Monday, 30 December 2024

2025 Boom Or Bust? Trump 2.0. China, EU, UK Recessions?

Baltic Dry Index. 997 +03           Brent Crude  74.30

Spot Gold 2623               US 2 Year Yield 4.31  +0.01

"The London Banker Henry Fauntleroy forged to keep his bank solvent. He was executed for it in 1824."

Charles P. Kindleberger, author Manias, Panics and Crashes.

It is almost year-end, normally a time to dress up stocks and stock indexes, but this year?

Will Trump 2.0 bring in boom, as the US stock casinos think, or bust as the US bond market is pricing in?

I think the bond vigilantes have it about right.

South Korea stocks shrug off tepid industrial data, political turmoil; Jeju Air shares hit record low

Published Sun, Dec 29 2024 6:40 PM EST Updated 54 Min Ago

Asia-Pacific markets were mixed on the penultimate trading day of this year, after Wall Street declined on Friday.

South Korea’s Kospi rose 0.91%, while the Kosdaq added 1.74% Monday, even as the country grapples with political turmoil and downbeat industrial data, among other things.

South Korea witnessed its deadliest airline crash on Sunday that claimed 179 lives when a Jeju Air plane crashed into a wall at Muan International Airport, bursting into flames.

South Korea’s acting President Choi Sang-mok instructed an urgent safety inspection of the nation’s airline operation system, to be carried out once the recovery efforts for the Jeju Air crash are completed.

Shares of Jeju Air hit an all-time low Monday, according to FactSet data, and were last down 8.53%. Other Korean airlines’ stocks were volatile. Korean Air slipped 1%, budget airlines T’way Air and Jin Air fell 3.23% and 2.12%, respectively. Air Busan climbed over 13%.

South Korea’s industrial output contracted 0.7% on a monthly basis in November, greater than the 0.4% decline expected by Reuters. On an annual basis, industrial output rose 0.1%, smaller than Reuters’ expectations of a 0.4% climb. This compares to October’s reading of a 6.3% increase.

The country’s parliament on Dec. 27 voted to impeach acting President Han Duck-soo, not long after Yoon got impeached as a result of his brief martial law decree, which plunged the country into political turmoil. The country’s investigation agency on Monday reportedly sought an arrest warrant for Yoon.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 fell 0.82%, while the Topix was down 0.30%

Japan’s factory activity contracted at a slower rate in December. The au Jibun Bank Japan Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index climbed to 49.6 in December, coming in slightly above November’s reading of 49.0 and marking the softest contraction in three months. However, the figure remained below the 50 threshold that separates expansion from contraction.

“The headline reading moved closer to neutrality amid softer reductions in both production and new order intakes,” said Usamah Bhatti at S&P Global Market Intelligence.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 traded 0.51% lower.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index rose 0.15%, while mainland China’s CSI 300 climbed 0.53%.

Traders await China’s manufacturing PMI on Tuesday, while markets will be closed on Wednesday for New Year’s Day holiday.

U.S. stocks fell Friday, led by technology names, but major indexes still rose for the week.

The blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average shed 333.59 points, or 0.77%, to 42,992.21, falling for the first time in six sessions. The S&P 500 fell 1.11% to 5,970.84. The Nasdaq Composite slid 1.49% to 19,722.03, as Tesla dropped about 5% and Nvidia fell 2%.

Asia markets live updates: Jeju Air, South Korea industrial output

Stock futures inch lower as Wall Street readies for the final trading week of 2024: Live updates

Updated Mon, Dec 30 2024 12:17 AM EST

Stock futures were slightly lower early Monday ahead of the last few trading sessions of 2024.

Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average dipped 81 points, or 0.19%, while S&P 500 futures edged down 0.16%. Nasdaq-100 futures hovered near the flatline.

The major averages are heading into the yearend shy of record levels, with the S&P 500 and Dow up more than 25% and 14%, respectively, and on track for the best year since 2021. The Nasdaq has gained more than 31%.

The benchmarks are also headed for a winning fourth quarter, with the Nasdaq on pace for its longest quarterly winning streaking since the second quarter of 2021.

Investors are hoping that stocks will continue to rise into the year-end and the new year, and trigger what’s known as a Santa Claus Rally. The phenomenon refers to the market rising into the final five trading days of a calendar year and the first two in January. The S&P 500 has returned 1.3% on average during this period since 1950, according to LPL Financial. 

However, some worries have mounted that the market may be losing momentum, with some year-end profit taking after the major averages notched losing sessions Friday.

“I think it’s long overdue,” Tavis McCourt, institutional equity strategist at Raymond James told CNBC’s Closing Bell on Friday. I would expect more as we get into January. We’ve had a tremendous amount of momentum into a narrow subset of names for the previous month.”

This week ushers in a light period for economic data, with the market closed Wednesday in observance of New Years Day. Chicago PMI and pending homes sales data are due out Monday.

