Saturday, 2 December 2023

Special Update 02/12/2023 The Fed Caves. The Biden Re-Election Boom Starts.

Baltic Dry Index. 3192 +255         Brent Crude 78.88

Spot Gold 2072                U S 2 Year Yield 4.56 -0.17

All the war-propaganda, all the screaming and lies and hatred, comes invariably from people who are not fighting.

George Orwell.

Yesterday, Fed Chairman Powell folded. While saying for the record that if necessary, more interest rate hikes were possible, stare decisis, in obiter dicta remarks, Chairman Powell threw in the towel and kicked off the Fed’s Biden Boom re-election strategy.

Rate cuts galore in 2024, Biden or Bust. Look away from that soaring gold price now.

But will the Powell resurrection plan work if as seems likely, China and Europe are leading the rest of the world into recession? Look away from that collapsing oil price now.


Fed Chair Powell calls talk of cutting rates ‘premature’ and says more hikes could happen

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell on Friday pushed back on market expectations for aggressive interest rate cuts ahead, calling it too early to declare victory over inflation.

Despite a string of positive indicators recently regarding prices, the central bank leader said the Federal Open Market Committee plans on “keeping policy restrictive” until policymakers are convinced that inflation is heading solidly back to 2%.

“It would be premature to conclude with confidence that we have achieved a sufficiently restrictive stance, or to speculate on when policy might ease,” Powell said in prepared remarks for an audience at Spelman College in Atlanta. “We are prepared to tighten policy further if it becomes appropriate to do so.”

However, he also noted that policy is “well into restrictive territory” and noted that balance of risks between doing too much or too little on inflation are close to balanced now.

Markets moved higher following Powell’s remarks, with major averages positive on Wall Street and Treasury yields sharply lower.

“Markets view today’s comments as inching toward the dovish camp,” said Jeffrey Roach, chief economist at LPL Financial.

Expectations that the Fed is done raising rates and will move to an easing posture in 2024 have helped underpin a strong Wall Street rally that has sent the Dow Jones Industrial Average up more than 8% over the past month to a new 2023 high.

Powell’s remarks gave some credence to the idea that the Fed at least is done hiking as the string of rate hikes since March 2022 have cut into economic activity.

“Having come so far so quickly, the FOMC is moving forward carefully, as the risks of under- and over-tightening are becoming more balanced,” he said.

“As the demand- and supply-related effects of the pandemic continue to unwind, uncertainty about the outlook for the economy is unusually elevated,” he added. “Like most forecasters, my colleagues and I anticipate that growth in spending and output will slow over the next year, as the effects of the pandemic and the reopening fade and as restrictive monetary policy weighs on aggregate demand.”

A Commerce Department report Thursday showed that personal consumption expenditures prices, the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, were up 3% from a year ago, but 3.5% at a core basis that excludes volatile food and energy prices. Recent sharp declines in energy have been responsible for much of the easing in inflation.

Powell said the current levels are still “well above” the central bank’s goal. Noting that core inflation has run at a 2.5% annual rate over the past six months, Powell said, “while the lower inflation readings of the past few months are welcome, that progress must continue if we are to reach our 2 percent objective.”

----After inflation hit its highest level since the early 1980s, the Fed enacted a series of 11 interest rate hikes, taking its policy rate to the highest in 22 years at a target range between 5.25%-5.5%. The FOMC at its past two meetings kept rates level, and multiple officials have indicated they think the federal funds rate is probably at or near where it needs to be.

The Fed’s next meeting is Dec. 12-13.

“The strong actions we have taken have moved our policy rate well into restrictive territory, meaning that tight monetary policy is putting downward pressure on economic activity and inflation,” Powell said. “Monetary policy is thought to affect economic conditions with a lag, and the full effects of our tightening have likely not yet been felt.”

Traders expect cuts

Market pricing Friday morning indicated that the Fed indeed is done hiking and could start cutting as soon as March 2024, according to the CME Group. Moreover, futures are pointing to cuts totaling 1.25 percentage points by the end of the year, the equivalent of five quarter percentage point reductions.

More

Fed Chair Powell calls talk of cutting rates 'premature' and says more hikes could happen (cnbc.com)

Markets pin hopes on soft landing, with one eye on recession risk

By Yoruk BahceliDhara Ranasinghe and Naomi Rovnick

Dec 1 (Reuters) - A stellar rally in equities and bonds suggests market confidence is high for the world economy to reach a soft landing after a run of aggressive interest rate hikes.

