Standard General says only FCC approval left for Tegna deal By Reuters



© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Signage is seen at the headquarters of the Federal Communications Commission in Washington, D.C., U.S., August 29, 2020. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly

(Reuters) -Hedge fund Standard General said its proposed acquisition of TV station operator Tegna Inc only needs Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approval after the U.S. Department of Justice reviewed it without mounting any challenge.

Standard General said in a statement on Tuesday that the so-called Hart-Scott-Rodino waiting period, which gives antitrust regulators time to review the deal, had expired.

Tegna shares ended trading in New York on Wednesday at their highest level since September, as investors assigned a higher probability to the deal closing.

The shares closed up 6% at $21.65. The discount to the $24-per-share deal price – which Tegna and Standard General agreed to in February 2022 – reflects lingering uncertainty over whether the FCC will let the deal go through.

Standard General added in the statement it now expects the deal with Tegna, which is valued at $8.6 billion, including debt, to close in March or April, subject to approval by the FCC.

In a separate regulatory filing, Tegna said that the period during which it and Standard General have committed to sticking with the deal in order to complete it has been extended by three months to May 22.



Source link

Dollar, sterling underpinned by upbeat PMI surveys; kiwi jumps By Reuters



© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: U.S. Dollar and Euro banknotes are seen in this illustration taken July 17, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

By Rae Wee

SINGAPORE (Reuters) – The dollar and sterling were buoyant on Wednesday, after a surprise rebound in business activity in the United States and the UK raised the likelihood that their respective central banks would have further to go in raising interest rates.

Elsewhere, the surged after the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) on Wednesday raised rates by an expected 50 basis points, but reiterated that inflation remains too high and employment is beyond its maximum sustainable level.

Data released on Tuesday showed that U.S. business activity unexpectedly rebounded in February to reach its highest level in eight months, while the UK flash composite Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) similarly surged to 53.0 this month, above the 50 threshold for growth for the first time since July.

The dollar rose against most major currencies after the upbeat data save for sterling, which jumped 0.6% on Tuesday. It was last 0.05% lower at $1.2107.

In the euro zone, its flash composite PMI likewise climbed to a nine-month high of 52.3 in February, supported by surprisingly strong services growth.

The euro, however, failed to benefit from the data as it slid 0.36% in the previous session. It was last 0.04% higher at $1.0652.

“It was kind of an issue of relativities in a sense, that while the services sectors performed better across the board, that extra lift that sterling got, was because of that very, very strong performance,” said Rodrigo Catril, senior currency strategist at National Australia Bank (OTC:).

“I think the euro is still in a sort of more difficult situation, given that there’s a general sense that the ECB still has more work to do, and that puts a little bit of strain in terms of their growth outlook.”

Against the Japanese yen, the dollar rose to a two-month high of 135.23 in the previous session, and slipped marginally to 134.91 in early Asia trade on Wednesday.

The stood at 104.13, having gained 0.3% on Tuesday.

The rebound in U.S. business activity comes on the back of a recent slew of resilient economic data pointing to a still-tight labour market, sticky inflation and robust retail sales in the world’s largest economy.

Markets have since raised their expectations of how high the Federal Reserve would need to lift rates to tame inflation, sending U.S. Treasury yields surging.

The two-year yields jumped to an over three-month high of 4.738% in the previous session, and last stood at 4.6933%.

The benchmark 10-year note yields peaked at 3.9660% in early Asia trade on Wednesday, its highest since last November.

In other currencies, the slid after data showed that Australian wages grew at the fastest annual pace in a decade last quarter, but was still short of market forecasts.

The Australian dollar fell about 0.3% after the data, and was last 0.1% lower at $0.6849.

The kiwi rose 0.39% to $0.6238, after earlier jumping roughly 0.5% to an intra-day high of $0.6248 immediately after the RBNZ’s cash rate decision.



Source link

S.Korea’s household credit falls for first time in a decade By Reuters



© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Houses are seen in Seoul August 1, 2012. REUTERS/Lee Jae-Won

SEOUL (Reuters) – South Korea’s household credit shrank in the fourth quarter of 2022, its first quarterly decline in nearly a decade, central bank data showed on Tuesday.

The country’s total household credit fell 0.2%, or 4.1 trillion won ($3.16 billion), in the fourth quarter from the previous quarter, to 1,867.0 trillion won by the end of December, according to the Bank of Korea.

