Country Garden didn’t deny media reports on the missed payments and didn’t clarify the company’s payment plans, Chow and a team said in a note late Tuesday.

    The report noted negative market sentiment spillover to other non-state-owned developers such as Longfor. Shares of Longfor closed about 0.8% higher Wednesday in Hong Kong after trading more than 1% lower during the day.

    “Overall homebuyer sentiment is likely to also suffer as a result,” the analysts said.

    Home prices in focus

    China’s massive real estate market has remained sluggish despite recent policy signals. In late July, its top leaders indicated a shift toward greater support for the real estate sector, paving the way for local governments to implement specific policies.

    Uncertainties remain around the sensitive topic of home prices.

    “We are concerned that as big cities lift local property restrictions, it will drain up demand in low tier cities, which account for 70% of national new home sales volume and are the real drivers of commodity demand and construction activity,” Nomura analysts said in an Aug. 4 report.

    “We are also concerned that merely easing restrictions on existing home sales without lifting restrictions on home purchase may add supply and depress home prices,” the report said.

    For the last several years, Chinese authorities have attempted to curb debt-fueled speculation in the country’s massive — and hot — real estate market. In 2020, Beijing cracked down on developers’ high reliance on debt for growth.

    Highly indebted Evergrande defaulted in late 2021, followed by a few others.

    With that faltering confidence, the private property sector will likely remain a drag on the country’s growth for the rest of the year.

    Last year, many people halted mortgage payments after a delay in receiving the homes they had bought. Most apartments in China are sold before they are completed.

    “After watching developers default and fail to complete housing for other families, few Chinese families are willing to shell out in advance for new housing,” Rhodium Group analysts said in a note this week. “With that faltering confidence, the private property sector will likely remain a drag on the country’s growth for the rest of the year.”

    The analysts pointed out that new starts in residential construction have fallen for 28 months straight.

    Real estate and related industries have accounted for about a quarter of China’s economy.

    Redmond Wong, market strategist at Saxo Markets Hong Kong said Country Garden will find it “very difficult, if not impossible” to refinance — and other Chinese developers would face difficulties raising money as a result, especially offshore.

    He pointed out that since China started its deleveraging campaign in 2016, it is very unlikely the state would step in to bail out real estate developers. “The most likely way for Country Garden or Chinese developers in similar situation to avoid defaults will be asset sales,” Wong added.

    State-owned developers stand out

    Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

    hide content

    Vanke was the only other one of the 10 developers to post a year-on-year sales decline for January to July period, down 9%, the research showed.

    The other names were mostly state-owned, such as Poly Development, which ranked first with a 10% sales increase during that time, according to the analysis.

    But that’s had little impact on home prices overall.

    Nomura pointed out in a separate report that average existing home prices dropped by 2% in July from the prior month, worse than the 1.4% decline in June, based on a Beike Research Institute data sample of 25 large cities.

    The July level is 13.4% below a historical high two years ago, the Nomura report said.

    Read more about China from CNBC Pro

    The seven-day moving average of new home sales as of Aug. 6 was down by 49% versus 2019, according to Nomura. That’s worse than the 34.4% decline for the prior week.

    Far more Chinese household wealth has been locked up in property than is the case in many other countries.

    Tight capital controls also make it difficult for people in China to invest outside the country, while the local financial markets are less mature than those of developed countries.

    “Right now people are reassessing what in the future will be a good investment,” Liqian Ren, leader of quantitative investment at WisdomTree, said in an interview last week.

    “Since the beginning of last year, people are starting to realize real estate prices are not going up,” Ren said. “I don’t think it’s the lack of confidence. For many people they still have money in the bank.”

    CNBC’s Hui Jie Lim contributed to this report.

    Source link

  • Bernstein says crypto may finally have its killer application

    Bernstein says crypto may finally have its killer application

    Source link

  • ‘Long path to profitability:’ What analysts are saying about Rivian’s second-quarter numbers

    ‘Long path to profitability:’ What analysts are saying about Rivian’s second-quarter numbers

    Source link

  • China reports smaller-than-expected drop in consumer prices

    China reports smaller-than-expected drop in consumer prices

    Customers at a fresh food market in Shanghai, China, on Monday, Aug. 7, 2023.

    Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    BEIJING — China reported inflation data for July that pointed to a modest improvement from June.

    The consumer price index fell by 0.3% in July from a year ago, but was up by 0.2% when compared with June, according to the National Bureau of Statistics Wednesday.

    The year-on-year CPI print for July was slightly better than expectations for a 0.4% decline, according to analysts polled by Reuters. It was still the first year-on-year decline since early 2021, according to official data accessed via Wind Information.

    The producer price index fell by 4.4% in July from a year ago, better than the 5.4% decline in June, the data showed.

    However, the year-on-year PPI read was worse than the 4.1% forecast by a Reuters poll.

    A 26% year-on-year drop in pork prices, a staple food in China, contributed to the overall decline in the CPI in July. Tourism prices rose by 13.1% from a year ago.

    Core CPI, which excludes food and energy prices, rose by 0.8% from a year ago — the highest since January, according to official data accessed via Wind Information.

    Producer prices will likely turn higher on a year-on-year basis before the consumer price index does, said Bruce Pang, chief economist and head of research for Greater China at JLL.

    He expects consumer prices will still be dragged down in the coming months by falling pork prices and a high base effect, while core CPI may gradually rise.

    Sluggish consumer demand

    Lackluster domestic demand has persisted since the pandemic. China’s consumer price index was flat in June from a year ago. Second-quarter data prompted several economists to warn of growing risk of deflation — a persistent decrease in prices over time.

    Officially, China’s central bank has pushed back against such fears and said it expects consumer prices to pick up after a dip in July.

    Oxford Economics expects China’s consumer price index to grow by 0.5% this year and the producer price index to fall by 3.5%.

    “China’s weak demand follow-through in Q2 can be attributed to its relatively contained demand-side stimulus during Covid, years of regulatory tightening, and an ongoing housing correction,” Louise Loo, lead economist at Oxford Economics, said in a note Tuesday.

    It’s a “positive development” that authorities are choosing targeted easing, rather than large-scale stimulus, Loo said.

    Read more about China from CNBC Pro

    China reported trade data Tuesday that showed a sharp plunge in both overseas and domestic demand.

    Exports fell by 14.5% in July from a year ago, while imports dropped by 12.4% in U.S. dollar terms — both worse than analysts had expected.

    The sharp decline in the imports figure was partly due to commodity price declines, but Loo’s estimates indicate imports declined in real volume terms by around 0.4%.

    China is set on Aug. 15 to release retail sales, industrial production and other data for July.

    Correction: This article has been updated to accurately reflect that Oxford Economics expects China’s producer price index to fall 3.5% this year. An earlier version of the story misstated it.

    Source link

  • Eli Lilly hits record high after earnings, Mounjaro hype. Here’s what the pros are saying

    Eli Lilly hits record high after earnings, Mounjaro hype. Here’s what the pros are saying

    Source link

  • ‘Barbenheimer’ can boost Cinemark shares more than 35% from here, Morgan Stanley says

    ‘Barbenheimer’ can boost Cinemark shares more than 35% from here, Morgan Stanley says

    Source link

  • Berkshire Hathaway’s operating earnings rise nearly 7%, cash pile approaches $150 billion

    Berkshire Hathaway’s operating earnings rise nearly 7%, cash pile approaches $150 billion

    Warren Buffett tours the grounds at the Berkshire Hathaway Annual Shareholders Meeting in Omaha Nebraska.

    David A. Grogan | CNBC

    Berkshire Hathaway on Saturday reported a solid increase in second-quarter operating earnings, while the cash hoard at Warren Buffett‘s conglomerate swelled to nearly $150 billion.