Yet labour markets are softening, the euro zone faces recession and China's property sector is in crisis.

Here's what some closely-watched market indicators say about global recession risks:

1/ AMERICAN EXCEPTIONALISM?

The U.S. economy grew 5.2% in the third quarter, defying dire recession warnings.

 

But unemployment is rising, nearing a closely-watched 'Sahm rule' threshold, that has shown historically a recession is underway when the three-month rolling average unemployment rate rises half a point above the low of the prior 12 months.

The picture is bleaker elsewhere. China grew faster than expected in the third quarter but manufacturing activity shrank for a second straight month in November. Britain's economy avoided the start of a recession in the third quarter but still failed to grow.

 

The euro zone contracted 0.1% in the third quarter and a business activity downturn remained broad-based in November, suggesting a year-end recession.

Economists broadly expect the global economy to slow next year but avoid a recession.

"The outlier is really the U.S.," said Guy Miller, chief market strategist at Zurich Insurance Group.

"At a global level, growth has and will be disappointing," he added.

2/ EVERYTHING RALLY

Inflation slowing quicker than expected has boosted bets on central bank rate cuts next year, fuelling a broad market rally pinned on a 'soft landing' scenario.

A global index of government and corporate investment-grade bonds in November delivered the best monthly return on record (.MERGBMI)

U.S. 10-year Treasury yields tumbled over 50 basis points in November, the biggest monthly drop in over a decade.

World stocks (.MIWO00000PUS) rose around 9%, their best month since November 2020, when markets cheered COVID-19 vaccines hoping for economies to reopen.

"We are of the view that risks are to the downside heading into January, and suspect investors are underestimating the risks that persist, most notably slowing economic growth," said Zurich Insurance's Miller.

More

Markets pin hopes on soft landing, with one eye on recession risk | Reuters

 

Wall St Week Ahead Tax-loss selling, 'Santa rally' could sway U.S. stocks after November melt-up

By David Randall 

NEW YORK, Dec 1(Reuters) - As U.S. stocks sit on hefty gains at the close of a rollercoaster year, investors are eyeing factors that could sway equities in the remaining weeks of 2023, including tax loss selling and the so-called Santa Claus rally.

The key catalyst for stocks will likely continue to be the expected trajectory of the Federal Reserve's monetary policy. Evidence of cooling economic growth has fueled bets that the U.S. central bank could begin cutting rates as early as the first half of 2024, sparking a rally that has boosted the S&P 500 (.SPX) 19.6% year-to-date and taken the index to a fresh closing high for the year on Friday.

At the same time, seasonal trends have been particularly strong this year. In September, historically the weakest month for stocks, the S&P 500 fell nearly 5%. Stocks swung wildly in October, a month noted for its volatility. The S&P 500 gained nearly 9% gain in November, historically a strong month for the index.

"We've had a solid year, but history shows that December can sometimes move to its own beat," said Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at CFRA Research in New York.

Investors next week will be watching U.S. employment data, due out on Dec. 8, to see whether economic growth is continuing to level off.

Overall, December has been the second-best month for the S&P 500, with the index up an average of 1.54% for the month since 1945, according to CFRA. It is also the month most likely to post a gain, with the index rising 77% of the time, the firm's data showed.

Research from LPL Financial showed that the second half of December tends to outshine the first part of the month. The S&P 500 has gained an average of 1.4% in the second half of December in so-called Santa Claus rallies, compared with a 0.1% gain in the first half, according to LPL's analysis of market moves going back to 1950.

Stocks that have not performed well, however, may face additional pressure in December from tax loss selling, as investors get rid of losers to lock in write-offs before year-end. If history is any guide, some of those shares may rebound later in the month and into January as investors return to undervalued names, analysts said.

Since 1986, stocks that were down 10% or more between January and the end of October have beaten the S&P 500 by an average of 1.9% over the next three months, according to BofA Global Research. PayPal Holdings, CVS Health, and Kraft Heinz Co are among the stocks the bank recommends buying for a tax-related bounce, BofA noted in a late October report.

"The market advance has been extraordinarily narrow this year, and there's reason to believe that some sectors and stocks will really take it on the chin until they get some relief in January," said Sameer Samana, senior global market strategist at the Wells Fargo Investment Institute.

Despite the market's hefty year-to-date rise, investment portfolios are likely to have plenty of underperforming stocks. Nearly 72% of the S&P 500's gain has been driven by a cluster of megacap stocks such as Apple, Tesla and Nvidia, which have an outsized weighting in the index, data from S&P Dow Jones Indices showed.