The quarterly decline was the first since the January-March quarter of 2013 and the biggest percentage fall since the first quarter of 2009.

On an annual basis, the total credit increased 0.2%, marking its slowest growth since data collection started in the fourth quarter of 2002.

South Korea’s central bank has raised interest rates by a total of 300 basis points since August 2021, including a 25-basis-point rate hike last month, which is widely expected to have marked the end of the current tightening cycle.

($1 = 1,297.5000 won)



Source link

Disasters lower outlook for New Zealand interest rate rise By Reuters



© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: An NH90 helicopter and crew recover people from the rooftops of their homes in Esk Valley, Napier in this handout photo released on February 14, 2023. New Zealand Defence Force/Handout via REUTERS

By Lucy Craymer

WELLINGTON (Reuters) – Expected damage to New Zealand’s economy from severe weather over the past three weeks has prompted financial markets to downgrade the outlook for interest rate rises.

An initial disaster, flash flooding in Auckland, New Zealand’s largest city, hit on Jan. 27. Then on Feb. 12 to 15 a cyclone hit the North Island, which includes Auckland.

“As the scale of the devastation has been gradually revealed, the market has all but priced out the chance of the RBNZ going ahead with the 75bp hike it signalled last November,” said ANZ chief economist Sharon Zollner in a note, referring to the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ).

“Indeed, it’s now pricing a small chance of a pause or just a 25bp hike next week, which is fair,” she added.

The flash flooding damaged roads across Auckland, closed businesses including the airport, destroyed houses, roads and crops. The cyclone then damaged still more roads, many of which are still closed, swept away rail track and grounded flights. Homes are flooded and communities cut off.

Tanker trucks cannot collect milk, some logging is suspended, and meat processing is reduced.

When Cyclone Gabrielle hit, picking had just begun on pip-fruit farms, whose production is worth about NZ$1 billion a year. Now the industry has lost not only 2023 product but many orchards are still inaccessible.

Among 25 economists polled by Reuters on Feb. 13-16, 20 expected the central bank to raise its policy rate by 50 basis points next week, even though the RBNZ Monetary Policy Statement in November had suggested a 75 basis point rise this month and an eventual peak of 5.5%.

The median from the Reuters poll now puts the peak at 5.25%.

No one has yet estimated the scale of the damage from the severe weather. But Finance Minister Grant Robertson told broadcaster TVNZ the cost to the government could be similar to the NZ$13.5 billion ($8.42 billion) it had spent rebuilding Christchurch after an earthquake in 2011.

“This will be a significant event financially for the government and for individuals, households, businesses, banks and insurers,” he said.

Fifteen people are so far confirmed to have died in the two disasters.

A surge in prices looks likely from the disruption. Economists expect inflation, already running at a near three-decade high of 7.2%, to rise as the country replaces homes and contents and repairs infrastructure. Loss of crops will push up food prices.

That would normally be a reason for a central bank to lift interest rates further, but some economists expect the RBNZ to look past the sudden rise as being temporary.

Still, Kiwibank chief economist Jarrod Kerr said the central bank should pause hikes until the effect of the cyclone can be understood.

“Current circumstances warrant caution. But what we think they should do is not what they will likely do,” said Kerr.

After the Christchurch earthquake, the central bank cut its policy rate due to concerns about the economy.

($1 = 1.6090 New Zealand dollars)



Source link

BlackRock, Standard Chartered join talks at new debt roundtable By Reuters


2/2

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: The Standard Chartered bank logo is seen at their headquarters in London, Britain, July 26, 2022. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls/File Photo

2/2

By Andrea Shalal and Jorgelina do Rosario

WASHINGTON/LONDON (Reuters) -U.S.-based investment firm BlackRock (NYSE:) said on Friday it would join a new sovereign debt roundtable set up to accelerate progress on stalled relief efforts for distressed countries, with Britain’s Standard Chartered (OTC:) also joining, according to sources.

The Global Sovereign Debt Roundtable, chaired by the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and India – this year’s leader of the Group of 20 major economies – held its first virtual meeting on Friday, a gathering aimed at setting the agenda for an in-person meeting on Feb. 25 on the sidelines of a G20 finance leaders meeting in Bengaluru, India.

Friday’s meeting allowed deputies to share their views and prepare for next week’s meeting, said one source familiar with the matter. U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen intends to press China and other creditors for faster progress on debt relief at the G20 finance leaders meeting.

