Thursday, March 17, 2022

Canada’s Scrambling to Supply a Massive Global Fertilizer Deficit

(Bloomberg) -- The world’s biggest fertilizer company is increasing output of the key crop nutrient potash in the face of a global shortage.

Canadia’s Nutrien Ltd. said Wednesday it would boost potash production by about one million metric tons in 2022 to a total of 15 million tons, with most of the additional volume coming in the second half of the year. 

That may not be nearly enough to meet demand. Sanctions on major producers means there could be a shortage. Second-ranked producer Russia may face sanctions due to its invasion of Ukraine, while third-ranked Belarus has already been cut off from global markets. That leaves Canada scrambling to supply agriculture powerhouses like Brazil, the biggest importer. The northern nation already supplies nearly all of the potash used in the U.S.

“Nutrien’s move to add one million metric tons of capacity, while sorely needed by the market, does not come close to fixing the supply gap if both Russia and Belarus are sanctioned out of the global potash trade,” said Alexis Maxwell, an analyst for Bloomberg’s Green Markets. 

Russia and Belarus together supply about 42% of the $35 billion global potash trade, or some 24 million metric tons annually, Maxwell said

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

Meet the Bidders Lining Up to Buy Chelsea From Roman Abramovich

(Bloomberg) -- Roman Abramovich’s sale of Chelsea Football Club is drawing a growing numbers of bidders for one of the most coveted assets in world football, ahead of a deadline on Friday.

The Russian billionaire put the London-based club up for sale after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which prompted the U.K. government to place him under far-reaching sanctions for his ties to President Vladimir Putin’s regime. 

Whoever takes over will have a tough act to follow: When Abramovich bought the club for about 150 million pounds ($197 million) in 2003, it hadn’t won the English top division since 1955. Since his arrival, the club has won 21 trophies, including five domestic and two European Champions League titles. 

Here are the names in the frame to succeed Abramovich:

1. Todd Boehly

Former Guggenheim Partners President Todd Boehly is bidding for Chelsea in partnership with Jonathan Goldstein, a property entrepreneur who was involved in a bid for rival Tottenham Hotspur FC in 2014. Boehly bid for the club back in 2019, only for Abramovich to turn him down, according to Dow Jones. A part owner of the Los Angeles Dodgers baseball team, he has just agreed terms to sell his CBAM Partners to Carlyle Group Inc. for $787 million.

2. Nick Candy

U.K. property developer Nick Candy said he has funding in place to make an offer for Chelsea and is in talks with potential partners about teaming up for a bid. As a property developer, any bid could include plans for a new stadium. Chelsea fans would have a role in the running of the club if his consortium wins, Candy said.

3. Ken Griffin and Ricketts Family

Citadel founder Ken Griffin has teamed up for a takeover bid of Chelsea with the Ricketts family, owners of the Chicago Cubs. If they were to succeed, they would join a number of other American owners in the Premier League, including the Kroenke family at Arsenal and the Glazers at Manchester United.

4. Martin Broughton

Martin Broughton is a former chairman of Liverpool Football Club and is planning to put in an offer for Chelsea, with funding from backers in the U.K., U.S. and Europe, Sky News reported. He is being advised by investment banker Michael Klein. 

6. Josh Harris

The co-founder of Apollo Global Management Inc., worth about $7.6 billion, remains undecided on an offer, Bloomberg reported on March 8. If Harris, 57, succeeds in his bid for the club it would be the latest in a string of sports investments: He’s already a minority owner of the NFL’s Pittsburgh Steelers and has stakes in the NBA’s Philadelphia 76ers and the NHL’s New Jersey Devils. He is also looking at bidding for the NFL’s Denver Broncos and owns a stake in another Premier League club, Crystal Palace FC. He would likely have to offload that holding to bid for Chelsea.

6. Oaktree Capital

Oaktree Capital, the U.S. asset manager run by Howard Marks, is planning to bid alone or as part of a wider consortium, Financial Times reported. Its previous forays into football include the provision of debt finance to a Luxembourg-based company that owns Chinese retailer Suning’s stake in Inter Milan.

7. Woody Johnson

New York Jets owner and former U.S. ambassador to the U.K. Woody Johnson is working on an offer, according to ESPN. He would be the fourth NFL owner to hold a stake in a Premier League franchise if he takes over Chelsea. Johnson, 74, is an heir to the Johnson & Johnson consumer products fortune. He has owned the Jets since 2000. The team last won more than half its games in 2015.

