Saturday, August 12, 2023

China’s Stalling Economy Puts the World on Notice

Peter S. Goodman
Sat, August 12, 2023

A residential development in Nanchang, China on May 22, 2023.
 (Qilai Shen/The New York Times)

For more than a quarter-century, China has been synonymous with relentless development and upward mobility. As its 1.4 billion people gained an appetite for the wares of the world — Hollywood movies, South Korean electronics, iron ore mined in Australia — the global economy was propelled by a seemingly inexhaustible engine.

Now that engine is sputtering, posing alarming risks for Chinese households and economies around the planet. Long the centerpiece of a profit-enhancing version of globalization, China has devolved into the ultimate wild card in a moment of extraordinary uncertainty for the world’s economy.

The risks have been amplified in recent weeks by a slew of developments.

First came word that China’s economy had slowed substantially in the spring, extinguishing hopes of a robust expansion following the lifting of extreme COVID restrictions.

This week brought data showing that China’s exports have declined for three months in a row, while imports have dropped for five consecutive months — another indicator of flagging prospects.

Then came news that prices have fallen on a range of goods, from food to apartments, raising the specter that China could be on the brink of so-called deflation, or sustained drops in prices, a harbinger of anemic commercial activity.

And in a sign of deepening distress in China’s housing market — the intersection of finance, construction and household wealth — a major real estate developer called Country Garden missed payments on its bonds and estimated it lost up to $7.6 billion in the first half of the year.

For Chinese workers and households, these events added up to trouble. Around the globe, a weakening Chinese economy signaled a shrinking of demand for major goods — from soybeans harvested in Brazil, to beef raised in the United States, to luxury goods made in Italy. It spelled less appetite for oil, minerals and other building blocks of industry.

“The slowdown in China is definitely going to weigh on the global economic outlook,” said Larry Hu, Hong Kong-based chief China economist for Macquarie, the Australian financial services firm. “Because China is now the No. 1 commodity consumer in the world, the impact is going to be pretty, pretty big.”

Over the past decade, China has been the source of more than 40% of global economic growth, compared with 22% for the United States and 9% from the 20 countries that use the euro currency, according to recent analysis from BCA Research.

Adding to the worry is the widespread sense that Chinese authorities are limited in their options to reinvigorate the economy, given mounting debts now estimated at 282% of national output — more than that of the United States.

The government has outlined spending programs aimed at spurring consumers to spend and businesses to invest. But the details have been opaque, while leaving the impression that local governments will be stuck with the bill. Local governments are at the center of concerns about the debt crisis. They had borrowed aggressively for years to finance the construction of roads, bridges and industrial parks.

All of this is playing out as China’s ruling Communist Party tries to transition from an economy powered by state-directed investments in infrastructure and exports to one led by domestic consumer spending.

The old model has run its course. It worked remarkably well for the two decades spanning the millennium, when the government financed ports, electrical grids and other basic works for an export-led factory boom.

At the same time, private entrepreneurs started some of the world’s more innovative and valuable technology companies. In more recent years, many have been constrained by a regulatory crackdown overseen by President Xi Jinping.

In the rest of the world — and especially in the United States — China’s staggering export growth, combined with the loss of domestic factory jobs, has set off conflicts over trade.

The Trump administration imposed across-the-board tariffs on Chinese imports. The Biden administration has continued that policy, adding prohibitions on investment in key Chinese sectors such as advanced computer chips. President Joe Biden intensified that campaign in signing an executive order Wednesday barring investment in industries that can bolster China’s military.

On Thursday, Biden referred to China’s economic vulnerabilities as “a ticking time bomb,” adding, “When bad folks have problems, they do bad things.”

Xi has previously accused the United States of running a campaign aimed at suppressing China’s development.

Faced with hostilities between Washington and Beijing and chastened during the pandemic by the difficulties moving products from Chinese factories to retailers in North America and Europe, multinational companies have shifted factory orders to countries like Vietnam, India and Mexico.

For Chinese policymakers, the alterations to the geography of international commerce have added urgency to the transition toward an economy centered on domestic spending power.

Still, those designs were halted by the pandemic. The government imposed draconian restrictions on business and freedom of movement, locking down whole cities.

The lifting of those controls in December, following an extraordinary series of public protests, was widely anticipated as a catalyst for consumer spending.

But consumer spending has been weak — so weak that China’s National Bureau of Statistics recently halted the release of data that drew attention to the economy’s problems.

