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The big shortcoming: A grumpy 2020 for global growth

By - Dec 26,2019 - Last updated at Dec 26,2019

PARIS — US political clouds coupled with wider climate and digital transformations point to a tricky 2020 for the world economy; although experts say a lurch back to crisis is improbable.

The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) said last month that activity had been hobbled by weaker trade and investment in the past two years, as US President Donald Trump pursued a trade war with China.

The OECD expects global growth to dip in the coming year to 2.9 per cent, its lowest level since the world recession of 2009.

Trump appears to have struck a truce with China for now, under a "phase one" pact announced this month, but pre-existing tariffs remain in place and it will take time to demobilise their effects.

More broadly, the OECD contrasted proactive actions taken by central banks with the policy foot-dragging by governments in the face of climate change and the march of technology.

Industrialists and investors are having to correct their climate strategies even as Trump sits firm in his policy of denial. Oil giant Saudi Aramco recently had to trim back the volume of its gigantic share offering.

The International Monetary Fund was a little more optimistic in its latest World Economic Outlook, forecasting 2020 growth of 3.4 per cent but warning nevertheless of a "synchronised slowdown and uncertain recovery".

At a time of populism and protests around the world, politics will remain an economic wild card next year.

Trump heads into the November presidential election under an impeachment cloud, and Britain's Brexit divorce from the European Union will likely be sealed next month, following Prime Minister Boris Johnson's election triumph.

The rise of technological giants sitting on mountains of data is meanwhile challenging the distribution of wealth between governments and big business, and has the potential to reshape the world of work as artificial intelligence exploits that data.

The online arena has emerged as another front for Trump's trade wars, after he threatened tariffs on France over its digital tax imposed on the likes of Amazon, Facebook and Google. Europe is threatening a collective response.

 

Between 

heaven and hell 

 

Ludovic Subran, chief economist of German insurance giant Allianz, sees a global "purgatory of growth" coming up.

Any systemic shock next year "will probably not be born in finance, but will be exogenous, for example a big regulatory shock on personal data, or in relation to the climate", he said.

If Trump survives the impeachment process and wins a second term, he could "double the bet against China" at the risk of military confrontation, Subran added.

Trump and his potential challengers on the Democratic left are united in their hostility to the free-trade and liberalisation agendas that, they argue, hollowed out industrial America over the past decades. 

The mistrust is felt well beyond the United States.

"We're not worried about how to overcome a cyclical crisis, we know what to do," said Ingo Kuebler, the staff representative at Mahle, a German automotive supplier that has already been forced to downsize as car buyers turn away from diesel engines.

"The big issue is transformation, digitalisation, electric mobility," he told AFP, fretting that an influx of cheap Chinese car batteries means "we are dreading the loss of many jobs".

 

The big income gap 

 

Since the financial crisis a decade ago, central bank policies have led to negative interest rates spreading in some countries, squeezing bank profitability and inflating private debt.

With growth faltering, the debate about wealth distribution will likely become still more acute. Anger at inequality runs like a thread through protest movements from rich Hong Kong to developing Chile.

In 2018, according to Oxfam, 26 billionaires had as much money as the poorest half of the world. 

"Even when people seem to enjoy basic material comfort, they may still experience the same level of misery and unhappiness as the poorest," French academic Esther Duflo said in October after she won the Nobel Prize in economics.

US investor Steve Eisman of "The Big Short" fame thinks that another global crisis is unlikely, but the best that can be hoped for is a slow strangulation of growth.

"What will happen next time, whenever it does happen, will be your normal garden variety of recession where the economy slows and goes negative and people lose money. That'll be painful enough," Eisman told AFP.

"A systemic crisis? Once was enough for our lifetimes," he said, reflecting back on the implosion of 2007-2008 that made hundreds of millions for his hedge fund when he correctly foretold the US subprime collapse. 

The prescient strategy of Eisman and other investment mavericks was recounted in a book by journalist Michael Lewis and subsequent Oscar-winning movie.