Many other names have languished: The equal-weighted S&P 500, whose performance is not skewed by big tech and growth stocks, is up around 6% in 2023.

Some worry that investor over-exuberance may have already set in after November's big rally, which spurred huge moves in some of the market's more speculative names.

Streaming service company Roku soared 75% in November, for instance, while cryptocurrency firm Coinbase Global climbed 62% and Cathie Wood's ARK Innovation Fund was up 31%, its best performance of any month in the last five years.

More

Wall St Week Ahead Tax-loss selling, 'Santa rally' could sway U.S. stocks after November melt-up | Reuters

Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession Watch.   

Given our Magic Money Tree central banksters and our spendthrift politicians,  inflation/recession now needs an entire section of its own.

In a recession, out of one, on the brink? Here’s where Europe stands

Published on 01/12/2023 - 07:00Updated 08:13

----Is Europe in a recession? The indicators

A good place to start is to look at the level of business activity in the economy. One of the indicators that helps us in this regard is HCOB’s Composite Purchasing Manager’s Index, which measures business conditions using different metrics such as new orders, employment, selling prices, purchasing activity and others.

According to the latest figures for the eurozone, the PMI index registered at 47.1 in November. A reading below 50 suggests contraction whereas above means economic expansion. The manufacturing PMI output index shows that the manufacturing activity has remained below 50 for 8 straight months with the latest number coming in at 44.3.

Another indicator on economic health is the lending activity of banks. If there are more loans being disbursed it certainly means that people are confident in the economic prospects of the country/region and therefore engaging in more business activity. A falling number of loans indicate otherwise.

In Europe, loans to businesses were 0.3% lower in October 2023, compared to October 2022, which is the first yearly fall since 2015. Similarly, a rising loan default ratio is another means to track the growth in a country and in Europe the stress of loan defaults seem to be rising, unfortunately.

Recently, the European Union reduced its growth forecasts for the eurozone economy to 0.6% from 0.8%. The reduction in growth prospects, or seemingly meagre figures of growth, are symbolic of the overall challenges faced by the world in general and Europe in particular.

Rising interest rates, persistently high energy prices and a highly volatile world economy adds to these worries. In fact, according to various estimates by banks, higher rates can shave off 1% of gross domestic product (GDP) from the eurozone.

What does the future hold?

With the recent geopolitical tensions, energy prices are expected to remain elevated well into next year. While inflation has tamed a bit it is still way above the 5 year moving averages.

In the IMF’s latest economic update, it anticipates a slight recovery for the eurozone in 2024, however, as it expects the GDP growth to average 1.5%. This, however, is based on certain assumptions and the most important one is that the oil and gas prices will remain stable and with the ongoing geopolitical conflicts this cannot be assured.

Wells Fargo said in its recent note that a recession in the eurozone is “increasingly possible, but not yet inevitable”. They do not expect a rate cut - one of the most important indicators and factors in this debate - until June of 2024. On the consumer end we are not seeing any encouraging spending trend as of today while retail sales are also down.

Mario Draghi, former president of the ECB, also echoed this concern very recently. While the Bank Governor of the Belgian central bank also agreed that risks are “tilted to the downside when it comes to the eurozone”.

Other factors and indicators are also concerning. Recently, the slowdown in eurozone business activity “accelerated” due to weak demand in the services sector and the new orders PMI now at its lowest level in the last 11 years (since September 2012). Manufacturing activity shows that new orders fell at the steepest rate since 1997. Some analysts are saying that while the eurozone might be able to avert a full blown recession it will still face some “mild bouts” of it. This also forms a good analogy of what many were calling a “rolling recession” in the US.

All in all, while we cannot certainly tell about the timing of the recession, one thing that is for sure is that the downside potential to future economic growth in the region is real, while a bouquet of indicators also now suggest that a recession in the largest economy in the world, the US, is also due.

In a recession, out of one, on the brink? Here’s where Europe stands | Euronews


Covid-19 Corner

This section will continue until it becomes unneeded.

New COVID Variant Spreading in US, but Risk Is Low: Experts

Compared to Eris, BA.2.86 has a significantly lower growth efficiency, meaning that it is less capable of replicating itself in the human bodies.

11/28/2023  Updated:  11/29/2023

The new BA.2.86 variant, unofficially known as Pirola is taking hold in the United States.