Chinese households have long been some of the most prodigious savers on Earth, owing to the fact that social safety nets are meager. Over the first half of this year, total household deposits in the Chinese banking system grew by some 12 trillion Chinese yuan (about $1.7 trillion), the largest expansion in a decade.

But the increased savings, as well as the weakness of investment and consumer spending, appears to reflect a general erosion of public faith. During the pandemic, policy lurched from total lockdown to no controls — what economist Adam Posen recently called “economic long COVID.”

For China’s consumers, some of the extra ardor for stashing cash reflects the widespread recognition that real estate is a story full of unhappy endings. Decades of overinvestment by developers has yielded entire cities full of empty apartment blocks. As prices plunge, developers are halting projects midstream, leaving the skeletons of high-rises serving as monuments to a speculative bonanza gone awry.

This basic story has provoked comparisons to Japan, where the bursting of a speculative real estate bubble in the early 1990s led the country into three decades of decline.

Central to Japan’s slide was deflation, a term that sends shivers up the spines of economists.

Deflation works its way into a society’s basic expectations, destroying incentives to spend, expand businesses or hire workers, given the likelihood that everything will be cheaper later. What is, for individuals, a rational thrift metastasizes into decline for society.

Most economists think China will avoid that fate. Falling prices may soon reverse. And the government appears to have moderated its attacks on successful private businesses.

After years of demonizing private entrepreneurs, the government has lately signaled a pivot to a more “pro-growth, pro-business mindset,” said Bruce Pang, chief economist for Greater China at JLL, a real estate and investment management firm in Hong Kong. “The key policy priority will be how to boost domestic demand.”

In the most optimistic scenario, the government will engineer a gradual transition to slower growth, trading factory jobs for those in services, while containing the size of real estate losses.

Yet if the debt hanging over China’s economy limits the potency of the government’s response, that could bring about the worst fears: a plunge in housing prices, followed by expensive rescues of strapped lenders, and an unruly exodus of money.

That outcome most unnerves government officials, given that it could bring joblessness, business insolvencies and social strife.

Such images undergird the assumption that the government will intensify its efforts to stimulate the economy, even as doing so may exacerbate the foundational threats to the economy, creating fresh debts.

Yet even if the government succeeds in overseeing a gradual economic slowdown, some see mounting challenges that threaten to provoke significant volatility.

The continued shifting of factory work away from China, along with the focus on centering the economy on domestic consumption, is likely to push down wages and household wealth. And even in a country controlled by a single unelected party, the loss of faith of large numbers of people may bring turbulence.

China’s exports and imports collectively make up 40% of its total economic output, Yasheng Huang, an economics professor at MIT’s Sloan School of Management, noted at a conference in May. Many of China’s imports are components for exported factory goods. So the more that China’s exports drop, the more that imports do, too — a feedback loop of diminishing fortunes.

That drags down jobs and incomes, Huang said. “There’s no way it is a happy story.”

c.2023 The New York Times Company
OMG FARTS!
Scientists Alarmed by What Space Station Astronauts Appear to Be Breathing

Noor Al-Sibai
Thu, August 10, 2023 


Smelt It Dealt It

The dust floating around the International Space Station is way worse than what's milling around in your house or apartment — and the concentration is way higher, too.

In a new study, scientists affiliated with NASA's Glenn Research Center and the UK's University of Birmingham found that the ISS is home to a specific mix of dust particles that include, among other things, microplastics and the kinds of compounds found in flame retardants and building insulation.

The study, which was published in the journal Environmental Science and Technology Letters, looked at the space station's specialized air filters to see what was left behind as the air was being circulated. The researchers found a number of chemicals, including polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs), organophosphate esters (OPEs), and perfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) — the now-infamous "forever chemicals."

While some of these chemicals like OPEs have previously been found to be potentially toxic at high levels, the health effects they're having on astronauts, if any, are still unclear.

But given their concentration, it's worth investigating.

"Our findings have implications for future space stations and habitats, where it may be possible to exclude many contaminant sources by careful material choices in the early stages of design and construction," said co-author Stuart Harrad, a professor of environmental chemistry at the University of Birmingham, in a statement.
Dust Devils

To be fair, the dust we breathe in our Earth-bound households is also often quite gross, and many of the aforementioned chemicals are not at all uncommon on terra firma. The difference between the dust we breathe in our households and this space station dust, the researchers suggested, is a matter of both concentration and filtration.