Saudi Arabia, Kuwait ink deal to resume joint oil output

By - Dec 24,2019 - Last updated at Dec 24,2019

Kuwaiti Oil Minister Khaled Al Fadhel (centre-left) and Saudi Oil Minister Prince Abdulaziz Bin Salman (Centre-right) arrive for a ceremony marking the signing of an agreement to reproduce oil in the neutral zone between the two countries, at Wafra about 100 kilometres south of Kuwait City, on Tuesday (AFP photo)

KUWAIT CITY — Saudi Arabia and Kuwait signed an agreement on Tuesday to resume pumping at two major oilfields in a shared neutral zone shut for five years due to a bilateral disagreement, officials said.

Kuwait’s oil minister Khaled Al Fadhel said on Twitter that the memorandum of understanding signed with Saudi Arabia included “the resumption of production in the divided zone”.

The state-run KUNA news agency reported that the two countries also signed an agreement on the demarcation of land and maritime borders in the neutral zone.

KUNA did not give details on the contents of the deal which likely revolves around amending previous border agreements between the two Arab nations.

The two fields were pumping some 500,000 barrels per day before production was halted, first at Khafji in October 2014 and then at Wafra seven months later, over a dispute between the neighbours.

Riyadh said at the time that the decision was due to environmental issues.

The oil produced in the neutral zone in the border area is shared equally between the two nations.

Khafji, an offshore field, was jointly operated by Kuwait Gulf Oil Co. and Saudi Aramco Gulf Operations, while the onshore Wafra field was operated by KGOC and Saudi Arabian Chevron.

Kuwait had blamed Saudi Arabia for unilaterally halting output at Khafji, noting it was entitled to five years’ notice under a joint agreement signed in 1965.

The two countries have been negotiating to resolve the row and resume production since June 2015.

The talks involved Kuwait’s Emir Sheikh Sabah Al Ahmad Al-Sabah visiting Riyadh and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman visiting Kuwait City.

Tuesday’s agreement comes as oil prices are under pressure due to abundant reserves and weak global economic growth.

Continued soft pricing has prompted the Organisation Producing Exporting Countries (OPEC) and its allies to make deeper production cuts starting next month.

OPEC kingpin Saudi Arabia pumps just under 10 million barrels per day, while Kuwait produces around 2.7 million bpd.

Stocks face subdued Christmas Eve trading

By - Dec 24,2019 - Last updated at Dec 24,2019

People with shopping bags walk down the sidewalk as the Christmas holiday approaches on Monday in New York City (AFP photo)

LONDON — Asian and European stock markets turned flat in quiet Christmas Eve trade on Tuesday, running out of fizz before the festive break despite fresh record gains on Wall Street overnight.

In holiday-shortened deals, London’s benchmark FTSE 100 shares index rose 0.1 per cent to end at 7,632.24 points, while the Paris CAC 40 finished flat at 6,029.55 points.

“In true Christmas tradition, financial markets saw low trading volumes and volatility,” said CMC Markets analyst David Madden.

Frankfurt’s DAX 30 had already shut for Christmas on Monday, closing down 0.1 per cent at 13,300.98 points.

Trading volumes are typically light at this stage with many investors away for extended Christmas and New Year holiday celebrations.

Investors were pausing for breath after a bumper run over the last two weeks or so.

Global equities have already enjoyed a “Santa Rally” as dealers welcomed news over the US-China trade war and Brexit, having been on a roller-coaster ride for the last 12 months.

Britain’s pro-Brexit Prime Minister Boris Johnson won a landslide election on December 12, boosting investor sentiment. 

Last week, Johnson clinched parliamentary approval for the nation to depart from the European Union on January 31, dispelling Brexit uncertainty that had plagued markets for more than three years.

The rally gathered pace at widespread investor relief over the China-US trade pact, with the two economic superpowers set to sign off the deal early next month.

“The UK election result and the US-China trade deal was the Santa Rally — it’s been quiet since then,” added Madden on Tuesday.

Wall Street had enjoyed another blistering record-breaking performance overnight, buoyed by relief at burgeoning hopes over the China-US trade deal.

Oanda analyst Edward Moya added that he did not expect a repeat of last year’s losses the day before Christmas.