“We welcome the Global Sovereign Debt Roundtable and look forward to engaging constructively in the dialogue alongside other key stakeholders,” a spokesperson for BlackRock told Reuters.

Three people with knowledge of the matter said Standard Chartered would also join. A spokesperson for Standard Chartered declined to comment.

Unlike the G20’s Common Framework platform for bilateral debt restructuring, the roundtable talks include public and private creditors as well as borrowing countries. Such setup aims at finding common ground on standards, principles and definitions for how to restructure debts of distressed countries, officials have said.

Participants include officials from creditor countries China, India, Saudi Arabia, the United States and other wealthy Group of Seven democracies, as well as six borrowing countries – Ethiopia, Zambia, Ghana, Sri Lanka, Suriname and Ecuador.

BURDEN SHARING

World Bank President David Malpass, who helped organize the roundtable, said he hoped bringing the private sector into the process earlier – and facilitating its dialogue with China and other big creditors – would help speed up debt relief.

“To actually have debt relief that’s meaningful, there has to be a burden sharing among the various creditors,” Malpass told Reuters in an interview on Thursday.

Including financial institutions in the roundtable along with China, India and other bilateral creditors that are not part of the Paris Club marked a big step forward, he said.

Private-sector creditors now hold a much bigger share of the debt owed by developing and emerging market economies than official sovereign creditors, but have been largely absent from the Common Framework process.

Meanwhile, New York’s state legislature is weighing a measure that would compel private-sector creditors to participate in debt restructurings of low- and middle-income countries on the same terms as official government creditors, lawmakers and non-profit groups say. Some 52% of private-sector-held sovereign debt is under contract in New York state.

The World Bank’s International Debt Report showed that the external debt of the poorest countries nearly tripled to $1 trillion in 2021 from a decade earlier, and 60% of those countries were in or at risk of debt distress. Low- and middle-income countries owed 61% of their debt to private creditors.

China, now the largest official creditor, has been holding back to see how other bilateral and private creditors participate in debt reductions, or haircuts. At the end of 2021, China was the largest bilateral lender to the poorest countries, accounting for 49% of their bilateral debt stock, up from 18% in 2010, according to World Bank data.

“Private creditors are major players in many debt restructurings and need to share the responsibility for achieving a successful restructuring,” Malpass added.



Source link

France’s Macron signals electric car subsidy concern on agenda with Harris By Reuters



© Reuters. U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris meets with French President Emmanuel Macron at the bilateral meeting at the Munich Security Conference in Munich, Germany February 17, 2023. Michael Probst/Pool via REUTERS

By Trevor Hunnicutt

MUNICH (Reuters) – French President Emmanuel Macron signaled on Friday that he would discuss concerns about U.S. electrical vehicle subsidies with Vice President Kamala Harris as they met during the Munich Security Conference.

“We are working hard,” on the issue, Macron said before their meeting.

While EU countries welcome the U.S. commitment to energy transition, they fear the U.S. Inflation Reduction Act’s (IRA’s) $369 billion of subsidies for electric vehicles (EVs) and other clean technologies could put companies based in Europe at a disadvantage.

Harris said they were also going to discuss their commitment to supporting Ukraine against Russia’s invasion but offered no comment about the subsidy issue before reporters were ushered out of a meeting between the two leaders.

The bill is a key part of Biden’s vision to deal with climate change, reinvigorate American manufacturing and compete with China, but it has rankled allies from Brussels to Seoul.

Macron, who U.S. President Joe Biden celebrated with a lavish state dinner in December, announced around that time that the two leaders had agreed to “fix” issues about the made-in-America EV law. But a solution from Washington that would be acceptable to France has not been forthcoming in the months since.



Source link

Australia’s central bank says more rate pain needed to tame inflation By Reuters



© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A worker is reflected in a wall of the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) head office in central Sydney, Australia, March 1, 2016. REUTERS/David Gray/File Photo/File Photo

By Stella Qiu

SYDNEY (Reuters) -Australia’s top central banker again projected further interest rate rises in coming months and said the pain was worth bearing to bring inflation down.

Speaking before members of parliament for the second time this week, Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) Governor Philip Lowe said the extent of further interest rate rises would depend on the global economy, household spending and the outlook for inflation and the labour market.