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

FASCISM NOT SOCIALISM

Macron Says French State Should Take Control of Some EDF Assets

(Bloomberg) -- French President Emmanuel Macron said some Electricite de France SA assets should be nationalized for his plans to bolster the country’s energy independence. 

Presenting his election manifesto in Paris, the French leader said that for activities most linked to questions of national sovereignty “the state should retake capital” as part of a larger overhaul of EDF. 

Earlier in the press conference Macron spoke of a need to take back control of several “industrial players” in the sector.

SEC to Force Wendy’s Shareholder Vote on Treatment of Pigs

(Bloomberg) -- The Securities and Exchange Commission directed Wendy’s Co. to include a shareholder proposal in its proxy materials that could force the company to disclose the use of gestation crates in its pork supply chain.

If passed, the proposal, from the Humane Society of the U.S., would require the burger chain to disclose whether its supply chain uses the stalls to house pregnant sows. The Dublin, Ohio-based company objected to including the proposal.

But in a letter to both parties dated March 16, the SEC sided with the animal-welfare group. “We are unable to concur in your view that the company may exclude the proposal,” the regulator said.

The SEC’s move to let the proposal be considered comes amid a high-profile proxy fight on the same issue between McDonald’s Corp. and activist investor Carl Icahn. Icahn has teamed up with the Humane Society to propose new board members for McDonald’s, escalating his demands that the company force its pork suppliers to stop using gestation crates. 

Wendy’s has “followed the guidance for sow housing systems from the state of Ohio and that guidance was supported by HSUS based on public announcements,” company spokesperson Heidi Schauer said. “Animal health and well-being is important to us.” Under Ohio law, gestation crates can be used in existing facilities through 2025. After that, the stalls can only be used to “maximize embryonic welfare” and allow confirmation of pregnancy. 

The Humane Society disputed Wendy’s characterization of the group’s support.

Wendy’s didn’t comment on the shareholder proposal or the SEC decision, referring to the company’s website for its policies. The agency declined to comment.

The pork industry has used gestation stalls to help ensure that sows have been successfully inseminated, keeping them in narrow, individual stalls without enough space to turn around. For 16 weeks after artificial insemination, the sows are fed on the front end. The crates often have slats on the back end for manure to fall through. 

Industry representatives say the practice is in the animals’ best interest because it allows for easier health monitoring. But critics including animal-welfare activists and animal-health experts say the crates are cruel and cause mental and physical anguish.

Company Promise

In 2012, the Humane Society applauded Wendy’s promise to eliminate the crates; in its 2020 corporate responsibility report, the company reiterated this promise. 

But rather than eliminating the stalls, Wendy’s has only reduced the amount of time the pigs spend in them to six weeks from 16 weeks, the society says. The group’s proposal, submitted in November, would require the restaurant chain to share the percentage of pork that is gestation-crate free, as well as the risks the company faces for continuing to use them in its supply chain despite public statements that said otherwise.

“Our engagements with Wendy’s over the years gave us huge pause and reason for concern that the company wasn’t actually doing what it claimed to be doing,” said Matthew Prescott, senior director of food and agriculture at the Humane Society. “Based on our knowledge of what the country’s largest pork producers are doing with regard to gestation crates, we were skeptical that Wendy’s claims were true.”

The company didn’t address language in its 2020 corporate responsibility report that reiterated its promise to eliminate the crates.

In 2012, the same year that Wendy’s, McDonald’s and other chains made commitments to eliminate the stalls, the American Association of Swine Veterinarians approved a definition for “group housing” that keeps multiple pigs living together only “after confirmed pregnant.” Typically, the pregnancy tests occurs at about six weeks after insemination, meaning that instead of 16 weeks of confinement, pigs in “group housing” are in crates for six weeks.

Wendy’s website currently refers to its goal to “committing to transition to pork raised in open pen/group housing by the end of 2022,” specifically stating that a sow “may be housed in an individual pen until pregnancy is confirmed (a period that our suppliers report is typically 4-6 weeks).” This is done to ensure successful embryo attachment, it says.

©2022 Bloomberg L.P

Wells Fargo Pressed by Senators on Race Disparity in Refinancing

(Bloomberg) -- Senate Banking Committee Chairman Sherrod Brown and other Democratic senators called on Thursday for regulators to investigate Wells Fargo & Co.’s treatment of Black homeowners seeking to refinance mortgages during the pandemic. 