While the air on the ISS is "constantly recirculated" eight to ten times an hour using its specialized filtration system, as the statement notes, its filters are broadly speaking there to scrub carbon dioxide and other contaminants. However, how much of these chemicals gets filtered out too is anyone's guess.

What's worse: the high levels of ionizing radiation that the space station goes through can speed up the aging process of onboard plastics, which causes them to break down faster and turn into micro- or nanoplastics "that become airborne in the microgravity environment."

"This may cause concentrations and relative abundance of [potentially harmful chemicals] in ISS dust to differ notably from those in dust from terrestrial indoor microenvironments," the news release adds.

The researchers are now hoping that their research could aid scientists in designing future space habitats and making wiser material choices — so astronauts can breathe more easily.

More on the ISS: NASA Thrilled That Astronauts Drink 98 Percent of Recycled Bodily Fluids
Thai Poll Winner Faces Dilemma Over Support for Tycoon’s PM Bid

Patpicha Tanakasempipat
Fri, August 11, 2023 




(Bloomberg) -- Move Forward Party, the surprise winner in Thailand’s May election, is in a quandary over whether to back or oppose a former ally’s candidate for prime minister after its own leader was rejected in his bids for the position.

A new coalition that’s being formed by Pheu Thai Party plans to nominate property tycoon Srettha Thavisin as its choice for prime minister. Voting against Srettha risks pushing Pheu Thai toward conservative adversaries and pro-royalist senators, who thwarted Move Forward’s efforts to form a government under Pita Limjaroenrat.

Move Forward’s lawmakers are gauging the mood among its supporters — largely urban and young voters — to decide its strategy. While Pita has said the party is in no hurry to decide, Piyabutr Saengkanokkul, a co-founder of disbanded predecessor Future Forward Party, said Move Forward should unequivocally state its resolve to sit in the opposition and rule out support for Pheu Thai’s coalition.

“Move Forward will likely upset many of its supporters if they vote for a Pheu Thai premier candidate who will lead a reconciliation pact with conservatives,” said Peter Mumford, Southeast Asia practice head at consultancy Eurasia Group.

A policy paralysis has hurt investor confidence in Thailand, which has been under a caretaker government since March with no major powers. Political parties are now under pressure to end the post-election stalemate and tackle economic issues such as a fragile economic recovery, high household debt and dwindling disposable income.

Move Forward was the frontrunner to run the government in the weeks after the May 14 election and now risks being relegated to the opposition, largely due to its unwillingness to back down from a pledge to amend royal insult laws and other platforms that may hurt pro-military business elites.

Pheu Thai has made an outreach for support and calls for reconciliation among political parties, citing the best interests for the nation. Move Forward’s decision could potentially determine the shape of Pheu Thai’s coalition as pro-military parties and senators have yet to back the alliance.

READ: Pheu Thai Courts Former Ally for Support as It Builds New Bloc

Pheu Thai’s new alliance is well short of the majority in the two chambers of parliament, which together have 750 members and will decide who becomes the prime minister. The coalition had the support of 238 lawmakers as of Thursday, 13 short of the majority in the elected House of Representatives. Move Forward’s 151 lawmakers can effectively seal Srettha’s win even without the support of the senators or military-aligned groups.

Pheu Thai, backed by former premier Thaksin Shinawatra’s family, is pushing for what it calls a reconciliatory government with the support of parties from across the ideological divide. The party said it’s time to put behind decades of color-coded politics — red for Shinawatra supporters and yellow for their royalist opponents — and focus on measures to revive the economy.

Thaksin’s plan to return to Thailand from 15 years of self-imposed exile is also seen weighing on Pheu Thai’s government formation. It potentially raises the necessity to broker deals with military-backed parties who represent the establishment to ensure his safe homecoming and the likelihood of receiving a royal pardon, said Napon Jatusripitak, a visiting fellow at the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute.

That too leaves Pheu Thai in a dilemma as it needs to decide if it should align with the military-affiliated parties despite having other options, Napon said.

“Pheu Thai is not counting on Move Forward’s support and seems to have ventured quite far down the ‘dark side’ already,” said Napon. “The actual challenge for Pheu Thai lies in the fact that certain options might significantly damage its reputation as a pro-democracy party, even if they lead it to power, or grant Thaksin a safe passage home.”