“Based on the currently available information, the (RBA) Board expects that further increases will be needed over the months ahead to ensure that inflation returns to target and that this period of high inflation is only temporary,” Lowe said.

“If we don’t get on top of inflation and bring it down in a timely way, the end result will be even higher interest rates and more unemployment in the future.”

Lowe delivered a similar message to members of parliament on Wednesday.

The RBA last week lifted interest rates by a quarter point to a decade-high of 3.35%, bringing its tightening since May to 325 basis points. It flagged that more increases would be needed to contain inflation, which is running at a three-decade high of 7.8%.

Markets responded by raising the expected peak for short-term interest rates to around 4.1%, from 3.6% a month previously, implying three more rises to come.

Market prices also imply that interest rates will fall next year. Lowe said the scenario was plausible if the RBA could get on top of inflation, with wage growth staying subdued. A few things would have to go right for that to happen, he added.

JIGSAW PUZZLE

When asked about seemingly soft jobs data for January, Lowe said it had not affected an RBA assessment that the labour market was still very tight. The central bank could reconsider that view if it saw another weak jobs report, though it did not expect one, he said.

“We are not on a predetermined path with interest rates. We meet every month and we are looking at all the pieces of the jigsaw puzzle every month and trying to put them together,” said Lowe.

“Our assessment at the last meeting is that we need to get it (the policy rate) up further but if information comes to suggest otherwise, we have the flexibility to adjust quickly.”

Interest rates implemented so far have lifted repayments on an average A$500,000 home loan by A$900 a month.

Around 10% of owner-occupiers paying variable-rate loans had almost no cashflow left after meeting mortgage payments and living costs, said Brad Jones, an assistant governor of the RBA. But half of variable-rate borrowers were more than a year ahead of required payments, he said.

Housing prices fell for the ninth straight month in January, when they were 8.9% below their April peak.



Source link

Canadian Senate calls for Bank of Canada to be more transparent By Reuters



© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Governor of the Bank of Canada Tiff Macklem walks outside the Bank of Canada building in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada June 22, 2020. REUTERS/Blair Gable/File Photo

(Reuters) – A Senate committee on Wednesday called for greater parliamentary oversight of the Bank of Canada and more transparency from the central bank as it battles to restore credibility lost during last year’s fight to contain inflation.

The Bank of Canada has come under a rare attack from critics, including opposition Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre, for misjudging inflation, which led to renewed calls for it to release minutes and be more open about its decision-making process.

Last week, Bank of Canada finally released minutes from the policy-setting meeting and concluded that the central bank hiked rates last month rather than leaving them unchanged because of labor market tightness and stronger-than-expected growth.

In a report published on Wednesday, the Senate committee on banking, commerce and the economy said the tightening of monetary policy was justified, while noting that rising interest rates had begun to slow economic growth and could worsen housing issues.

“The Bank of Canada should be more transparent and periodically make public its assessment of the effect of its interventions on inflation and on the evolution of key economic indicators,” the report said.

The central bank did not immediately respond to Reuters request for comment on the Senate committee report.

On Jan. 25, the Bank of Canada hiked its key interest rate to 4.5%, the highest level in 15 years, and became the first major central bank to say it would likely hold off on further increases for now.



Source link

Asia stocks fall, dollar stands firm after sticky U.S. CPI By Reuters



© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Monitors displaying the stock index prices and Japanese yen exchange rate against the U.S. dollar are seen after the New Year ceremony marking the opening of trading in 2022 at the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE), amid the coronavirus disease (COVI

By Xie Yu

HONG KONG (Reuters) – Asian stocks slipped while the U.S. dollar was steadfast on Wednesday, following U.S. inflation data and remarks from central bank officials that have investors worrying interest rates are going to be higher for longer.

Headline U.S. CPI came in at 6.4% year-on-year for January, a bit higher than the 6.2% economists had expected, setting off selling in the bond market and Fed funds futures as hopes that rates could be cut later this year grow dimmer and dimmer.

Fed funds futures now imply a peak above 5.2% by mid-year and rates above 5% at year’s end.

Two-year Treasury yields, which rise when prices fall, climbed nearly nine basis points in New York trade to 4.611%, widening their premium over 10-year rates – an unusual phenomenon that reliably signals recession.

U.S. stocks finished flat on Tuesday but dropped 0.4% in Asia.