In a separate letter to Chief Executive Officer Charlie Scharf, senators Elizabeth Warren and Ron Wyden, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, demanded the bank produce by March 28 data and algorithms used to evaluate applicants and cited what they called “potentially illegal discrimination.” 

The letters follow publication last week of a Bloomberg News investigation that found Wells Fargo had in 2020 approved only 47% of applications to refinance mortgages completed by Black homeowners compared with 72% of those from White applicants. The bank’s approval rate for Black applicants was the lowest among major lenders, the Bloomberg analysis of federal mortgage data found. 

Read more: Wells Fargo Rejected Half Its Black Applicants in Refi Boom

Wells Fargo denied any wrongdoing in response to the Bloomberg investigation, saying its own internal review of its 2020 lending decisions had found that other factors such as credit scores accounted for the disparities in approval rates. It declined to share data about its 2021 performance. 

The Senate Banking Committee letter was addressed to U.S. Housing and Urban Development Secretary Marcia Fudge and Rohit Chopra, director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Brown and other Democrats including Illinois Senator Dick Durbin, Raphael Warnock of Georgia and Oregon’s Jeff Merkley cited the Bloomberg findings as cause for action. 

“While there can be differences in loan characteristics or borrower circumstances that result in a lender denying an application, the stark racial disparity in refinance approval rates at Wells Fargo raises questions about whether its mortgage systems and processes comply with all federal fair housing and fair lending laws and regulations,” the senators wrote, calling for a review of the bank’s mortgage refinancing process.

Like other major banks, Wells Fargo has faced scrutiny of its lending practices. In 2012, it paid $184 million as part of a federal settlement negotiated with the U.S. Department of Justice over allegations that it steered Black and Hispanic homeowners into high-interest subprime mortgages before the 2008 financial crisis. In 2019 it paid $10 million to settle a lawsuit brought by the city of Philadelphia, which accused Wells Fargo of making it harder for minority homeowners to refinance their mortgages. 

In their letter, Warren and Wyden cited the bank’s past record related to its treatment of minority homeowners. “Wells Fargo is incorrigible,” Warren said in a statement to Bloomberg News. “It has repeatedly and systematically ripped off its customers and discriminated against Black Americans in the housing market. It’s long past time to break up this big bank.”

The calls for greater scrutiny of Wells Fargo came after the Federal Reserve on Wednesday started a tightening cycle by raising its main policy rate 25 basis points, bringing an end to a remarkable wealth event that saw U.S. homeowners refinance $5 trillion in mortgages over the past two years. Freddie Mac said Thursday that the average interest rate on a 30-year fixed rate mortgage in the U.S. last week rose above 4% for the first time since May 2019. 

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

Workers Are Quitting at Highest Rates in South, Mountain States

(Bloomberg) -- Amid near-record job openings in the U.S., South and Mountain states like Georgia, Mississippi and Montana are seeing some of the highest rates of workers leaving their jobs.

While so-called quit rates have decreased in half of the states in January from a month earlier, South and Mountain states continue to face elevated levels of resignations, according to Labor Department data released Thursday.

These are regions where unemployment rates are among the lowest in the county, and home to cities that have experienced a surge in housing surged during the pandemic. In tight labor markets, workers are leaving to secure a job with better pay, more flexibility or both. Companies have bid up wages, which is contributing to higher-than-average inflation. 

On the bright side for employers, hiring improved in about of half of states too, with Delaware, Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah seeing the largest increases in January, the BLS data shows.

Over the last two years, the rate of hires increased in 39 states, were unchanged in two, and fell in nine states. During that period, Delaware, Kentucky, Georgia and Massachusetts saw the biggest improvements.

Meanwhile Washington state, the hiring rate -- the number of hires during the month divided by the number of people who were employed -- was still a full percentage point below its January 2020 levels.

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

Crypto’s Unregulated DeFi Boom Raises Shadow Banking Comparisons

(Bloomberg) -- Many of the negative hallmarks of shadow banking -- such as the excessive leverage and opacity that precipitated the 2008 global financial crisis -- have already seeped into the world of decentralized finance.

That’s the warning of Hilary Allen, a professor at American University’s Washington College of Law, in a recently published paper titled “DeFi: Shadow Banking 2.0?” 

Unless regulators move to provide stronger oversight of this burgeoning sector of the cryptocurrency world, the risk to the broader financial system will grow, she said. Loosely defined, the shadow banking system consists of lenders, brokers and other intermediaries that fall outside the realm of traditional regulated banks. The most infamous participants and casualties are probably Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns, which both failed amid the collapse of the subprime mortgage market. 

