Baltic
Dry Index. 1587 -11 Brent Crude 74.50
Spot Gold 3120 US 2 Year Yield 3.87 -0.02
US Federal Debt. 36.672 trillion!!!
"As fewer and fewer people have
confidence in paper as a store of value, the price of gold will continue to
rise. The history of fiat money is little more than a register of monetary
follies and inflations. Our present age merely affords another entry in this
dismal register."
Hans F. Sennholz
Trump Tariff Day has arrived, with the Great Man himself at 4 pm Washington time, due to share with the rest of the world, what tariffs will be imposed, on whom, and what the Great Man thinks will be the beneficial results.
I suspect the effect on the global economy will be a repeat of the 1930s global economy, but with masses of rapidly unserviceable corporate, consumer and national debt.
Far from being a masterplan to Make America Great Again, dinosaur Graeme, thinks it more likely to Make Everyone Poor Again.
But first we have to see what the Grate
Great Man actually says.
Asia-Pacific markets mixed as Trump administration
prepares to roll out fresh tariffs
Updated Wed, Apr 2 2025 12:03 AM EDT
Asia-Pacific markets were mixed Wednesday
as investors brace for U.S. President Donald Trump to roll out fresh tariffs
this week.
Japan’s Nikkei 225 traded
0.10% higher while the Topix declined 0.55%. South Korea’s Kospi slipped 0.30% and the
small-cap Kosdaq lost 0.47%.
Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 traded 0.26%
higher.
Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index was flat
while mainland China’s CSI 300 added 0.15%.
India’s Nifty 50 gained 0.45% at the
open.
U.S. stock futures moved higher as Wall
Street awaits the expected rollout of President Donald Trump’s tariffs on
Wednesday.
Overnight in the U.S., the three major
averages closed mixed. The S&P
500 added 0.38% to close at 5,633.07 while the Nasdaq Composite gained
0.87% and ended at 17,449.89. The Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped
11.80 points, or 0.03%, to settle at 41,989.96
While markets are likely to be volatile in
the near term, UBS analysts expect news flow to become “more positive” toward
the second half of the year.
“We think investors can use market swings
to build long-term exposure. Investors should therefore consider taking
advantage of market dips to buy into broad U.S. equities and companies exposed
to AI,” the investment bank wrote in a note.
Asia-Pacific
markets live: South Korea inflation
Factories Shrink, Treasury Bets Rise on US
Uncertainty
April 1, 2025 at 11:16 PM GMT+1
US factory activity contracted in
March for
the first time this year and prices accelerated sharply for a second
month as the drumbeat of higher tariffs reverberated through the economy. The
Institute for Supply Management’s manufacturing index declined 1.3
points last month to 49, according to data released Tuesday.
Readings below 50 indicate contraction and
the figure was slightly weaker than the median projection in a Bloomberg survey
of economists. At the same time, the group’s price measure increased to
the highest since June 2022. Over the past two months, the gauge has increased
14.5 points, the most over a comparable period in four years.
With Donald Trump pledging more tariff
turbulence Wednesday and the rest of the world primed to retaliate, options traders
are betting Treasuries will extend their rally ahead of
any details on the president’s “reciprocal” tariff plans. Evidence that investors are
girding for new tariffs is accumulating as the once churning US economy begins
to stumble under the weight of Trump-driven uncertainty.
Investors tend to buy Treasuries when they
believe growth is going to slow and eventually force the Federal Reserve to
ease monetary policy. A popular haven in turbulent times, US government bonds
have also drawn buyers following weeks of tariff-fueled
volatility in stocks and other assets.
The preparation for more economic damage
can be seen in everything from big options wagers on lower Treasury yields to
expectations of deeper-than-expected cuts from the Fed reflected in
interest rate-linked derivatives. Lopsided demand for call options—which are
used to bet on higher Treasury prices—is another important indicator. The
premium investors are paying for calls relative to put options stands at its
highest level since August 2024.
“There is a large group of people in the
marketplace that are putting much more emphasis right now on a recession than
an inflationary episode without a recession or at least a slowdown,” said
Thierry Wizman, global currencies and interest-rate strategist at Macquarie
Group.
Factories
Shrink, Treasury Bets Rise on Uncertainty: Evening Briefing Americas -
Bloomberg
Trump’s tariffs in numbers: The biggest
losers amid escalating US trade war
1 April 2925
World leaders are bracing for an
escalation in the US trade war with Donald Trump set to unveil a swathe of tariffs on imported goods.
