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IMF ups global growth forecast but signals medium-term pessimism

Organisation expects world economy to grow by 3.2% in 2024

By - Apr 16,2024 - Last updated at Apr 16,2024

International Monetary Fund (IMF) Communications Officer Meera Louis; Monetary and Capital Markets Director Tobias Adrian; Monetary and Capital Markets Deputy Director Fabio Natalucci; and Assistant Director Jason Wu, hold a press briefing as the IMF publishes its Global Financial Stability Report at the IMF-World Bank Group spring meetings at the IMF headquarters in Washington, DC on Tuesday (AFP photo)

WASHINGTON — The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has raised its outlook for the global economy this year, while maintaining a gloomy forecast over the medium term, according to fresh data published on Tuesday.

The IMF now expects the world economy to grow by 3.2 per cent this year, up 0.1 percentage point from its previous forecast in January, and by a further 3.2 per cent in 2025, according to the latest World Economic Outlook (WEO) report.

Global headline inflation is expected to ease from 5.9 per cent this year to 4.5 per cent in 2025, supported by elevated interest rates in many countries.

"The global economy continues to display remarkable resilience, with growth holding steady and inflation declining," IMF chief economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas told reporters on Tuesday. "But many challenges still lie ahead."

"Most indicators continue to point to a soft landing," he said, referring to attempts by many central bankers to bring inflation down to target without fueling unemployment or hampering economic growth.

The WEO's publication comes as global financial leaders gather in Washington this week for a series of semi-annual meetings hosted by the IMF and World Bank. Assistance for the world's most indebted nations and climate change top the agenda for those meetings.

 

Divergence among advanced economies 

 

The differences among the world's advanced economies are stark: The IMF now expects growth in the United States to hit 2.7 per cent this year — up 0.6 percentage points from the January forecast — marking an acceleration from the 2.5 per cent growth recorded in 2023. 

Growth in the world's largest economy is then expected to slow to 1.9 per cent in 2025, slightly higher than previously expected.

In contrast, the euro area is now expected to grow by just 0.8 per cent in 2024 — down 0.1 percentage point from January and only slightly above last year's tepid 0.4 per cent expansion — before picking up to 1.5 per cent in 2025.  The outlook for the United Kingdom and Canada this year has also been revised lower, while Japan's 2024 growth forecast was unchanged. 

 

China unchanged 

 

The picture is also mixed for emerging market and developing economies. 

China, the world's second-largest economy, is still expected to grow by 4.6 per cent this year, and by 4.1 per cent in 2025 — unchanged from January. 

The growth slowdown is largely down to the easing of a "postpandemic boost to consumption and fiscal stimulus", and ongoing weakness in the property sector, the WEO said.

One of the bright spots this year is India, which the IMF now expects to grow by 6.8 per cent — up 0.3 points from January's forecast — and by 6.5 per cent in 2025.

Although a full per centage point below India's growth figure for 2023, the robust growth expected this year reflects the South Asian economy's "continuing strength in domestic demand and a rising working-age population", the IMF said. 

 

Russia outlook improved, again 

 

Russia's growth prospects have been revised sharply higher once more, as it continues to defy expectations of a slump due to its costly ongoing war in Ukraine.

The Russian economy is now expected to expand by 3.2 per cent this year, and by 1.8 per cent in 2025, well above January's forecast. Such unexpected strength is down to four key factors, including Russia's steady oil export volumes, strong corporate investment, "robustness" in private consumption, and impact from government spending, IMF Research Department deputy director Petya Koeva Brooks told reporters. 

This year's forecast for Latin America is slightly higher at 2 per cent, while the outlook for Sub-Saharan Africa is unchanged at 3.8 per cent. The outlook for 2024 growth in the Middle East and Central Asia is slightly lower, at 2.8 per cent, down 0.1 percentage point.