Markets had been hammered in 2018 by tighter monetary policy — from both the US Federal Reserve and also the European Central Bank.

“This Christmas Eve will not mimic last year, when we saw US stocks collapse with the S&P 500 falling into bear market territory,” Moya said. 

“This holiday period should be rather calm as trade updates appear very constructive as we near the finalisation of the phase-one trade deal next month.

“The reason we won’t see a repeat of last year is because there are no fears of any of the major central banks tightening policy anytime soon.”

Asian markets were mixed in thin business on Tuesday as Wall Street failed to spur another rally, while many bourses also closed early ahead of the holiday.

Emirates airline says president to step down

By - Dec 24,2019 - Last updated at Dec 24,2019

DUBAI — Tim Clark, president of Emirates, the Middle East’s biggest carrier, will step down from his position after 16 years in June 2020, the airline said on Tuesday.

“We can confirm Sir Tim’s retirement... in June 2020,” a spokesperson told AFP, without elaborating. 

Clark, 70, joined Emirates in 1985, when it began operations with two leased planes, and became president in 2003. 

The carrier now has a whopping 271 large aircraft, including 113 Airbus A380 superjumbos and 158 Boeing 777 planes.

However, the airline in November slimmed down its purchasing plans with Boeing and cut an order with Airbus, as tough conditions force a review of its fleet.

The airline, which has seen modest profits in recent years, signed a firm order for 30 Boeing 787 Dreamliners worth $8.8 billion at list price — 10 aircraft less than the commitment it made two years ago.

Emirates also reduced a mammoth contract for 156 Boeing 777X it signed six years ago to just 126 aircraft, amid delays in delivering the new long-range 777X.

The restructuring means that the carrier now has just 156 aircraft ordered from Boeing, compared to 196 previously in both firm orders and initial agreements, an airline spokeswoman said at the time.

In November, Emirates signed a $16 billion firm order for 50 Airbus A350-900 widebody aircraft, but the deal replaced a bigger commitment signed earlier this year, as it reorganises its fleet after cutting orders of the A380 superjumbo.

Its move to axe 39 aircraft from its total A380 orders prompted Airbus to pull the plug on the costly plane, which airlines have struggled to fill to its capacity of 500-850 people.

At the time, Emirates said it would buy smaller A330 and A350 models instead in a sale worth $21.4 billion, but the deal struck in November fell well short of that.

Emirates is facing slowing economies in its home Gulf region and stagnant tourism numbers to its glitzy base of Dubai.

In the last full year, its net profit dived 69 per cent to just $237 million due to high oil prices and currency fluctuations, although in November it said half-year profits nearly tripled thanks to a drop in operating costs.

Stocks fluctuate as traders wind down for Christmas

Analysts expect quiet week

By - Dec 23,2019 - Last updated at Dec 23,2019

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange during the beginning of the Christmas holiday week, on Monday, in New York City (AFP photo)

LONDON — Traders' screens twinkled red and green on Monday as stock markets wobbled on Monday in a muted start to a holiday-shortened trading week, with many investors already away for Christmas.

Asian equities fluctuated on Monday with activity thinning out. In Europe, London stocks pushed higher while Frankfurt and Paris appeared to run out of fizz.

But on Wall Street confidence remained buoyed by relief at prospects for the China-US trade deal, with the main indices moving higher off record closes as trading got underway.

"It's been a strong run up to Christmas for the stock markets and it seems traders are taking a little breather in this shortened trading week," said analyst Craig Erlam at trading firm Oanda.

"It's been a good few weeks for investors, spurred primarily by the de-escalation in the trade war, with Trump... claiming it will be signed very shortly."

Global equities have enjoyed a flourish as they head towards the end of the year, having been on a roller-coaster ride for 12 months owing to the long-running trade row and Brexit.

Observers say that with those two major issues cleared up for now, 2020 could see a healthy run-up in prices, boosted by looser central bank monetary policy as well as signs of improvement in economies around the world.

Traders were still breathing a sign of relief after Britain's freshly-elected parliament approved Prime Minister Boris Johnson's divorce deal with the European Union.