Between Oct. 28 to Nov. 25, its prevalence increased from 1 to around 9 percent in the United States, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

The World Health Organization designated Pirola as a variant of interest on Nov. 21, yet it also found the public health risk posed by BA.2.86 to be “low at the global level (pdf).”

In an update published on Nov. 27, the CDC agreed with the WHO’s assessment “that the public health risk posed by this variant is low compared with other circulating variants, based on available limited evidence.”

Current Research Suggests Low Risk of Disease

Pirola is derived from BA.2, an earlier Omicron variant.

Other variants derived from BA.2 include XBB.1.5 which became the dominant strain in early 2023.

The current dominant variant is H.V.1, and it is derived from the variant EG.5, unofficially known as Eris, a previously dominant variant in the United States.

“At this time, BA.2.86 does not appear to be driving increases in infections or hospitalizations in the United States,” the CDC wrote.

Research outside of the United States similarly suggests that Pirola should not be more severe than current variants.

Researcher Yunlong Cao, who holds a doctorate in physical biochemistry from Harvard found that Pirola “exhibits lower cell infectivity” compared to XBB.1.5 and Eris.

A preprint study from Japan found that while Pirola may be more transmissible than Eris a previous dominant variant, it is less likely to cause disease.

Technology Update.

With events happening fast in the development of solar power and graphene, I’ve added this section.

This weekend, meet the Uni Wheel.

Hyundai and Kia's radical Uni Wheel system could revolutionize EV design

Ben Coxworth  November 29, 2023

As is the case with their gas-burning counterparts, electric cars are limited in spaciousness and design by the layout of their drivetrain. The Hyundai Motor Company and Kia Corporation have set about addressing that issue, with their radical new Universal Wheel Drive System.

In internal combustion engine cars, the engine takes up a lot of space, as do the transmission and drive shafts which transfer power from the engine to the wheels. In an electric car, the engine is replaced by a motor, but the vehicle's design still has to allow for a means of linking that one motor to at least two of the wheels.

That's where the Universal Wheel Drive System – aka Uni Wheel – comes in.

Unveiled Nov. 29th at a media event in Seoul, the setup swaps one big motor for four smaller ones. Each of those motors is located right beside one of the vehicle's wheels, and is connected to it via a short drive shaft.

Occupying what would otherwise be empty space inside each wheel hub is a reduction gear. It consists of a central "sun gear" that is turned by the drive shaft, and which is connected via articulated linkages to four outlying pinion gears. Those pinions are in turn meshed with a single large "ring gear" that runs around the circumference of the hub.

So, on each Uni Wheel unit … the motor turns the driveshaft, which turns the sun gear, which turns the pinion gears, which turn the ring gear, which turns the wheel. If that sounds confusing, watching the explanation in the video at the end of this article will help.

Additionally, thanks to the pivot points in the linkages (which allow them to flex as the gears are turning), power transmission from each motor to each wheel stays efficient and consistent even as the wheel moves up and down while going over bumps in the road. By contrast, when the wheels on a traditional drivetrain move vertically, power transmission efficiency decreases as the angle of drive shaft deflection increases.

Other claimed advantages of the Uni Wheel system include increased durability and torque, along with the ability to independently control torque at each wheel for better handling. And as mentioned earlier, there's also the fact that by moving most of the drivetrain into the wheels, additional space becomes available inside the vehicle.

That space could be used for more seating, more cargo capacity, or for reconfigurable interiors – the fact that the floor could be completely flat would certainly help in that regard. The extra space could also be used for more batteries, thus expanding the range of EVs without making them physically larger.

Hyundai and Kia now plan on improving Uni Wheel's reduction gear ratio, and upgrading its lubrication and cooling systems. There's currently no word on when it might actually enter production.

More

Hyundai and Kia's radical Uni Wheel system could revolutionize EV design (newatlas.com)

This weekend’s music diversion. Teleman’s Table Music with a Hammered Dulcimer. Approx. 15 minutes.

G.PH. TELEMANN: Concerto for Mandolin, Hammered Dulcimer and Harp in F major TWV 53:F1

G.PH. TELEMANN: Concerto for Mandolin, Hammered Dulcimer and Harp in F major TWV 53:F1 - YouTube

This weekend’s chess update. Approx. 13 minutes.

Kramnik Unlocked A Hidden Power!

Kramnik Unlocked A Hidden Power! - YouTube

No weekend the math’s update again this week. This week, wheat.  Approx. 18 minutes.