Despite the IMF's more optimistic overall 2024 outlook, the WEO report still finds that medium-term growth is expected to remain "historically weak", due largely to "persistent structural frictions preventing capital and labor from moving to productive firms". It expects growth to hit 3.1 per cent in 2029, well below its pre-pandemic forecast. The IMF report also found that "the pace of convergence toward higher living standards for middle- and lower-income countries has slowed, implying a persistence in global economic disparities".

Hong Kong conditionally approves first bitcoin and ether ETFs

By - Apr 16,2024 - Last updated at Apr 16,2024

HONG KONG — Hong Kong's securities regulator on Monday granted conditional approval to start the city's first spot-bitcoin and ether exchange-traded funds (ETFs), firms involved said, positioning it as a leader in Asia for the use of cryptocurrencies as investment tools. 

ChinaAMC (HK), the city's unit of China Asset Management, said in a statement it had received regulatory approval from Hong Kong's Securities and Futures Commission of Hong Kong (SFC) for the provision of virtual asset management services. 

The company is "actively deploying resources in the development of spot Bitcoin ETF and spot Ethereum ETF", it said. 

This will be done in partnership with BOCI-Prudential Trustee Limited, a joint venture of the fund management arm of Bank of China (HK) and the British multinational insurance firm. 

Two other fund managers — the Hong Kong units of Harvest Fund Management and Bosera Asset Management — also said they had received conditional approvals from the SFC, Bloomberg reported. 

The SFC declined to comment on individual applications. 

OSL Digital Securities will provide custody services to China AMC and Harvest to ensure trading safety, the licensed digital assets platform announced on Monday. 

"This collaboration marks a critical advancement in the financial landscape of the region, heralding a new chapter in digital asset investments," OSL said in a statement. 

Hong Kong has been trying to edge ahead as a regional digital asset hub as its international financial centre status has been dented by political turmoil in recent years and China's economic downturn. 

The latest move came three months after the United States gave the green light to ETFs pegged to bitcoin's spot price, making it easier for mainstream investors to add the unit to their portfolio. 

Hong Kong is also widely considered an experimental field for including cryptocurrencies as mainstream investment tools — which are banned in mainland China. 

"The financial hub is looking to establish itself as a competitor in the space competing with Dubai and Singapore as regulators open up crypto markets to institutional demand," said James Harte, an analyst from Tickmill. 

He added that Bitcoin futures were down "around 7 percent at the lows of the day before sentiment reversed on" Hong Kong's news. 

Last December, the city's SFC said it was ready to allow retail investors to buy funds that are 100 per cent invested in some of the digital assets, triggering the first wave of applications from fund managers. 

Singapore economic growth misses forecasts in Q1

GDP expanded 2.7% on-year, says Trade Ministry

By - Apr 14,2024 - Last updated at Apr 14,2024

Singapore’s economy grew slower than expected in the first quarter, early data showed on Friday, as a struggling manufacturing sector weighed on tourism spending from events including Taylor Swift’s concerts (AFP file photo)

SINGAPORE — Singapore's economy grew slower than expected in the first quarter, early data showed recently, as a struggling manufacturing sector weighed on tourism spending from events including Taylor Swift's concerts.

The city-state's economic performance is often seen as a barometer of the global environment because of its reliance on international trade.

Gross domestic product expanded 2.7 per cent on-year, the trade ministry said, faster than the previous three months but weaker than the 3 per cent projected in a Bloomberg poll of economists. It grew just 0.1 per cent on-quarter.

The advance estimates are computed largely from data in January and February and are subject to revision when March figures come in.

Manufacturing, a pillar of the trade-reliant economy, rose 0.8 per cent on-year and contracted 2.9 per cent from October-December.

The services sector, which includes accommodation and food, grew 2.9 per cent.

"In all likelihood, the slew of concerts which attracted many international visitors to Singapore's shores, did have a temporal boost to the consumer-facing industries, namely the hospitality and entertainment-related activities," said Selena Ling, chief economist at banking group OCBC.