"The passing of Boris' Brexit withdrawal bill on Friday means MPs in the UK can finally relax and enjoy all of the festivities that this time of year brings," added Erlam.

Wall Street provided yet another record-breaking lead on Friday after data confirmed the US economy enjoyed reasonable growth in the third quarter, while other reports showed personal income and consumer confidence improving.

The New York gains on Friday lent some support to Asian markets but dealers there struggled to build any momentum, despite Beijing saying will lower import tariffs on more than 850 products including frozen pork from next month.

While the move does not appear to be linked to the bruising trade war between China and the US, which has seen Washington and Beijing exchanging levies on goods worth hundreds of billions of dollars, it will likely help reduce tensions.

Hong Kong finished up 0.1 per cent while Tokyo barely moved, and Shanghai sank more than one per cent.

Wall Street seemed to welcome the news, with the Dow pushing 0.3 per cent higher in the first minute of trading.

It was also helped by shares in Boeing jumping 2.7 per cent after the aerospace giant announced it had replaced its embattled chief executive, Dennis Muilenburg, saying a change was needed as it attempts to restore its reputation amid the protracted 737 MAX crisis.

With very little by way of market-moving events on the horizon, analysts are expecting a quiet week.

"It has been a quiet morning in Europe as dealers are winding down for Christmas," noted CMC Markets analyst David Madden.

"As it is Christmas week, market volatility is low, and trading ranges are small, so it is possible today's movements are not a true reflection of market sentiment."

Fed-up French travellers face traffic chaos over festive period

By - Dec 22,2019 - Last updated at Dec 22,2019

In this photo taken on December 12, SNCF agents stand inside the Gare de Lyon station, in Paris, during a strike of public transports operator SNCF and RATP employees over French government’s plan to overhaul the country’s retirement system, as part of a national strike (AFP file photo)

PARIS — Travellers across France scrambled on Saturday to begin their Christmas getaways with trains cancelled, roads jam-packed and nerves tested as a strike over a pension overhaul shows no signs of letting up.

Hopes of a holiday truce were dashed after talks between the government and union leaders this week failed to ease the standoff, with train operator SNCF warning the traffic would be “severely disrupted” over the festive period.

SNCF said its aim to allow 850,000 ticket holders to travel this weekend was being upheld — but only half of its usual services were running.

“I’m upset, this strike is unbearable... The government must do something,” said Jeffrey Nwutu Ebube, who was in the northern port town of Le Havre trying to find a way back home to the southern city of Toulouse, some 850 kilometres away.

On Saturday, French President Emmanuel Macron, called on the strikers to embrace a “spirit of responsibility” and for “collective good sense to triumph”.

“I believe there are moments in the life of a nation when it is also good to call a truce to respect families and the lives of families,” he said, speaking in Abidjan, the commercial capital of Ivory Coast, where he is on a visit.

 

‘Everything is full’ 

 

Many stranded travellers have turned to car rental agencies or sharing platforms since the strike began on December 5, but the last-minute surge in demand meant vehicles were hard to come by.

“We tried other ways, BlaBlaCar, etc, but everything is full, everything is taken,” said Jerome Pelletier, a manager in the textile industry.

President Macron wants to forge the country’s 42 separate pension regimes into a single points-based system which the government says will be fairer and more transparent. 

It would do away with schemes that offer early retirement and other advantages to mainly public-sector workers, not least train drivers who can retire as early as 52. 

While some unions support a single system, almost all reject a new “pivot age” of 64 — beyond the legal retirement age of 62 — which workers would have to reach to get a full pension.

Macron will renounce the pension he will be entitled to as former president, the Elysee palace said on Saturday.

He will also not take his seat on the Constitutional Court, of which former presidents are members for life and receive an allowance of 13,500 euros ($14,950) the Elysee added.

Heavy toll on business 

 

The unions are hoping for a repeat of 1995 when the government backed down on pension reform after three weeks of metro and rail stoppages just before Christmas.

Prime Minister Edouard Philippe said on Thursday that talks had made progress and called on unions to lift the strike “so that millions of French can join their families for the end of this year”.