Stock futures today: Live updates

Finally, more of the spendthrift same in the District of Crooks. Shame no one in DC reads Charles P. Kindleberger’s, book Manias, Panics and Crashes.

Yellen Says Treasury to Hit New Debt Limit in Mid-January

By Viktoria Dendrinou and Alexandra Harris December 27, 2024 at 4:51PM EST

(Bloomberg) -- Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said her department is likely to begin taking special accounting maneuvers sometime in mid-January to avoid breaching the US debt limit, and urged lawmakers to take action defending the “full faith and credit” of the US.

“On Jan. 2, 2025, the new debt limit will be established at the amount of outstanding debt,” Yellen wrote in a letter on Friday to House Speaker Mike Johnson and other congressional leaders.

The Treasury will be given a short reprieve, however, because outstanding debt is scheduled to decrease by $54 billion on Jan. 2, thanks to the expected redemption of securities held by a federal trust fund.

The extra headroom is likely to be exhausted by Jan. 14 to 23, Yellen said. At that point, the Treasury will resort to special accounting maneuvers to help keep the government funded.

Yellen gave no indication how long those measures, and the department’s cash reserves, are expected to last. 

Wall Street has, however, begun providing estimates. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. economist Alec Phillips wrote in a Dec. 21 note that the ultimate “deadline for debt limit action is likely not until Jul.-Aug. 2025.”

Prolonged Tussle

Yellen’s letter kicks off what is likely to be a prolonged tussle over fiscal policy as the new administration led by Donald Trump takes office. 

The party in opposition typically uses the need for congressional approval of raising or suspending the debt ceiling as leverage in broader negotiations over taxes and spending. 

Some strategists have anticipated an easier path to an agreement to suspend or lift the cap given Republicans’ unified control of Congress. Yet last week, Trump failed to get a debt-ceiling measure attached to the latest temporary federal spending bill when members of his own party shot down a House version that included a two-year suspension.

A showdown over the debt ceiling could strain financial markets and put upward pressure on already-elevated US borrowing costs.

Debt ceiling brinkmanship is a recurring challenge for financial markets. Standoffs typically send front-end interest rates lower as the Treasury reduces its sales of short-term government debt when operating under the constraint of the limit.

More

Yellen Says Treasury to Hit New Debt Limit in Mid-January

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.

According to the Wall Street “experts,” predictably, there’s no chance of a US recession in 2025. Still when was the last/first time any of the predicted a US recession was likely?

"I never think of the future. It comes soon enough."

 Albert Einstein.

Will the U.S. Have a Recession in 2025?

December 27, 2024

As the final days of December approach, it’s time for Wall Street’s favorite seasonal game: making predictions about whether the U.S. economy will fall into a recession in the coming year.

Coming off a year of record-setting stock market gains and lower — albeit still elevated — inflation, many financial pros are relatively sanguine about the outlook for 2025. For example, the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association’s Economist Roundtable has a generally upbeat attitude. The survey of more than 20 economists found that, on average, respondents say they predict 1.9% GDP growth in 2025.

That’s less than the average expectation of 2.4% GDP growth in 2024 but suggests that the U.S. economy will keep chugging along without slipping into a recession. Gross domestic product, or GDP, is a broad measure of the country’s economic activity. Economists tend to be happy with annual GDP growth in the 2% to 3% range. Too little growth — or an economy that shrinks — raises concerns about recession, but runaway growth isn’t ideal, either, since an overheated economy can trigger inflation.

The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) is the quasi-official arbiter of when the economy enters and exits recessions, but a good rule-of-thumb definition for a recession links it to two consecutive quarters (half a year) of negative GDP growth. That indicates the economy is contracting instead of growing.

Will we have a recession in 2025?

Although nobody has a crystal ball, the consensus seems to be that the economy will continue to expand in 2025, albeit at a slower rate of growth than it did this year. SIFMA says nearly half of roundtable members believe the odds of a recession in 2025 to be 15% or less, while another third estimate that the likelihood of a recession is between 15% and 30%.

Here are what some individual financial experts have predicted recently about the 2025 economy.

David Mericle, chief U.S. economist, Goldman Sachs Research

“Recession fears have diminished, inflation is trending back toward 2%, and the labor market has rebalanced but remains strong,” Mericle wrote in a Nov. 20 post, predicting 2.5% GDP growth for the year.

He added that there are three big expected policy changes as a result of Republicans’ sweep of the White House and Congress that could affect the economy in 2025: more tariffs, tighter immigration policy and the extension of a slew of expiring 2017 tax cuts passed during President-elect Donald Trump’s first term.

Paul F. Gruenwald, global chief economist, S&P Global

“Even before taking office, a second Trump administration is already moving the macro-financial needle and raising downside risks,” Gruenwald wrote in a Nov. 27 research outlook. These implications go beyond just the U.S., he explained, and could have a significant impact on the global economy.