Swift performed only in Singapore in March for the Southeast Asian leg of her Eras Tour, while Coldplay played in January and the Singapore Airshow, the biggest in Asia, was held in February.

Veteran economist Song Seng Wun said he expected an "upward adjustment" to the overall first quarter growth when the effects of Swift's concerts are fully counted.

There could also be "spillover effects" into March of spending from the Singapore Airshow, added Song, at financial services firm CGS International Singapore.

"The bottom line is that the economy is still recovering post-pandemic," he told AFP.

In a separate announcement, the central bank Monetary Authority of Singapore kept its monetary policy unchanged for a fourth straight time, saying it needed to keep inflation in check.

As the city-state imports most of its needs, it deals with imported inflation by allowing for a stronger Singapore dollar.

Europe stocks boosted by ECB rate cut signal; earnings in focus

By - Apr 14,2024 - Last updated at Apr 14,2024

The European flag flutters next to the headquarters of the European Central Bank (ECB) in Frankfurt am Main, western Germany, on Thursday, ahead of an ECB press conference on Eurozone monetary policy (AFP photo)

LONDON — Europe's stock markets rose Friday after the European Central Bank (ECB)  signalled a likely June interest rate cut, with London boosted by fresh hope that Britain has escaped from recession, as dealers also awaited the start of the US earnings season.

Gold hammered a record pinnacle at $2,400.67 per ounce as dealers flocked to the haven investment to shelter from intensifying Middle East tensions, which also propelled crude oil more than one percent higher.

The dollar climbed versus the euro as dealers digested increasing indications of a June rate reduction from the Frankfurt-based ECB.

Yet, fading hopes for a similar June rate cut from the US Federal Reserve roiled Asian equities, which struggled to build on Wall Street's positive lead.

"Stock markets edged higher in Europe on Friday despite uneven performances across Asia overnight and rising global uncertainty," said ActivTrades analyst Pierre Veyret.

"Despite a few volatility spikes, EU stock investors reacted positively to ECB President Christine Lagarde's speech. The central banker reassured everyone, saying the ECB would stick to its rate-cut plan regardless of the recent hot inflation report in the US."

London stocks fizzed higher on data showing the UK economy grew for a second straight month in February, further fuelling recovery hopes after sliding into a shallow recession in the second half of last year.

 

'Welcome distraction' 

 

Attention is now turning to the corporate reporting season, which gets underway in earnest later in the day with banking giants JPMorgan and Citibank among those to log earnings.

Analysts said that while reducing interest rates would be a major boost for equities, investor optimism about company profits was crucial.

"The inception of the US first quarter earnings season brings a welcome distraction from the Fed's struggles in bringing inflation back down to target," said Scope Markets analyst Joshua Mahony.

Tech titans helped drive gains in the Nasdaq and S&P 500 after producer price index data broadly met expectations, tempering worries about inflation following Wednesday's figures showing a third successive upside miss in consumer price inflation.

The CPI figures followed a series of indicators suggesting the world's number one economy remained resilient and the jobs market strong despite interest rates sitting at two-decade highs and inflation still well above the Fed's target.

That has seen investors trim their US rate cut bets from six at the start of the year to two now.

Dimming hopes for rate cuts continued to support the dollar, which surged to another 34-year high above 153 yen, putting Japanese officials in the spotlight after they said they were ready to intervene in markets to support their currency.

Biden lands another big Taiwan chip investment

By - Apr 09,2024 - Last updated at Apr 09,2024

A security guard walks past a company logo at the headquarters of the world's largest semiconductor maker TSMC (AFP File photo)

WASHINGTON — The Taiwan chip giant TSMC has agreed to build a third semiconductor factory in Arizona, raising its total investment in the United States to $65 billion, US officials said on Monday. 

Lael Brainard, President Joe Biden's chief economic adviser, hailed the election-year news as "a new chapter for America's semiconductor industry". 