Though Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy is poised to expand more than 3% this year due to a rebound in tourism and private consumption, it faces headwinds from sluggish global demand for its goods and rising borrowing costs. Investors are also concerned the delay in forming a government may push back state budget approvals and public spending.

Srettha sees the formation of a government at the earliest as a solution to urgent economic problems facing Thailand, and doesn’t rule out an alliance with military-backed parties.

“We need to be realistic,” he told reporters late on Friday. “We need a new government. To solve Thailand’s problems, it’s imperative that Pheu Thai leads the government.”
Nikola recalls all battery-electric trucks, halts sales after fire probe

Mrinmay Dey
Fri, August 11, 2023 

 Logo of U.S. truckmaker Nikola in Hanover

(Reuters) -Nikola said on Friday it was recalling all the battery-powered electric trucks that it has delivered till date and is suspending sales after an investigation into recent fires found a coolant leak inside a battery pack as the cause.

There are a total of 209 battery-powered electric trucks in the marketplace between dealers and customers and the company is recalling those vehicles and is in the process of contacting all parties, a spokesperson for Nikola told Reuters.

The preliminary findings of the probe by a third-party investigator were corroborated on Thursday by a "minor thermal incident" on one pack on a parked engineering-validation truck, the company said, adding that no one was injured.

"Foul play or other external factors were unlikely to have caused the incident," Nikola said in a statement, adding efforts were underway to provide a remedy.

The company had said it suspected foul play when it started an investigation in June after trucks at its Phoenix, Arizona, headquarters caught fire. One damaged truck, kept at the Phoenix site for monitoring, re-ignited last month.

Internal investigations from Nikola's safety and engineering teams indicate a single supplier component within the battery pack as the likely source of the coolant leak that caused the vehicles to catch fire, the company said.

Struggling with supply chain bottlenecks and weaker demand, Nikola decided to make battery electric trucks only to order and focus on hydrogen fuel cell trucks.

Nikola on Aug. 4 appointed Chairman Stephen Girsky, a former General Motors executive, as its chief executive, its fourth in four years.

The company flagged "substantial doubts" about its ability to continue as a going concern for the next 12 months, reiterating its warning for the third time since February, as it awaits "critical" additional capital.

On Friday, Nikola asked customers and dealers of its Tre battery electric trucks to take certain immediate safety measures, including considering parking them outside.

Nikola's shares fell as much as 5.6% after the close.

(Reporting by Shubhendu Deshmukh and Mrinmay Dey in Bengaluru and Abhirup Roy in San Francisco; Editing by Sandra Maler, William Mallard and Raju Gopalakrishnan)

Flying taxi maker Archer settles Boeing Wisk lawsuits, shares jump


David Shepardson
Thu, August 10, 2023 

Flying taxi company Archer Aviation unveils all-electric aircraft in Los Angeles


(Reuters) -Air taxi maker Archer Aviation has reached an agreement with Boeing and its Wisk air taxi unit to settle litigation and collaborate on autonomous technology, the companies said on Thursday.

Archer's shares jumped 30% in after-hours trading to $7.60.

Separately, Archer said it completed a $215 million equity investment round that includes Stellantis, Boeing, United Airlines, and ARK Investment Management, increasing Archer’s total funding to date to over $1.1 billion as it works to win Federal Aviation Administration certification and begin commercial operations in 2025.

In a joint statement with Boeing and Wisk, Archer said it "has agreed to make Wisk its exclusive provider of autonomy technology for future variants of Archer’s aircraft."

Boeing said it is making an investment in Archer "that will support the integration of Wisk’s autonomous technology in future variants of Archer’s aircraft."

Boeing added its team members are "focused on supporting Wisk and are excited by their continued progress toward certifying and bringing to market the first all-electric, self-flying air taxi in the U.S."

The agreement settles several lawsuits.

Wisk was formed through a joint venture between Boeing and Google co-founder Larry Page's Kitty Hawk Corp, which is now wholly owned by Boeing. Wisk sued rival Archer in 2021 accusing it of stealing trade secrets and infringing on its patents. Archer counter sued Wisk in 2021 "for its false and malicious extra-judicial smear campaign" and Boeing in 2022.

Archer will issue warrants to Wisk for up to 13.2 million shares as part of the settlement and autonomy agreement.

Electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft (eVTOL) have been touted as the future of urban air mobility. Low-altitude urban air mobility aircraft has drawn intense global interest.