WHEAT Documentary: Everything You Ever Wanted to Know about Wheat

WHEAT Documentary: Everything You Ever Wanted to Know about Wheat - YouTube

Peace cannot be kept by force; it can only be achieved by understanding.

Albert Einstein.

  

Friday, 1 December 2023

War Resumes. OPEC+ Extends Production Cuts.

Baltic Dry Index. 2937 +241         Brent Crude  80.72

Spot Gold 2041                  US 2 Year Yield 4.73 +0.09

The statesman who should attempt to direct private people in what manner they ought to employ their capitals, would not only load himself with a most unnecessary attention, but assume an authority which could safely be trusted, not only to no single person, but to no council or senate whatever, and which would nowhere be so dangerous as in the hands of a man who had folly and presumption enough to fancy himself fit to exercise it.

Adam Smith, The Wealth Of Nations, 1776.

The big news this morning is that the seven day truce on war in the Gaza Ghetto has ended. Let the killing resume on industrial scale once again. If it does, ignoring Biden and Blinken’s instruction to Israel to moderate the killing of women and children, a wider regional war looms before Christmas.

In the stock casinos, onward and upward into December?

Well maybe, but in the real world far from the central bankster fuelled money spigots, a massive global property bust is underway from China through Europe and out to the USA. Nothing good happens for the wider economy when real estate markets stumble.

Asia markets slide as investors assess factory activity private surveys; China manufacturing clocks surprise growth

UPDATED FRI, DEC 1 2023 12:37 AM EST

Asia-Pacific markets started Friday lower, breaking ranks with Wall Street which mostly advanced on Thursday, amid mixed economic data from across the region.

Most notably, investors assessed China’s Caixin manufacturing purchasing managers’ index for November, which showed that the sector unexpectedly expanded.

The Caixin PMI reading came in at 50.7, compared to 49.5 in October and beating a Reuters poll forecast of 49.8.

This comes after official numbers Thursday showed the country’s manufacturing sector contracted for a second straight month.

In Australia, the S&P/ASX 200 inched down 0.2% and closed at 7,073.2, ending a three-day winning streak.

South Korea’s Kospi slid 0.76%, while the small cap Kosdaq was down 0.21%.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 was marginally below the flatline, but the Topix bucked the trend and rose 0.35%.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index fell 0.3% at open, while China’s CSI 300 index dropped 0.57%.

Overnight in the U.S., the Dow Jones Industrial Average reached a new high for the year, as cooling inflation data and strong Salesforce earnings help the benchmark cap its best month since October 2022.

The S&P 500 added 0.4%, but the Nasdaq Composite was about 0.2% lower as investors took some profits in Big Tech stocks that have led the November comeback.

Separately, the U.S. personal consumption expenditures price index — the Federal Reserve’s favorite inflation gauge — rose 3.5% on a year-over-year basis, slowing from a 3.7% annual gain in prior month.

Asia stock markets today: Live updates, PMI readings, U.S. inflation (cnbc.com)

Stock futures mixed on Friday after Dow notches new high for the year: Live updates

UPDATED FRI, DEC 1 2023 12:26 AM EST

Stock futures were mixed on Friday morning after the Dow Jones Industrial Average notched a new 2023 high and capped off its best month in more than a year.

Futures tied to the 30-stock index extended gains marginally and climbed 20 points, or 0.06%, while S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq-100 futures slipped 0.0.6% and 0.2%, respectively.

Disney shares moved up less than 1% in extended trading after the entertainment giant reinstated its dividend. Ulta Beauty jumped nearly 12% on strong quarterly results.

Thursday’s overnight moves come on the heels of an exhilarating end to a blowout November rally. The Dow Jones Industrial Average surged 520 points, or 1.47%, to settle at 35,950.89 and top its previous 2023 high hit in August. The S&P 500 rose 0.4%, while the Nasdaq Composite slipped about 0.2%.

Stocks finished off a record November during Thursday’s session and snapped a three-month losing streak. The S&P and Nasdaq rallied 8.9% and 10.7%, respectively, to notch their best monthly performances since July 2022. The Dow surged 8.8% for its best month since October 2022.

Both the Dow and S&P are also headed for a winning week, with the Dow on pace to hit a fifth consecutive winning week for the first time in more than two years. The Nasdaq is down about 0.2% week to date and is slated to snap a four-week wining streak.

Despite Thursday’s big market win and November’s upbeat market sentiment, some on Wall Street are advising that investors remain cautious into year-end and 2024.