She told reporters the investment planned by TSMC is based on a preliminary agreement with the US Commerce Department that is tied to a major investment law called the Chips and Science Act. 

Under this agreement, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company will receive up to $6.6 billion in direct funding from the US government and could get up to another $5 billion in the form of loans. 

The law is a pillar of the administration's drive to protect and strengthen American industrial power as Biden runs for another term in November. 

The United States is seeking to ward off the prospect of suffering shortages of cutting edge chips that are essential for making cell phones, electric cars and advanced military equipment. 

TSMC, which had already planned to build two plants in Arizona, is going to make semiconductors even more advanced than originally planned at one of them and will also construct a third facility, US officials said early Monday. 

The company is thus raising its total investment in the US from $40 billion to $65 billion. 

"For the first time ever, we will be making at scale the most advanced semiconductor chips on the planet here in the United States of America," Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said. 

"These are the chips that underpin all artificial intelligence." 

Artificial intelligence 

Raimondo said that with these plans, TSMC would create at least 6,000 direct high-tech jobs but also more than 20,000 in the construction of the factories and tens of thousands of indirect jobs. 

"Our US operations allow us to better support our US customers," said TSMC Chairman Mark Liu. 

TSMC accounts for more than half of the world's semiconductor production. 

The Chips and Science Act passed in 2022 calls for $52.7 billion in money to overhaul the semiconductor industry in the United States, with the idea that making public money available for this purpose will lure private investment. 

Elon Musk says Tesla will unveil robotaxi in August

By - Apr 08,2024 - Last updated at Apr 08,2024

SAN FRANCISCO — Elon Musk revealed last week that Tesla will pull back the curtain on a robotaxi this summer, news that comes as adoption of self-driving vehicles hits speed bumps over safety concerns.

The billionaire boss of the electric car maker did not provide details, saying only in his post on X that the "Tesla Robotaxi unveil" will come on August 8.

Tesla shares rose more than three percent in after-market trades following the post, after finishing the day down.

Musk has long boasted of work Tesla is doing on its systems for electric cars to drive themselves.

Tesla models with FSD (Full Self-Driving) "will be superhuman to such a degree that it will seem strange in the future that humans drove cars, even while exhausted and drunk!" he said in a post on X in March.

Musk has also said that owners of Tesla vehicles with FSD will be able to have their cars serve as robotaxis, rather than remain idly parked. Despite its potential, rollout of self-driving vehicles in the United States has been tentative and rocky so far as both regulators and the public voice safety concerns.

San Francisco has been a testing ground for the technology.

Robotaxis from Google's Waymo in the city have been targeted by vandals opposed to autonomous vehicles, while GM-owned Cruise indefinitely suspended its robotaxi service at the end of October after several accidents sparked a crackdown by California regulators.

Tesla's "autopilot" feature has also come under scrutiny, facing accusations the marketing of the feature oversold its actual capabilities.

Tesla's robotaxi reveal came on the heels of a Reuters report that the company had abandoned Musk's long-touted plan to manufacture an electric car model selling close to $25,000 to drive adoption in the mass market.

Musk fired off a post denying the report.

Tesla this week reported sharply lower first-quarter auto sales amid an underwhelming demand outlook for electric vehicles, while legacy players including Toyota rode improved US inventories to higher sales.

Musk's auto giant reported global deliveries fell 8.5 per cent in the quarter, reflecting in part a weak sales market in China, where it faces heavy competition from local electric vehicle makers.

Wedbush analyst Dan Ives called the quarterly results "an unmitigated disaster".

Samsung Electronics expects 10-fold rise in Q1 profit

By - Apr 08,2024 - Last updated at Apr 08,2024

A man walks past a signboard of Samsung Electronics displayed outside the company's Seocho building in Seoul on Friday (AFP photo)

SEOUL — Samsung Electronics said recently it expects first-quarter operating profits to rise more than 10-fold year on year as chip prices recover.