“Potentially large changes in fiscal, trade and immigration policy from the U.S. are significant unknowns at this juncture,” he wrote. “Given the size of the U.S. economy, policy action on any of these fronts can move the global needle.”

Still, Gruenwald said he predicts 2% GDP growth for the U.S. next year.

More

Will the U.S. Have a Recession in 2025?

Covid-19 Corner

This section will continue until it becomes unneeded.

FBI's Covid-19 lab theory kept from Biden, scientist claims

Published: 22:36, 26 December 2024 | Updated: 14:54, 27 December 2024

The FBI was not allowed to brief the US President on evidence that suggested Covid-19 was caused by a lab leak, it was claimed last night.

Jason Bannan, former senior scientist at the FBI, alleged the intelligence agency was not invited to a National Intelligence Council (NIC) briefing with Joe Biden.

Mr Bannan told the Wall Street Journal: ‘Being the only agency that assessed that a laboratory origin was more likely, and the agency that expressed the highest level of confidence in its analysis of the source of the pandemic, we anticipated the FBI would be asked to attend the briefing.

'I find it surprising that the White House didn’t ask.’

US President Joe Biden authorised an investigation in May 2021 by US intelligence agencies and national laboratories to uncover the origin of the virus.

The FBI found that a lab leak was the likely cause of the virus and had ‘moderate confidence’ in its assessment.

Meanwhile, the NIC had concluded with only ‘low confidence’ that Covid-19 had been transmitted from an animal to a human, but this view was presented to the President.

A spokesman for the DNI’s office told the Wall Street Journal that the differing views among the intelligence community had been represented and it was against standard practice to invite representatives from individual agencies to briefings for the president.

The DNI and the NIC’s work on Covid-19 origins ‘complied with all of the intelligence community’s analytic standards, including objectivity,’ the spokesman added.

Mr Bannan, now retired, wants the evidence backing a lab leak theory to be reassessed.

‘What ended up on the intelligence community’s cutting-room floor needs to be re-examined,’ he said.

The US review published in August 2021 concluded thatit would be hard to confirm the origin without cooperation from China.

China has only cooperated on a joint report with the World Health Organisation (WHO) in 2021 which said the virus most likely moved from bats to humans via another animal.

FBI was not allowed to brief President Joe Biden on evidence that suggested Covid-19 was caused by a lab leak, ex-scientist for US intelligence agency claims | Daily Mail Online

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.

Scientists develop record-breaking tech that could slash the cost of solar power: 'We've significantly advanced the durability'

Jon Turi  Thu, December 26, 2024 at 11:15 AM GMT

Perovskite solar cells offer the promise of increased efficiency and lower costs than traditional silicon photovoltaics, but long-term stability issues have held them back.

However, researchers at Northwestern University have now discovered a more resilient replacement to the ammonium-based coating layer used currently, as TechXplore reported. Instead, they found a more robust layer of amidinium is better able to protect the perovskite from harsh environmental stresses like heat and moisture.

Photovoltaics made from silicon have long been the most common choice because of its resilience, but it's also much more expensive.

Dual-layer solutions that use both perovskite and silicon have shown promising results, offering higher efficiencies than either on their own. The Department of Energy has seen examples of perovskite cells reaching 34%, which is a far cry from the 3% efficiency reports from 2009.

Now, the team has found that amidinium-coated perovskite is 10 times more resilient to decomposition than ones using ammonium, per the report.

They also managed to hit a respectable 26.3% power conversion efficiency, while retaining "90% or more of that efficiency for 1,100 hours of maximum power point operations at 85 degrees Celsius," as their research detailed.

"This work addresses one of the critical barriers to widespread adoption of perovskite solar cells—stability under real-world conditions," Northwestern's Mercouri Kanatzidis, who co-led the study, shared with TechXplore.

"By chemically reinforcing the protective layers, we've significantly advanced the durability of these cells without compromising their exceptional efficiency, bringing us closer to a practical, low-cost alternative to silicon-based photovoltaics."

Solar power has seen huge advances in recent years, with a Solar Energy Industries Associate report showing there are 5 million installations across the U.S., and 97% percent of those are on residential rooftops.

Those consumers could benefit from lower costs, which can help ease the expansion of rooftop solar, as the market is projected to double by 2030 and triple by 2034.

The increased resilience will also be a boon for the commercial end of the sector, as solar power becomes a more grid-connected utility, reducing the reliance on dirtier fuels for power.

"The primary barrier to the commercialization of perovskite solar cells is their long-term stability," Ted Sargent, director of the Paula M. Trienens Institute for Sustainability and Energy and a co-author of the study, concluded in the report.

"Due to its multi-decade head start, silicon still has an advantage in some areas, including stability. We are working to close that gap."

Scientists develop record-breaking tech that could slash the cost of solar power: 'We've significantly advanced the durability'

Next, the world global debt clock. Nations debts to GDP compared.

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org)

"The best minds are not in government. If any were, business would hire them away."

Ronald Reagan, 40th United States President.

No comments:

Post a Comment