    The Omaha-based giant’s operating earnings — which encompass profits made from the myriad of businesses owned by the company, like insurance, railroads and utilities — totaled $10.043 billion last quarter, 6.6% higher than the figure from the same quarter a year ago.

    related investing news

    CNBC Pro

    Net income totaled $35.91 billion, compared with a $43.62 billion loss during the second quarter last year. The strong results were bolstered by a jump in Berkshire’s insurance underwriting and investment income.

    Berkshire reported a near $26 billion unrealized gain from its investments as its gigantic stake in Apple led the market rally in the second quarter. The tech giant soared nearly 18% during the quarter and Berkshire’s bet has ballooned to $177.6 billion.

    The “Oracle of Omaha” trimmed his Chevron stake by $1.4 billion to $19.4 billion at the end of June. Shares of Chevron have significantly lagged the broader market this year, down more than 11%. The S&P 500 has rallied almost 17% in 2023.

    Cash hoard swells

    Berkshire’s massive cash pile grew to $147.377 billion at the end of June, near a record and much higher than the $130.616 billion in the first quarter.

    Share repurchase activity slowed down as the conglomerate’s stock climbed back to a record high. The company spent just about $1.4 billion in buybacks during the quarter, bringing the year-to-date total to $5.8 billion.

    The conglomerate’s Class A shares hit a new record close of $541,000 on Thursday, exceeding the conglomerate’s previous high of $539,180 reached on March 22, 2022. The stock has gained 13.8% this year.

    Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

    hide content

    BRK.A in 2023

    Source link

  • Astra conducts layoffs, raises debt and shifts focus to spacecraft engines in bid to survive

    Astra conducts layoffs, raises debt and shifts focus to spacecraft engines in bid to survive

    An Astra Spacecraft Engine during testing.

    Astra

    Struggling space company Astra is cutting 25% of its workforce, the company announced Friday, and restructuring to focus more on its spacecraft engine business, which will delay progress on the small rocket it has been developing.

    Astra is cutting about 70 employees, as well as reallocating about 50 personnel from its rocket development program over to its space products unit, which builds the company’s spacecraft engines.

    “We are intensely focused on delivering on our commitments to our customers, which includes ensuring we have sufficient resources and an adequate financial runway to execute on our near-term opportunities,” Astra chairman and CEO Chris Kemp said in a statement.

    The workforce reductions are expected to result in $4 million in quarterly cost savings, beginning in the fourth quarter. Astra noted that it had 278 total orders for spacecraft engines, as of four months ago, worth about $77 million in contracts. It expects to deliver on “a substantial majority” of those orders by the end of 2024.

    In a separate filing Friday, Astra said it raised $10.8 million in net proceeds from selling debt to investment group High Trail Capital.

    Astra stock was little changed in after-hours trading Friday from its close at 38 cents a share.

    Sign up here to receive weekly editions of CNBC’s Investing in Space newsletter.

    Last year, Astra moved away from its Rocket 3.3 vehicle earlier than expected to focus on the next version, an upgraded system called Rocket 4.0, after its final Rocket 3.3 mission failed mid-launch. While the company was targeting a first launch of Rocket 4 by the end of this year, in a securities filing, Astra noted the prioritization of the spacecraft engine business “will affect the timing of the Company’s future test launches.”

    “The Company’s ability to conduct paid commercial launches in 2024 and beyond will depend on the ultimate timing and success of the initial test launches which will in turn depend on the resources that the Company is able to devote to Launch Systems development in the coming quarters,” Astra warned.

    The company also released preliminary second-quarter results. Astra expects it brought $1 million or less in revenue during the quarter, with a net loss between $13 million and $15 million, and a remaining amount of cash and securities of about $26 million. The company plans to report finalized second-quarter results Aug. 14.

    Last month, Astra finalized plans to conduct a reverse stock split at a 1 to 15 ratio. It’s also seeking to raise up to $65 million through an “at the market” offering of common stock through Roth Capital and ended a prior agreement with B. Riley to sell up to $100 million in common stock that the company signed a year ago.

    In Friday’s filing, Astra said it hired PJT Partners as a financial advisor, with the company “focused on thoughtfully pursuing opportunities to raise additional capital.”

    Source link