The US president is set to announce a
string of fresh tariffs on so-called “Liberation Day” in an effort to
increase homegrown production and reduce trade imbalances.
The changes are set to range from levies on countries
buying Venezuelan oil to reciprocal tariffs on countries with “unfair taxes” on
US goods.
But some countries will be hit harder than
others, with a handful already bearing the brunt of Trump’s trade war.
What are the tariffs and who is impacted?
All countries worldwide which trade with
the United States are at risk of facing tariffs on Mr Trump’s so-called
“Liberation Day”.
The United States imported around $3.3
trillion in goods from abroad last year, and latest reports from the Washington Post claim the White
House has drafted tariffs “of around 20 per cent on most imports to
the United States”.
As it stands, existing tariffs on goods
from Mexico, Canada and China, as well as on imported steel and aluminium, plus
a new 25 per cent tariff
on vehicles and parts., will cover at least $1.4 trillion-worth of goods,
according to the Tax Foundation.
But that value of imports hit by taxes
will increase with a series of reciprocal tariffs to be announced by Donald
Trump in the coming hours, plus levies on Venezuelan oil importers, and
possible undefined tariffs on agricultural products from overseas.
“To the Great Farmers of the United
States: Get ready to start making a lot of agricultural product to be sold
INSIDE of the United States,” Mr Trump announced
on Truth Social in early March. “Tariffs will go on external product on April
2nd. Have fun!”
Mr Trump had warned “all countries” will
be affected by the looming reciprocal tariffs - although a statement alongside
his Presidential Memorandum in February suggested that countries which either
have a deficit in trade with the US – meaning that they export more than they
import – or place higher tariffs on US products would be targeted.
The memorandum stated that these “unfair”
taxes on US goods cost American firms over $2 billion each year.
But as of Tuesday evening, it is still
unclear which countries will be hit by the latest round of tariffs, and to what
degree, and so economists are unable to estimate the value of trade impacted.
Instead, US treasury secretary Scott
Bessent singled out a “top 15 per cent” of countries that trade heavily with
the US and impose high tariffs and barriers to imports - but would not name
them, or give more detail on what the percentage figure was for.
Another member of Mr Trump’s National
Economic Council said that the administration was targeting countries that were
in a trade deficit with the US; amounting to a total goods trade deficit of
$1.2 trillion in 2024.
Countries that export more to the US than
they import include China, the EU, Mexico,
Vietnam, Ireland, Germany, Taiwan, South Korea, Canada,
India, Thailand, Italy, Switzerland, Malaysia, Indonesia, France, Austria, and
Sweden.
The most likely scenario is countries
across both groups will be affected, with Trump’s memorandum directly calling out France, Brazil, Canada, India,
China, and the EU as a whole.
Despite not being in a trade deficit, the
UK may also be affected, with the White House including value-added tax (VAT)
in its list of “unfair, discriminatory, or extraterritorial taxes imposed by
our trading partners on United States businesses, workers, and consumers”.
UK efforts to negotiate a deal with the US
for exemptions continued into Tuesday night.
More
Trump’s
tariffs in numbers: The biggest losers amid escalating US trade war
Tariffs will likely raise much less money than
White House projects, economists say
Published Tue, Apr 1 2025 4:03 PM EDT
President Donald Trump says that tariffs will
make the U.S. “rich.” But those riches will likely be far less than the
White House expects, economists said.
The ultimate sum could have big
ramifications for the U.S. economy, the nation’s debt and legislative
negotiations over a tax-cut package, economists said.
White House trade adviser Peter Navarro on
Sunday estimated tariffs would raise about $600 billion a year and $6 trillion
over a decade. Auto tariffs would add another $100 billion a year, he said on
“Fox News Sunday.”
Navarro made the projection as the
U.S. plans
to announce more tariffs against U.S. trading partners on Wednesday.
Economists expect the Trump
administration’s tariff policy would generate a much lower amount of revenue
than Navarro claims. Some project the total revenue would be less than half.
Roughly $600 billion to $700 billion a
year “is not even in the realm of possibility,” said Mark Zandi, chief
economist at Moody’s. “If you get to $100 billion to $200 billion, you’ll be
pretty lucky.”
The White House declined to respond to a
request for comment from CNBC about tariff revenue.
The ‘mental math’ behind tariff revenue
There are big question marks over the
scope of the tariffs, including details like amount, duration, and products and
countries affected — all of which have a significant bearing on the revenue
total.