Although the moderate UNSA union agreed, the hardline CGT and Force Ouvrier unions said they would not let up.

This weekend, the last for Christmas shopping, the RATP Paris train operator said metro services would be “heavily reduced” on Sunday with only two driverless metro lines working.

The protest is also taking a heavy toll on businesses, especially retail, during one of the busiest periods of the year, with industry associations reporting turnover declines of 30 to 60 per cent from a year earlier.

IMF approves $2.9 billion Ethiopia aid package

By - Dec 21,2019 - Last updated at Dec 21,2019

WASHINGTON — Ethiopia will receive $2.9 billion in a three-year aid package to help economic reform, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has confirmed.

The country — which has one of the fastest-growing economies in Africa — will receive $308.4 million immediately, the IMF said in a statement on Friday.

“The programme aims to support the authorities’ implementation of their ambitious reform agenda,” the Fund’s First Deputy Managing Director David Lipton said in a statement.

The funding would aim to ease foreign exchange shortages, as well as helping to reform state-owned enterprises, and safeguard financial stability, he added.

Lipton said Ethiopia’s rapid growth over the past decade has reduced poverty and improved living standards, but that such a model — driven by public investment — had “reached its limits”.

A financial agreement with the Fund will support the authorities’ plan, helping to catalyse the funding of other partners.

The Ethiopian government announced last week that foreign donors have pledged to finance $9 billion in its ambitious economic reform program, crucial at a time when the country is facing violent ethnic unrest.

Trump approves Russia-Europe gas pipeline sanctions

By - Dec 21,2019 - Last updated at Dec 21,2019

In this photo taken on November 15, 2018, an employee of the Allseas offshore service company works on the ship ‘Audacia’, from where parts of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline are laid in the Baltic Sea off the coast of Laage, northeastern Germany (AFP file photo)

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Friday signed off on US sanctions against companies building a Russian natural gas pipeline to Germany that Congress fears will give the Kremlin dangerous leverage over European allies.

The sanctions, which are opposed by the European Union, were included in a sprawling defence spending bill Trump signed at a ceremony on Joint Base Andrews, an air force installation outside Washington, DC.

They target companies building the nearly $11 billion Nord Stream 2 pipeline under the Baltic Sea with the aim of doubling deliveries of Russian natural gas to Europe's leading economy, Germany.

Both houses of Congress overwhelmingly approved the sanctions, with the Senate voting on Tuesday to send the measure to Trump's desk.

The sanctions were inserted into a much wider $738 billion annual Pentagon funding bill and, given the level of congressional support, a veto would likely have been overturned.

The US measures have angered Moscow and the European Union, which says it should be able to decide its own energy policies.

Germany's foreign minister, Heiko Maas, discussed the issue during a phone call on Friday with US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, State Department spokeswoman Morgan Ortagus said.

Pompeo expressed "strong opposition" to the project, Ortagus said in a statement.

The German-Russian Chamber of Commerce insisted last week that the pipeline was important for energy security and urged retaliatory sanctions against the United States if the bill passes.

The US sanctions target pipe-laying vessels for Nord Stream 2 and TurkStream, a Russia-Turkey pipeline, and include asset freezes and revocations of US visas for the contractors.

One major contractor that could be hit is Allseas, which has been hired by Russia's state-owned energy giant Gazprom to build the offshore section.

Following the act's signing, the Swiss-based company said in a statement it had "suspended its Nord Stream 2 pipelay activities".

The power of Gazprom, which is closely integrated with the Russian state, is at the centre of concerns about the pipeline in the United States, and also in eastern and central European countries.

Senator Ted Cruz, a Republican ally of Trump, said that halting Nord Stream 2 should be a major security priority for the United States and Europe alike.

"It's far better for Europe to be relying on energy from the United States than to be fueling Putin and Russia and dependent on Russia and subject to economic blackmail," he told the Senate last week.

However, Senator Rand Paul, another Republican, voted against the bill, objecting to its bid to "sanction NATO allies and potentially American energy companies".