Lending is one of the leading applications in DeFi, with more than 160 apps that let people trade, lend and borrow without intermediaries and often anonymously. Many are offering double-digit and even higher returns in exchange for lending out tokens for holders. The total value of the assets “locked” in DeFi apps is around $120 billion, according to industry data tracker DappRadar. 

The inflows have caught the attention of more traditional financial institutions. Societe Generale SA has been tinkering with DeFi loans. HSBC Holdings PLC just acquired a plot of virtual real estate in the Sandbox metaverse. A slew of financial institutions, such as Silvergate Capital Corp. and a group of small banks, are planning or already issuing their own stablecoins, which are widely used to facilitate DeFi transactions.

“There are established financial institutions that are looking hungrily at the money being made in this space,” Allen said in an interview. “The concern I see both from the growth of this area and the financial stability perspective is if financial institutions see profits in this space.”    

Crypto companies catering to institutional clients such as hedge funds are already moving in. Genesis Trading, the world’s largest digital-asset lender with more than $150 billion in originations, is making plans to enter DeFi, said Matthew Ballensweig, managing director and co-head of trading and lending at Genesis. 

“We are thinking what our long-term strategy is going to look like with DeFi and our integration there,” Ballensweig said, adding that DeFi could end up being a source of cheaper capital, or a place to park money through apps such as Maple Finance, which offers uncollateralized loans to corporate and institutional borrowers.

Alameda Research, one of the world’s biggest crypto traders, is using DeFi loans to fund a portion of its $5 billion in daily trading activity. In January, Fireblocks teamed up with lender Aave Arc to let financial institutions participate in DeFi.

As more financial institutions pour in, the problems that have plagued DeFi -- everything from “rug pulls” to hacks that result in massive losses -- could potentially ripple through traditional finance and even raise the risk of bank runs, Allen and other observers said. 

“DeFi, much like shadow banking pre-financial crisis, has risks, and in particular could malfunction in ways that we can’t predict,” said John Griffin, a finance professor at the University of Texas at Austin. “That could lead to financial fragility in ways we also don’t expect.”

Stablecoins, which are usually pegged to assets such as the dollar, are one of the biggest threats, Allen said. Issuers such as Tether, with an $80 billion market value, operate as private companies and don’t fully disclose reserves. Whether crypto exchanges would convert stablecoins into fiat in times of trouble is unclear, Allen said.

DeFi proponents argue that the risks are worth taking since the sector is a hotbed of innovation, making services cheaper and faster. Allen said these claims have been overblown. It can be as expensive to transfer a digital coin to another country and to convert it into fiat, she said. And dapps’ decentralization -- the idea that they are run by their community of users and computer code -- is often just an illusion.

“Anything that is purportedly decentralized is by definition going to be clunky,” Allen said. “All of it is building in redundancy so you don’t have to trust anyone. So it’ll never be as efficient as a system with an intermediary. But what we are seeing is there are intermediaries everywhere in this space.” 

Many DeFi apps end up being controlled by a small group of developers, or venture capitalists with large stakes.

U.S. regulators have taken a mostly hands-off approach so far. President Joseph Biden’s March executive order on digital assets emphasized his support for crypto’s technological innovation, while stressing the need for consumer protections.

“To me that suggests that people are accepting at face value the idea that DeFi will help financial inclusion,” Allen said. “In light of that I don’t think what I am proposing will get much political traction until after a crisis occurs.”

Lebanese authorities hold hundreds of Syrian journalists, activists at notorious prison

Lebanese authorities are holding hundreds of Syrian journalists and activists at the notorious Roumieh prison east of Beirut on 'terrorism' charges.

The New Arab Staff
17 March, 2022

The Roumieh prison is notorious for violence and poor conditions [file photo-Getty]

Lebanese authorities are detaining hundreds of Syrian journalists and activists at the notorious Roumieh prison, east of Beirut, The New Arab's affiliate Syria TV reported on Thursday.

Sources from within the prison told Syria TV that around 300 Syrian journalists, media activists, and other political prisoners are being held there, emphasising that this number does not include Syrians held for ordinary crimes.

Tariq Shandab, a lawyer specialising in international law, said that many of the prisoners are media activists who supported the Syrian revolution against President Bashar Al-Assad.

"They were unjustly accused of terrorism by the General Military Prosecution," he told Syria TV.

Most of the political prisoners are being held under "anti-terrorism" laws and have been sentenced to terms ranging from one year to life in prison.