The White House is
considering a 20% tariff on most imports, The Washington Post reported on Tuesday. President
Trump floated this
idea on the campaign trail. The Trump administration may ultimately opt for a
different policy, like country-by-country tariffs based on each nation’s
respective trade and non-trade barriers.
But a 20% tariff rate seems to align with
Navarro’s revenue projections, economists said.
The U.S. imported about $3.3 trillion of goods in 2024.
Applying a 20% tariff rate to all these imports would yield about $660 billion
of annual revenue.
“That is almost certainly the mental math
Peter Navarro is doing — and that mental math skips some crucial steps,” said
Ernie Tedeschi, director of economics at the Yale Budget Lab and former chief
economist at the White House Council of Economic Advisers during the Biden
administration.
That’s because an accurate revenue
estimate must account for the many economic impacts of tariffs in the U.S. and
around the world, economists said. Those effects combine to reduce revenue,
they said.
A 20% broad tariff would raise about $250
billion a year (or $2.5 trillion over a decade) when taking those effects into
account, according to Tedeschi, citing a Yale Budget Lab analysis published Monday.
There are ways to raise larger sums — but
they would involve higher tariff rates, economists said. For example, a 50%
across-the-board tariff would raise about $780 billion per year, according to economists at the Peterson Institute for
International Economics.
Even that is an optimistic assessment: It
doesn’t account for lower U.S. economic growth due to retaliation or the
negative growth effects from the tariffs themselves, they wrote.
Why revenue would be lower than expected
Tariffs generally raise
prices for consumers. A 20% broad tariff would cost the average consumer
$3,400 to $4,200 a year, according to the Yale Budget Lab.
Consumers would naturally buy fewer
imported goods if they cost more, economists said. Lower demand means fewer
imports and less tariff revenue from those imports, they said.
Tariffs are also expected to trigger
“reduced economic activity,” said Robert McClelland, senior fellow at the
Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.
For example, U.S. companies that don’t
pass tariff costs on to consumers via higher prices would likely see profits
suffer (and their income taxes fall), economists said. Consumers might pull
back on spending, further denting company profits and tax revenues, economists
said. Companies that take a financial hit might lay off workers, they said.
Foreign nations are also expected to
retaliate with their own tariffs on U.S. products, which would hurt companies
that export products abroad. Other nations may experience an economic downturn,
further reducing demand for U.S. products.
“If you get a 20% tariff rate, you’re
going to get a rip-roaring recession, and that will undermine your fiscal
situation,” Zandi said.
There’s also likely to be a certain level
of non-compliance with tariff policy, and carve-outs for certain countries,
industries or products, economists said. For instance, when the White House
levied tariffs on China in February, it indefinitely
exempted “de minimis” imports valued at $800 or less.
More
Tariffs
may raise much less than White House projects, economists say
Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession
Watch.
Given
our Magic Money Tree central banksters and our spendthrift politicians,
inflation now needs an entire section of its own.
Food
inflation in UK continues to edge up in March
Tue,
01st Apr 2025 01:00
(Alliance
News) - Food inflation continued to edge up in March, despite retailers doing
"all they can" to avert pressures bearing down on the industry,
figures show.
Food
prices overall are now 2.4% higher than last March, up from 2.1% in February
and above the three-month average of 2%, according to the British Retail
Consortium-NIQ shop price index.
Ambient
food inflation saw the biggest increase, to 3.7% from February's 2.8%, with
alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages both recording price increases because of
duty changes and the hangover from high global sugar prices.
Fresh
food prices are 1.4% higher than a year ago, a slight dip from February's 1.5%.
Shop
prices overall are 0.4% cheaper than last March, a slowing on last month's 0.7%
decline, driven by clothing and footwear falling into double digit deflation as
a result of weak consumer demand.
BRC
chief executive Helen Dickinson said: "Retailers continue to do all they
can to protect customers from the cost pressures bearing down on the industry.
"Prices
fell for most non-food categories, which kept year-on-year overall shop prices
in deflation, but at a reduced rate compared to February.
"With
retailers bracing for significant extra costs which kick in later this week as
a result of the Budget, inflation will likely accelerate in the coming months.
"Along
with new packaging taxes later this year, retailers will be shouldering an
additional GBP7 billion in costs. It is crucial that the Employment Rights Bill
and business rates reform don't further inflate costs and increase red
tape."
Mike
Watkins, head of retailer and business insight at NielsenIQ, said: "There
is competition on the high street as retailers look to pull in reluctant
shoppers with seasonal promotions.
"However,
with upwards pressure on prices, retailers may also need some focused price
cuts to help footfall in the run up to the late Easter."