“Everyone’s really happy and it’s time for either a correction or some sort of pullback as we enter the new year,” Wells Fargo’s Chris Harvey told CNBC’s “Closing Bell” on Thursday.

The head of equity research added that the market looks “dramatically overbought,” rate cuts seem unlikely until the second half of 2024, and that investors should consider getting defensive.

Looking ahead, earnings reports from Dominion Energy, Gartner and Cardinal Health are due out Friday. Construction spending for October and ISM Manufacturing data for November are also on deck.

Stock market today: Live update (cnbc.com)

In other news, to no one’s surprise OPEC+ production cuts will continue into 2024. But with a slowing global economy, will that be enough to hold Brent crude priced in the 80s?

Oil kingpin Saudi Arabia extends its production cut into first quarter as OPEC+ holds policy

The influential Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries coalition and its allies, collectively known as OPEC+, on Thursday opted against formally deepening production cuts, while de facto leader Saudi Arabia extended its 1 million barrel per day voluntary trim into the first quarter, and other members announced further reductions.

The policy steps were decided in a virtual meeting delayed by internal disagreements over the baselines — the levels off which quotas are decided — of the OPEC group’s largest West African members, Nigeria and Angola. The spat postponed talks initially scheduled to be held in person in Vienna over the weekend of Nov. 25-26. The baselines of Angola, Nigeria and Congo remain under study.

The OPEC+ alliance had already instituted a 2 million barrel per day cut in place until the end of 2024, with several coalition members voluntarily pledging a further 1.66 million barrel per day decline over that same period.

While OPEC+ has not formally endorsed production reductions, market participants are following the possibility of further voluntary cuts announced by key participants to the coalition. Already, Saudi state media has announced that Riyadh will extend its voluntary reduction of 1 million barrels per day, which it has had in place since July, until the end of the first quarter of 2024.

Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak, who represents his country in OPEC+ affairs, has said Moscow will implement a voluntary supply cut totaling 300,000 barrels per day of crude and 200,000 barrels per day of petroleum products over that same period, according to a Google-translated statement on Telegram.

Close Saudi ally Kuwait will enforce a 135,000 barrel per day reduction in the first quarter, while the Energy Ministry of OPEC member Algeria said it would trim a further 51,000 barrels per day. Oman said it will also reduce output by 42,000 barrels per day in that same period.

Riyadh to extend 1 million-barrel-per-day cut as OPEC+ holds policy (cnbc.com)

People of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment and diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public, or in some contrivance to raise prices…. But though the law cannot hinder people of the same trade from sometimes assembling together, it ought to do nothing to facilitate such assemblies, much less to render them necessary.

Adam Smith, The Wealth Of Nations, 1776.

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.

Asia factory activity weakens, uncertainty on China clouds outlook

By Leika Kihara 

TOKYO, Dec 1 (Reuters) - Asia's factory activity remained weak in November on soft global demand, surveys showed on Friday, with mixed signs on the strength of China's economy clouding the outlook for the region's fragile recovery.

China's private Caixin/S&P Global manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) unexpectedly rose to 50.7 in November from a 49.5 reading in October, exceeding the 50 mark separating growth from contraction and surpassing analysts' forecasts.

 

The reading came a day after official survey that showed a contraction in both manufacturers' and non-manufacturers' activity, underscoring deepening troubles in the world's second largest economy.

 

"The domestic market cannot make up for losses in Europe and the United States. The data shows that factories are producing less and hiring fewer people," Dan Wang, chief economist at Hang Seng Bank China, said of China's PMI readings, which have different samples.

Export-reliant Japan, South Korea and Taiwan bore the brunt of sluggish global demand with their manufacturing activity remaining stagnant in November, surveys showed.

"It's hard to expect a recovery in Asia any time soon," said Toru Nishihama, chief emerging market economist at Dai-ichi Life Research Institute. "While exports probably hit bottom, they won't accelerate much from here as the global economy lacks a key driver of growth."

Japan's final au Jibun Bank manufacturing PMI fell to 48.3 in November from 48.7 in October, shrinking at the fastest pace in nine months.

South Korea's PMI stood at 50.0 in November, rising slightly from October's reading of 49.8. The factory gauge rebound came after 16 straight months of contraction through October, the longest downturn since the survey began in April 2004.

Manufacturing activity also shrank in Taiwan, Vietnam and Malaysia, but expanded in India, Indonesia and the Philippines, the surveys showed.

