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December 16 – December 22, 2016

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China no longer the largest US creditor – Japan is again. China capital outflows, have you looked at the bank loans? Brazil’s Odebrecht just got served the FCPA’s largest settlement.

Happy Holidays!

Headlines

Special Reports / Opinion Pieces

Briefs

Graphics

WSJ – Daily Shot: Vancouver Housing Market Correction 12/18

WSJ – Daily Shot: Declining income mobility in US 12/18

Visual Capitalist – 75 Years of How Americans Spend Their Money – Jeff Desjardins 12/19

WSJ – Daily Shot: S&P vs. Treasury Spread 12/20

FT – China’s ‘airpocalypse’ hits half a billion people – Yuan Yang 12/19

WSJ – Daily Shot: Change in Mortgage Rates Since Election 12/21

WSJ – Daily Shot: Percentage of Adults Without Children in House 1967 & 2016 12/21

FT – Hedge fund fees take a trim – Lindsay Fortado 12/21

Featured

*Note: bold emphasis is mine, italic sections are from the articles.

China cedes status as largest US creditor to Japan. Tom Mitchell, Joe Rennison, and Eric Platt. Financial Times. 16 Dec. 2016.

“Beijing’s ownership of US Treasuries fell by $41.3bn to $1.12tn in October, according to data from the US Treasury released on Thursday – the sixth straight month of decline. Japan’s holdings fell by $4.5bn to $1.13tn for the same period.”

According to Eswar Prasad, an economics professor at Cornell University and former IMF director for China, “this pattern is unlikely to be reversed in the near future, especially with US and Chinese economic fortunes and monetary policy stances continuing to diverge. The days of China providing abundant and cheap financing for US budget and current account deficits through the purchases of Treasury securities may have come to an end.”

“China and Japan account for 37% of the total $6tn of holdings tracked by the Treasury and Federal Reserve.”

China capital outflows: bank loans dwarf foreign deals. Gabriel Wildau and Don Weinland. Financial Times. 17 Dec. 2016.

“While an overseas buying spree by Chinese companies has grabbed headlines, more mundane activity such as trade finance and corporate cash management are a much bigger strain on China’s foreign exchange reserves, analysis of official data shows.”

“‘Several hundred billion in outflows are simply associated with repayment of existing loans,’ said Brad Setser, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and former US Treasury official.”

“Foreign bank claims on China, a broad measure of cross-border lending, have fallen by $305bn in the 18 months through June this year, according to the most recent figures from Bank of International Settlements, showing how banks are pulling funds from the country. Claims had risen by $643bn in the previous two years.”

“Much of this lending came in the form of trade finance. When the renminbi was appreciating against the dollar, Chinese importers eagerly borrowed in dollars.”

“‘Corporates rushed to raise funding in dollars because interest rates were very low. Now that carry trade is being unwound,’ said Harrison Hu, China economist at Royal Bank of Scotland in Singapore.”

“To be sure, the regulatory focus on corporate deals is a response to a rapid acceleration of outbound FDI. But it also reflects the lower disruption from tightening the reins on foreign acquisitions compared with forcing loan or bond defaults by blocking cross-border debt repayments.”

“‘The cross-border regulations could definitely have an impact on companies that have offshore debt,’ said Xia Le, chief Asia economist at BBVA in Hong Kong. ‘There is a concern that many will have to refinance but at a much higher cost. They will need to issue very high-yielding bonds.'”

Brazil’s gargantuan corruption scandal goes global. Economist. 22 Dec. 2016.

“On December 21st America’s Department of Justice (DoJ) reached a $3.5bn settlement with Odebrecht, Brazil’s biggest builder, and with Braskem, a petrochemical joint venture between that firm and Petrobas. The DoJ alleges that since 2001 Odebrecht and Braskem paid $788m in bribes to officials and political parties in Brazil and in 11 other countries.

“The payoffs brought Odebrecht and Braskem contracts for around 100 projects, many of them to build public infrastructure. Often, governments paid more for the work than they needed to. The DoJ alleges that Odebrecht set up a ‘Division of Structured Operations,’ which ‘effectively functioned as a stand-along bribe department.'”

“The settlement is the biggest yet under America’s Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA). It is more than double the previous record: $1.6bn paid by Siemens, a German engineering giant, in 2008.”

“Odebrecht has accepted that the appropriate fine for the company is $4.5bn but says it can only afford $2.6bn; the remaining $900m is owed by Braskem.”

Additionally, now the authorities in the 11 countries will have a crack at the two companies.

Either way “Odebrecht is a shadow of its former self. To survive the investigations, it has been retrenching. Over the past three years the company has reportedly laid off 100,000 of its 181,000 employees, most of them since the launch of the Petrobas investigation in March 2014…. Even Odebrecht’s stake in Braskem, which makes up half of the construction firm’s revenues, may be up for sale. That is quite a comedown for a company named in 2010 by a Swiss business school as the world’s best family-run firm.”

Other Interesting Articles

Bloomberg Businessweek

The Economist

FT – Central bank injection soothes China credit squeeze 12/15

FT – China’s exports to the US fall for first time since crisis 12/15

FT – US drugmaker charges 200 times UK price for common worm pill 12/18

FT – Vanke: to our sponsors 12/19

FT – Yield on German two-year debt falls to new low 12/19

FT – Uber racks up $800m third-quarter loss despite China exit 12/19

FT – Italy seeks up to €20bn to prop up fragile lenders 12/19

FT – China’s bull market in bonds on borrowed time 12/19

FT – Lawyers demand Chinese government action to clear smog 12/20

FT – US sues Barclays for fraud over crisis-era loans 12/22

LinkedIn – Reflections on the Trump Presidency, One Month after the Election (Ray Dalio) 12/19

Miami Herald – Miami Beach wants to know if you’re renting your condo on Airbnb 12/15

NYT – How Republics End (Krugman) 12/19

NYT – Hedge Fund Math: Heads We Win, Tails You Lose 12/22

ValueWalk – CalPERS Cuts Retiree Benefits For First Time Ever 12/20

WSJ – China Halts Trading in Key Bond Futures as Panicky Investors Sell Securities 12/15

WSJ – Surging Dollar Upends China’s Huge Bond Market 12/16

WSJ – Platinum Partners’ Executives Charged With $1 Billion Securities Fraud 12/19

 

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