Food inflation in UK continues to edge up in March | Financial News
Covid-19
Corner
This
section will continue only occasionally when something of interest occurs.
Study estimates current Moderna vaccine 53% effective against COVID
hospitalization
Stephanie Soucheray, MA March 31, 2025
A preprint study posted late last week on the server medRxiv reveals
that the current Moderna COVID-19 vaccine is 53% effective against
COVID-19–related hospitalization and 39% protective against medically attended
COVID-19 over a median follow-up period of 57 days.
The study, which has not
yet been peer-reviewed, evaluated the effectiveness of Moderna's updated
vaccine targeting the KP.2 variant at preventing hospitalizations and medically
attended COVID-19 illness. Outcomes among recipients of the vaccine were compared
to people who did not receive any 2024-25 COVID vaccine.
The retrospective matched
cohort study used electronic health records to determine vaccinations from
August 23, 2024, through December 24, 2024, and with follow-up through December
31, 2024. Overall, 465,073 KP.2 vaccine recipients were matched 1:1 to unexposed
adults.
---- Lower protection in those with underlying
conditions
Vaccine effectiveness
(VE) was 52.8% (95% confidence interval [CI], 34.8% to 65.8%) against
COVID-19–related hospitalization, and 39.4% (95% CI; 35.0% to 43.5%) against
medically attended COVID-19 over a median follow-up of 57 days.
Adjusted VE against
COVID-19–related hospitalization was 53.1% for adults 50 years old or older,
53.2% among adults 65 years old or older, and 46.5% among adults with at least
one underlying medical condition. Adjusted VE against medically attended COVID-19
was 41.2% for adults ages 50 years old and older, 46.7% among those 65 years
old or older, and 40.4% among adults with at least one underlying medical
condition.
More
Study estimates current Moderna vaccine 53% effective against COVID
hospitalization | CIDRAP
Technology
Update.
With events happening fast in the
development of solar power and graphene, among other things, I’ve added this
section. Updates as they get reported.
Sodium-iron
battery startup to challenge Li-ion for extended storage
By Abhimanyu Ghoshal March 31, 2025
We've
long relied on lithium-ion batteries for long-term energy storage, but they can
be expensive to produce and maintain over the years. California-based startup
Inlyte wants to offer a scalable alternative with its sodium-iron battery tech,
and it'll soon manufacture cells to showcase its benefits.
The
idea behind sodium-iron batteries has been around for decades. Beta Research,
an outfit in the UK, pioneered this technology back in the 1970s for use in
electric vehicles, but it didn't take off – and lithium-ion took the lead
instead. Several years later, Stanford graduate Antonio Baclig chose to run
with sodium metal halide battery designs in his effort to create a
utility-grade energy storage solution, and launched his own firm to
commercialize it.
Inlyte
looked at Beta Research's work developing this tech and acquired the latter's
team and facilities. In 2023, the
startup raised US$8 million in seed funding to
pursue its ambitions. Now, it's inked a deal with Horien Salt Battery Solutions
to scale up production of sodium-iron batteries at a facility in the US, and
bring these long-duration storage batteries to market.
The
big draw of sodium-iron batteries is in the name: they're made of two highly
abundant materials, which means they could cost as little as $35 per kWh when
manufactured at scale. That's a fraction of what you'd pay for lithium-ion
batteries, which are around
$139 per kWh.
Sodium-iron
batteries are also durable, can operate and be safely shipped in any climate,
pose low fire risks, and promise between 6-24 hours of energy storage. In
comparison, lithium-ion
storage batteries generally offer about 4 hours of storage duration.
Inlyte
has also demonstrated its cells managing
over 700 cycles with no loss in energy capacity, and
claims a battery life of at least 7,000 cycles, or 20 years. That could
give lithium-ion-based
storage options like Tesla's Megapack a run for their
money.
By
partnering with Horien, Inlyte hopes to throw open the doors to its first
US-based battery factory by 2027. The company has already been testing its tech
at a pilot plant in the UK; manufacturing in the US with Horien's expertise
could accelerate its ambition to commercialize its cells and sign up customers
in the near future.
Source: Inlyte via PR
Newswire
Sodium-iron
battery startup to challenge Li-ion for extended storage
Next, the
world global debt clock. Nations debts to GDP compared.
World Debt
Clocks (usdebtclock.org)
“The problem with fiat money is that it rewards the minority that
can handle money, but fools the generation that has worked and saved money.”
“Adam Smith” aka George Goodman.