More

Asia factory activity weakens, uncertainty on China clouds outlook | Reuters

French economy contracts in Q3, inflation eases further

PARIS, Nov 30 (Reuters) - The French economy contracted by 0.1% in the third quarter of the year, revised data from the statistics office INSEE showed on Thursday, while November inflation eased more than expected.

The contribution of gross fixed capital formation, which indicates how much of the new value added in an economy is invested rather than consumed, to France's national output was revised considerably downwards, while the contribution of domestic demand also slowed to 0.2 points, INSEE said.

The stats office said the contribution of external trade, at -0.4 points, had also negatively impacted gross domestic product (GDP) during the third quarter, as imports grew.

In November, the EU-harmonised preliminary inflation came to 3.8% year-on-year, below a Reuters poll of 19 economists, which had predicted a figure of 4.1%. The inflation was down from 4.5% in October, helped by easing price pressure in energy and in the services sector.

Food prices rose 7.6% in November, versus 7.8% in October while the increase in energy prices slowed to 3.1% after seeing an increase of 5.2% last month.

Month-on-month, prices declined by 0.2% as falling transportation and energy prices offset a month-on-month rise of food prices, especially fresh produce.

Despite the unexpected economic contraction, the government kept its 1% growth forecast for 2023.

"I maintain my growth forecasts. We will have positive growth this year and higher growth in 2024 than in 2023," Economy Minister Bruno Le Maire said on French radio, adding that he was sticking with his forecast of 1.4% growth next year.

French economy contracts in Q3, inflation eases further | Reuters

These 16 states are already in a recession

November 29, 2023

The economies of 16 US states contracted between July and October, even as economists are still betting the US can avoid a recession.

The latest State Coincident Indexes release from the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia shows a third of state economies contracted during the three-month period, compared to just nine states between June and September. Between July and October, the indexes increased in 33 states and remained stable in one state.

These changes were most pronounced in West Virginia, with a three-month contraction of over 2.7%. Michigan and Montana also had contractions of over 1%, while Missouri, Illinois, and Iowa had declines of about 0.8%.

Meanwhile, Maryland, North Dakota, and South Carolina had economic growth of over 1% during the period. Texas came in at 0.85%, similar to Nevada and Wyoming. California's economy grew by 0.47%, while Florida experienced a 0.65% increase.

Among the 10 states with the highest GDPs, seven — California, Texas, Florida, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Georgia, and North Carolina — are growing their economies, according to the three-month data.

This growth "should be enough to keep the US economy as a whole from falling into recession this quarter," DataTrek Research cofounders Nicholas Colas and Jessica Rabe said in a note on Monday. "How these trends develop through the balance of Q4 will tell us a lot about the state of the US economy as we enter 2024."

Looking at month-over-month rates, 27 states experienced economic contraction, while 16 states saw economic growth.

A recession occurs when an economy suffers a widespread and severe downturn across different dimensions. The state coincident indexes capture several of those dimensions across labor markets, industrial production, and people's real incomes.

The coincident indexes pull together four state-level indicators, including nonfarm payroll employment, the unemployment rate, average hours worked in manufacturing by production workers, and wage and salary disbursements deflated by the consumer price index. Those measures echo the metrics the National Bureau of Economic Research tracks to determine whether the national economy as a whole is in a recession.

Experts remain divided on whether the US will avoid a recession in 2024. Some believe a recession is likely in 2024, including Citadel founder Ken Griffin, who told Bloomberg he expects to see a "recessionary environment" around the second quarter.

Others, though, think a recession may not arrive until 2025 — or may not occur at all. Raphael Bostic, the president of the Atlanta Federal Reserve, told CNBC, "We are not going to see recession, that is not in my outlook. We are going to see a slowdown, and inflation will get down to 2%."

These 16 states are already in a recession (msn.com)

Covid-19 Corner

This section will continue until it becomes unneeded.

DNA Contamination in COVID-19 Vaccines May Explain Rise in Cancers, Clots, Autoimmune Diseases: Pathologist

Clinical pathologist and immunology specialist Dr. Ryan Cole said that DNA contamination in some COVID-19 vaccines may be linked to a rise in various cancers.

11/28/2023 Updated: 11/28/2023


Clinical pathologist Dr. Ryan Cole has said that DNA contamination in some COVID-19 vaccines may be related to an increase in cancers, micro-clotting, and autoimmune diseases.

“My big concern is the fact that billions of people across the earth have received a product that was overtly contaminated with something that should not have been in the product," Dr. Cole, an anatomic clinical pathologist with postgraduate Ph.D. training in immunology, recently told the "American Thought Leaders" program.