By mid-morning Hong Kong time, MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was down 1.3%, led by drops bigger than 1% in Australia and Hong Kong, and analysts were bracing for further falls.

“If I combine this earlier (U.S.) Fed rhetoric trying to keep the rates higher for longer and the recent CPI number…then it seems likely that there should be some degree of moderation in the equity markets, both developed markets and Asian markets,” said Manishi Raychaudhuri, head of Asia Pacific equity research at BNP Paribas (OTC:).

He said the dollar might also regain some strength over emerging market currencies, helped by the prospect of U.S. rates staying elevated.

The dollar touched a six-week high of 133.30 Japanese yen overnight and hovered at 132.80 yen on Wednesday. It had a bumpier ride against other currencies following the CPI data, but seems to be pausing following a January slide.

The was steady at 103.32. The Australian dollar eased a bit to $0.6959 even as central bank Governor Philip Lowe said rates would need to rise further to contain inflation in remarks to a parliamentary committee.

Oil prices fell as traders worried about mounting supplies and weakening demand. dipped 0.46% to $78.70 a barrel. settled down 1.19% to $85.58 per barrel.

Gold was slightly higher. traded at $1,854.92 per ounce. clung to an overnight bounce at $22,114.



Source link

Asian Shares track Wall Street’s inflation optimism, yen recoups losses By Reuters



© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Monitors displaying the stock index prices and Japanese yen exchange rate against the U.S. dollar are seen after the New Year ceremony marking the opening of trading in 2022 at the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE), amid the coronavirus disease (COVI

By Stella Qiu

SYDNEY (Reuters) – Asian shares tracked a bounce on Wall Street on Tuesday, as investors remained confident that key U.S. economic data due later would show an easing in inflation, while the yen recouped losses as Japan nominated a new central bank governor.

Japan’s currency had weakened on uncertainty surrounding the next governor of the Bank of Japan. The government named academic Kazuo Ueda on Tuesday as its pick for the job, a surprise choice that could improve the odds of an end to its unpopular yield control policy.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rebounded 0.3%. rose 0.5%.

Chinese shares reversed earlier gains to be down for the day, with blue chips easing 0.1% and Hong Kong’s losing 0.3%.

In some positive news for geopolitics, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken is considering meeting top Chinese diplomat Wang Yi at the Munich Security Conference this week, after the United States shot down what it said was a Chinese spy balloon and other flying objects of unknown origin.

Later on Tuesday, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics will release January’s consumer price index (CPI) data, which is expected to show how effective Federal Reserve policy tightening has been in taming inflation.

Analysts expect the headline CPI to rise 0.5% in January, with the core number seen advancing 0.4%, compared with 0.3% in the previous month, according to a Reuters poll. On an annual basis, consumer price inflation likely eased to 6.2%, from 6.5% in December.

Overnight on Wall Street, the rose 1.2%, while the Nasdaq rallied 1.5% and Dow Jones was up 1.1%.

“The bottom line for us is two-fold. First, inflation is coming down, but it will not be a smooth decline. A return to target for inflation was never very likely this year, so patience is required regardless,” said Seth Carpenter, chief global economist at Morgan Stanley (NYSE:).

“But second, the recent high wage inflation does not spell failure for the Fed. Services inflation is not too far off target, the link from wages to inflation is there, but small, and both services wage and price inflation are trending down despite a strong labour market,” Carpenter added.

Treasuries were largely steady, with the yield on benchmark 10-year government bonds mostly unchanged at 3.7073%.

Two-year bond yields also eased from their three-month highs to hover at 4.5154%, compared with the previous close of 4.5340%.

In currency markets, the dollar remained subdued ahead of the inflation data, after suffering a 0.3% loss against its major peers last session.

It weakened 0.2% against the Japanese yen to 132.13 yen, after gaining 0.8% the previous day.

Japan’s 10-year bond yields hovered at 0.5% – hitting the upper limit of a range enforced by the Bank of Japan – as investors bet the yield control policy would wound up eventually under the new governor.

BlackRock (NYSE:) Investment Institute on Monday cut Japanese stocks to “underweight”, saying that a Bank of Japan (BOJ) policy change away from its ultra-loose monetary strategy could push global yields higher and reduce risk appetite.

In the oil market, futures eased 1% to $85.77 while U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude also fell 1.3% to $79.1.

Gold was slightly higher. traded at $1,855.59 per ounce.



Source link