The firm is the flagship subsidiary of South Korean giant Samsung Group, by far the largest of the family-controlled conglomerates that dominate business in Asia's fourth-largest economy.

The tech giant said in a regulatory filing that January-March operating profits were expected to rise 931.3 per cent to 6.6 trillion won ($4.89 billion). Operating profits in the same period last year totalled around 640 billion won. The expectation exceeded the average estimate by 20.5 per cent, according to South Korea's Yonhap news agency, which referenced its financial data firm.

Sales, meanwhile, are expected to rise 11.4 per cent to 71 trillion won, Samsung said. South Korean chipmakers, led by Samsung, enjoyed record profits in recent years as prices for their products soared, but a global economic slowdown dealt a blow to memory chip sales. However, the semiconductor market had been predicted to recover this year and grow 11.8 per cent, according to industry monitor World Semiconductor Trade Statistics.

The news from Samsung comes after South Korea's SK Hynix — the world's second-largest memory chip maker — announced in January that it had returned to profit after four consecutive quarters of losses.

Samsung's overall outlook is "fortified by a resurgence in the smart phone market, escalating DRAM (memory chip) prices", Neil Shah, vice president of Counterpoint Research, told AFP.

Samsung is expected to release its final earnings report at the end of this month.

US hiring blows past expectations in March

By - Apr 07,2024 - Last updated at Apr 07,2024

Home Depot customers walk by a posted now hiring sign on March 8 in San Rafael, California (AFP photo)

WASHINGTON — US hiring rose much more than expected last month, according to government data published recently, increasing the chances that the Federal Reserve will remain on pause for longer as it weighs when to start cutting interest rates.

The world's largest economy added 303,000 jobs in March, up from a revised 270,000 new jobs created a month earlier, the Department of Labor announced.

The surge, coming seven months before the November election pitting President Joe Biden against former Republican president Donald Trump, was far above market expectations of an increase of 200,000, according to Briefing.com.

The unemployment rate ticked lower to 3.8 per cent from 3.9 per cent in February, in line with expectations — and maintaining the longest streak of below 4 per cent joblessness in decades.

"Today's report marks a milestone in America's comeback," Biden said in a statement. "Three years ago, I inherited an economy on the brink. With today's report of 303,000 new jobs in March, we have passed the milestone of 15 million jobs created since I took office."

Beyond the headline number, wage growth increased 0.3 per cent on a monthly basis, while average hourly earnings were up 4.1 per cent from a year earlier, Labour Department figures showed.

The labour force participation rate was little changed at 62.7 per cent.

Many of the new jobs were created in the health care and government sectors, while construction and leisure and hospitality also saw big gains.

While the overall unemployment rate fell slightly, it rose for Black Americans, while declining for both Asians and Hispanics.

Wall Street stocks climbed following the report's publication, bouncing back after tumbling in the prior sessions over geopolitical concerns.

Policymakers at the Fed, led by Chairman Jerome Powell, have been debating when will be the right time to begin lowering interest rates, as they look to return inflation firmly to their long-term target of 2 per cent without damaging the buoyant US economy.

"It's a big number, and you can't argue with it," Allianz Trade's senior North America economist, Dan North, told AFP, referring to 303,000 new jobs that were created last month.

"Lots of job growth, participation rates back up fairly sharply, unemployment back down a tick. So for Jerome Powell and the Federal Reserve, what more can you ask for?" he said.

"It's strong, but I wouldn't say it was out of whack," said Erica Groshen, a former commissioner of the US Bureau of Labor Statistics.

"This is certainly not sending a signal that the rates are too high," added Groshen, who is also a senior economics adviser at Cornell's School of Industrial and Labour Relations.

"This would probably support any inclination to just wait a little bit longer," she said.

Inflation fell sharply last year, while the economy and jobs markets have remained resilient. But it has edged higher since the start of the year, causing some policymakers to delay their expectations for the start of cuts.