Shandab said that international organisations had failed to bring the issue to attention the public, while officials who had "politicised" the issue of terrorism to imprison the activists had not been held to account.

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One Syrian photojournalist, Fadi Soni, told Syria TV that he was beaten by Lebanese General Security officers after he reported a robbery.

Soni had previously worked with media activists in Qusair, a Syrian town near the border with Lebanon once held by rebels but later taken over by the Syrian regime and Hezbollah.

He said that security forces had asked him about his colleagues and he responded "most of them were martyred", meaning they were dead.

One of the security officers responded, "you mean they rotted", leading the other staff to beat him.

"I had to confess to crimes I didn't commit. That was the only way to stop the security forces beating me all over my body," he told Syria TV.

One prisoner, currently being held in Roumieh and who used the pseudonym Ahmed, said that conditions in the prison were "very bad" with detainees being medically neglected and free medical care no longer being provided.

He said that many prisoners' families could no longer afford medical care for them with scabies spreading through the prison.

Syria TV reported that seven prisoners had died in Roumieh prison since the beginning of 2022. The prison has a notorious history of riots and violence and has failed to meet UN standards for prison facilities.
GENOCIDE AT SEA
Seventy migrants feared dead off Libya: IOM
Around 70 migrants who went missing off the Libyan coast are now presumed dead, according to a UN agency for migration.
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The New Arab Staff & Agencies
17 March, 2022

The migrants are now presumed dead [Getty]


Around 70 migrants are presumed dead after going missing off the Libyan coast since late February, the International Organization for Migration said Thursday.

The United Nations agency said 22 migrants had been found dead after boats capsized on February 27 and March 12, with 47 still missing.

In the latter tragedy, a boat reportedly carrying 25 migrants capsized off the Libyan port city of Tobruk, bringing the total number of migrants reported dead or missing in the central Mediterranean to 215 so far this year, it said.

"I am appalled by the continuing loss of life in the Central Mediterranean and the lack of action to tackle this ongoing tragedy," said Federico Soda, IOM's Libya chief.

He called for "concrete action to reduce loss of life ... through dedicated and proactive search and rescue and a safe disembarkation mechanism".

"Each missing migrant report represents a grieving family searching for answers about their loved ones," he added.

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Libya has long been a springboard for migrants, often from countries ravaged by war and poverty, to make desperate bids to reach a better life in Europe.

Many end up drowning in the attempt, making the central Mediterranean route the world's deadliest migration corridor.

More than 123,000 migrants landed in Italy from Libya and neighbouring Tunisia in 2021, up from around 95,000 the previous year, according to the UN's refugee agency UNHCR.

Nearly 2,000 migrants went missing or drowned last year in the Mediterranean, compared to 1,401 in 2020, it says.
WHY? HOW? #ECOCIDE #HOMOCIDE
Emirati-flagged cargo ship sinks in Persian Gulf off Iran with 30 on board


2022-03-17 

Shafaq News / An Emirati-flagged cargo ship, longer than a soccer field, sank in stormy seas off Iran's southern coast in the Persian Gulf on Thursday, authorities said. Rescuers were trying to account for all of the vessel's 30 crew members.

Capt. Nizar Qaddoura, operations manager of the company that owns the ship, told The Associated Press the Al Salmy 6 encountered treacherous weather. The choppy waters forced the vessel to list at a precarious angle and, within hours, fully submerged the ship.

Emergency workers dispatched from Iran successfully saved 16 crew members, Qaddoura said, and civilian ships had been asked to help with the rescue efforts. Another 11 survivors made it into life rafts, while one person was plucked and saved from the water by a nearby tanker. Two crew members were still bobbing in the sea, he said.

The crew consisted of nationals from Sudan, India, Pakistan, Uganda, Tanzania and Ethiopia, Qaddoura said. The ship had been bound for the port of Umm Qasr, in southern Iraq, carrying cars and other cargo. It had left Dubai days earlier.

The ship's owners, the Dubai-based Salem Al Makrani Cargo company, specializes in car freighters.

The vessel capsized some 30 miles off the coast of Asaluyeh, in southern Iran, the state-run IRNA news agency reported. The search-and-rescue operation was complicated by bad weather, the report added, and was continuing.

Iranian media released images and footage of the ship, flipping over on its side after being rocked by waves, that matched with previous images of the Al Salmy 6, a roll-on, roll-off carrier - so named because automobiles can drive on and off.

The U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet, which patrols in the Mideast, didn't immediately respond to a request for comment about the incident.

(The Associated Press)