"If I went and bought some meat at the grocery store and they had heavy metal or pesticide toxins, they would pull those from the shelves immediately," he added.

Recently, researchers found that vaccine vials containing Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccines had billions of residual DNA fragments, including molecules derived from Simian Virus 40 (SV40) used as "promoters" or "enhancers" that help produce the mRNA molecules that help human cells make proteins that trigger an immune response inside the body.

Monkey Virus 'Enhancers' in Vaccines

SV40 is a monkey polyomavirus that has been linked to cancer in laboratory animals. While the virus itself was not found to be present in Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine, the presence of the SV40 enhancer gene is controversial because it comes from a virus associated with malignant transformation. However, some experts have raised concerns that the SV40 enhancer itself may be associated with adverse events.

Dr. Cole believes that the SV40 enhancer has health risks, saying it contains a "concerning" nuclear co-localization sequence that "allows it to get into the nucleus of the cell and to induce these different pathways of action and mechanisms that can, again, go haywire, mutate, cause toxicity."

Molecular virologist David Speicher, the lead author of the study that found SV40 enhancers in COVID-19 vaccines, told The Epoch Times in a recent interview that much more research is needed to investigate DNA contamination in the COVID-19 vaccines. Unanswered questions include whether the SV40 sequence in the vaccines is triggering "turbo cancers," meaning ones of a particularly aggressive and fast-growing variety, he said.

recent review of cancer registry records from 44 countries found a rapid rise in the incidence of early-onset cancers for 14 types—including colorectal, breast, esophageal, gastric, and pancreatic cancers—especially in younger adults.

More

DNA Contamination in COVID-19 Vaccines May Explain Rise in Cancers, Clots, Autoimmune Diseases: Pathologist | The Epoch Times 

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.

A new kind of solar cell is coming: is it the future of green energy?

Firms commercializing perovskite–silicon ‘tandem’ photovoltaics say that the panels will be more efficient and could lead to cheaper electricity.

29 November 2023

On the outskirts of Brandenburg an der Havel, Germany, nestled among car dealerships and hardware shops, sits a two-storey factory stuffed with solar-power secrets. It’s here where UK firm Oxford PV is producing commercial solar cells using perovskites: cheap, abundant photovoltaic (PV) materials that some have hailed as the future of green energy. Surrounded by unkempt grass and a weed-strewn car park, the factory is a modest cradle for such a potentially transformative technology, but the firm’s chief technology officer Chris Case is clearly in love with the place. “This is the culmination of my dreams,” he says.

The firm is one of more than a dozen companies betting that perovskites are finally poised to push the global transition to renewable energy into overdrive. A few niche perovskite-based PV products are already on the market, but announcements this year signal that many more are set to join them. Case says that end users should get their hands on solar panels made from Oxford PV’s cells around the middle of next year, for example. In May, a large silicon PV manufacturer, Hanwha Qcells, headquartered in Seoul, said it plans to invest US$100 million in a pilot production line that could be operational by the end of 2024.

Silicon is the workhorse material inside 95% of solar panels. Rather than replace it, Oxford PV, Qcells and others are piggybacking on it — layering perovskite on silicon to create so-called tandem cells. Because each material absorbs energy from different wavelengths of sunlight, tandems could potentially deliver at least 20% more power than a silicon cell alone; some scientists project much greater gains.

Perovskite supporters say that this extra electricity could more than offset the additional costs of tandem cells, particularly in crowded urban areas or industrial sites where space is at a premium. “Our biggest initial demand is from utilities, because they simply don’t have enough accessible land,” says Case.

As perovskite–silicon tandems get closer to market, excitement has boiled over into headlines predicting that a “revolutionary” “miracle material” is “about to change the world”. The reality is that the industry faces at least two major challenges in its battle to transform the solar market.

First, published research shows that the perovskites’ performance declines much more quickly than silicon when they are exposed to moisture, heat and even light. Oxford PV says it has done private research that’s overcome this issue. But “for commercial manufacturing, I would say stability is the key challenge that still remains”, says Fabian Fertig, Qcells’ director of research and development for wafers and cells, who leads the company’s development of perovskite–silicon tandems.

More

A new kind of solar cell is coming: is it the future of green energy? (nature.com)

Another weekend and the Gaza killing resumes. How long it stays localised is an open question, but nothing good for anyone lies down this path.

There's no honorable way to kill, no gentle way to destroy. There is nothing good in war. Except its ending.

Abraham Lincoln.