"We think the Fed is more likely to start moving in July at this point," North from Allianz Trade said, adding: "June seems to be too early."

The consistently strong jobs data is good news for Biden, who is campaigning on a platform that he has rebuilt the post-pandemic US economy.

However, the Democrat still faces the challenge of persistent inflationary pressures for ordinary Americans spurred by the high interest rates.

If inflation remains above target, stronger jobs and growth data will likely keep the Fed on pause for longer, pushing up the cost of borrowing for consumers and producers.

This makes it harder for consumers looking to purchase a home, or to repay credit card debts, and makes it more expensive for companies to borrow to invest for the future.

"There's never been a president that didn't want lower interest rates all the time," North from Allianz Trade said.

"I think it's well recognised that even though most economic measures are pretty good, people are still concerned more about inflation," he added.

UK deepens competition probe into Vodafone-Three deal

By - Apr 05,2024 - Last updated at Apr 05,2024

A pedestrian passes a Vodafone store in west London (AFP file photo)

LONDON — Britain's competition regulator deepened on Thursday its probe into Vodafone's planned merger of British mobile phone operations with those of Three UK, owned by Hong Kong-based CK Hutchison, citing concerns over higher prices. 

The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA), which began in January a formal investigation into the tie-up, said in a statement that it will launch an in-depth probe after both firms declined to offer undertakings to ease its concerns. 

The watchdog had warned last month that the deal could have a "substantial" impact on competition and may lead to higher prices and also reduced quality for consumers. It had given the groups until April 2 to respond. 

"The CMA has referred the anticipated joint venture... for an in-depth investigation," it said in a statement on Thursday. 

"On the information currently available to it, it is or may be the case that this merger may be expected to result in a substantial lessening of competition within a market or markets in the United Kingdom." 

Vodafone said in response that the move was "an expected next step in the process" and expressed confidence it would complete the transaction, while insisting there would be no price changes. 

"Vodafone UK and Three UK remain confident that the transaction will drive stronger competition in the mobile sector and give customers and businesses a step-change in network quality, speed, and coverage," Vodafone said in a statement e-mailed to AFP. "Both companies have already stated there will be no change to each operator's pricing strategy as a result of the merger." 

The proposed tie-up, announced in June last year, is aimed at creating Britain's biggest mobile operator with 27 million customers and to accelerate rollout of faster 5G connectivity. The planned transaction sees British giant Vodafone taking 51 percent of the combined group and CK Hutchison the rest. 

The pair have a target value of £16.5 billion ($21 billion) for the new group. 

The merger, if approved, will vault the combined operations above the country's two largest mobile operators BT EE and Virgin Media O2 in terms of customer numbers. 

Expansion of 5G across the UK has been hampered by Britain's ban on Chinese giant Huawei, a major supplier of equipment for mobile telephone networks. 

$82.5m spent on digital games in Jordan —Intaj

By - Apr 04,2024 - Last updated at Apr 04,2024

According to a report by the Market Studies Unit of the Information and Communications Technology Association of Jordan, the total expenditure on digital games in Jordan amounted to approximately $82.5 million in 2023 (Petra photo)

AMMAN — According to a report by the Market Studies Unit of the Information and Communications Technology Association of Jordan (Intaj), the total expenditure on digital games in Jordan amounted to approximately $82.5 million in 2023.

The spending was diversified across different categories, with approximately $17 million allocated to the purchase of paid games and $7.3 million dedicated to live in-game purchases. 

A total of $6.6 million was invested in in-game advertising, with mobile games accounting for the lion’s share at $45 million, while online games accounted for $6.5 million. 

The report revealed that the total number of users engaging in activities such as downloading games, using live game streaming services, playing mobile games, and participating in online games reached 5.9 million users in 2023.

The unit anticipated the spending to increase to approximately $103 million by 2027, based on annual growth rates, market size and competition among digital game developers, as reported by the Jordan News Agency, Petra.

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