Best renewable energy graduation projects honoured

By - Dec 19,2019 - Last updated at Dec 19,2019

The winners of the ‘Best Graduation Projects in Renewable Energy’ contest were honoured in a ceremony this week (Photo courtesy of Orange)

AMMAN — The winners of the “Best Graduation Projects in Renewable Energy” contest were honoured in a ceremony this week.

Deputising for Minister of Energy and Mineral Resources Hala Zawati, Secretary General of the Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources Amani Al Azzam attended the event. 

The contest was organised by the Jordanian-German Centre of Excellence for Solar Energy (GJCE) of the National for Employment and Training Company (NET), and in cooperation with Orange Jordan to shed light on the importance of renewable energy and to connect the students with the labour market, according to a statement from Orange. 

NET is committed to supporting youth, helping them meet the needs of the labour market and connecting them with employers in the energy sector, Ali Al Daaja, the general manager of the company was quoted in the statement as saying.

Munjed Akroush, Orange Jordan’s customer relations and operations director and GJCE’s vice-president, said that Orange supports all the efforts undertaken to reduce dependency on non-renewable energy resources and encourages the production of clean energy, stressing on the company’s commitment to support the GJCE technically and financially, in line with its social and national responsibility strategy and commitment to protect the environment, according to the statement.

The contest received 14 submissions from Balqaa Applied University, Al al Bayt University, German Jordanian University (GJU), Jordan University of Science and Technology, Israa University and Hashemite University.

The graduation projects were discussed by a committee that joined members from GJCE, Orange, Izzat Marji Group and some private sector partners. 

Eight projects reached the second round of the contest, out of which four competed for the first three places. 

The three winners were Sarah Mansour, an engineer from GJU, for her project “Environmental impacts of energy storage waste”, engineers Ameera Al Amayreh and Afaq Al Hyari for their project that tackled the Bus Rapid Transit Project and Hiba Al Thahabi, an engineer from GJU for her project “Double-sided Photovoltaic Systems on one Axis:  Design and Effectiveness”, according to the statement.

GJCE is the first Jordanian training centre to receive accreditation from the King Abdullah II Centre for Excellence, which is awarded to institutions that develop work practices and enhance expertise in accordance with world-class standards, the statement concluded. 

UK watchdog ‘concerned’ over dominant digital giants

By - Dec 18,2019 - Last updated at Dec 18,2019

This photo taken on October 1, shows the logos of mobile apps Facebook and Google displayed on a tablet in Lille, France. (AFP photo)

LONDON — Britain must consider tighter regulation of "digital giants" like Google and Facebook, because they could squeeze out potential Internet rivals and hurt traditional media, the competition watchdog said on Wednesday.

The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA), revealing interim findings of a market study into online platforms and digital advertising, said the average Briton spent three hours and 15 minutes online per day — and more than a third of this was on Google or Facebook apps and sites.

"Big is not necessarily bad and these platforms have brought very innovative and valuable products and services to the market," the watchdog said in a statement.

"But the CMA is concerned that their position may have become entrenched with negative consequences for the people and businesses who use these services every day."

The regulator added that Google accounted for more than 90 per cent of all UK search advertising revenues, totalling more than £6 billion.

It found that Facebook accounted for nearly half of all UK display advertising revenues, totalling more than £2 billion.

"A lack of real competition to Google and Facebook could mean people are already missing out on the next great new idea from a potential rival," the CMA continued.

"It could also be resulting in a lack of proper choice for consumers and higher prices for advertisers that can mean cost rises for goods and services such as flights, electronics and insurance bought online.

"The market position of Google and Facebook may potentially be undermining the ability of newspapers and other publishers to produce valuable content as their share of revenues is squeezed by large platforms."

The CMA aims to publish its full findings in July 2020 after a consultation period.

"There is a strong argument for the development of a new regulatory regime," it said.

"This could include rules governing the behaviour of online platforms and giving people greater control over their own data.”

"The most likely outcome at the end of this study will be recommendations to the new [UK] government as it decides whether and how to regulate the digital sector.

"On the other hand, the CMA stands ready to act directly through any or all of its own powers if, ultimately, these issues are not addressed in other ways, whether domestically or internationally."

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