The $215 million funding includes an acceleration of $70 million from Chrysler-parent Stellantis under a 2023 strategic funding agreement.

In January, carmaker Stellantis said it would help build Archer Aviation's electric aircraft and increase its stake in the U.S. company.


Airlines and other companies are looking at developing transport services using battery-powered aircraft that can take off and land vertically to ferry travelers to airports or for short city trips, allowing them to beat traffic.

(Reporting by David Shepardson in WashingtonEditing by Matthew Lewis and Lisa Shumaker)
OMG WOKE ESG
Blackstone-Backed Solar Company Esdec Seeks US IPO at $5 Billion Value
WE DON'T CALL IT ESG (BLACKSTONE)

Aaron Kirchfeld and Swetha Gopinath
Thu, August 10, 2023



(Bloomberg) -- Esdec Solar Group is seeking an initial public offering in New York that would value the Blackstone Inc.-backed solar firm at more than $5 billion, according to people familiar with the matter.

The Netherlands-based company has appointed JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Morgan Stanley to the top line and is in the process of adding further banks to the IPO syndicate, the people said, asking not to be identified discussing confidential information.

The company is attempting to tap growing investor demand for green assets, the people said. It would add to a growing list of European companies pursuing US listings.

Founded in 2004, Esdec, which is also backed by European private equity investor Rivean Capital, develops and distributes rooftop solar racking and mounting systems.

No final decision has been made on the timing and size of the listing, the people said. Representatives for Blackstone, Morgan Stanley and Esdec declined to comment, while Rivean Capital and JPMorgan couldn’t be immediately reached.

The US market for IPOs is finally warming after 18 months in the doldrums, boosted by the recent success of restaurant chain Cava Group Inc.’s debut. Among a growing pipeline of listings is the iconic footwear maker Birkenstock, which is said to be ready to launch an IPO as soon as September.

UK-based Arm Ltd., owned by SoftBank Group Corp., is gearing up for what promises to be the biggest IPO of the year. The chipmaker plans to raise as much as $10 billion in an offering in September, Bloomberg News has reported.
US trade union fights TSMC plan to use Taiwanese workers on Arizona semiconductor factory build

South China Morning Post
Fri, August 11, 2023


A US workers' union has started an online petition against chipmaking giant Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, whose US$40 billion Phoenix plant faces setbacks.

Among other issues, workers in Arizona want American lawmakers to deny visas for Taiwanese workers the company wants to import to speed up construction of the plant, once hailed as a symbol of President Joe Biden's agenda to compete with China.

"TSMC announced they plan to bring more than 800 foreign workers to Arizona to operate on the North Phoenix facility," Arizona Pipe Trades 469 said on its Votervoice.net page, a digital platform used for advocacy and organising. The trade union is based in Phoenix and represents pipe fitters and plumbers.

"Protect your union brothers and sisters, protect your pay cheque and protect American jobs!"


The petition titled "Block TSMC Worker Visas" accuses the company of showing "a lack of respect for American workers, placing profit above worker safety and deliberately misrepresenting the quality, skills and experience of Arizona's workforce" despite the Taiwanese chip maker receiving "large financial breaks" under the Chips and Science Act.

Plans to build the TSMC Phoenix plant were announced in 2020 under former US president Donald Trump's administration.

It is among the beneficiaries of Biden's signature Chips and Science Act, which offers more than US$50 billion in subsidies to support US semiconductor research and development.


Since the beginning of the Biden administration, companies have announced more than US$231 billion in commitments to semiconductor and electronics investments in the US, according to a White House fact sheet published on Wednesday to mark the first anniversary of the bill.

In December Biden visited TSMC's factory in Phoenix, where he declared "American manufacturing is back ".

But a shortage of skilled workers to install advanced machinery required to manufacture high-end semiconductors has forced TSMC to postpone its production plans in the city. It had been expected to start making 5-nanometer chips in 2024 but the company has pushed that goal to 2025.

TSMC chairman Mark Liu told analysts on an earnings call last month that the company was working to send skilled technicians from Taiwan to train local workers in the US.

If allowed, these workers would work on EB-2 visas, which permit foreign professionals with "advanced degrees or exceptional abilities" to work and live in the US permanently, according to the US Citizenship and Immigration Services website.

But labour groups in the US oppose TSMC's plan to bring in Taiwanese workers.

While demanding that elected officials "use their influence to halt the EB-2 worker visas", the union's petition said that "replacing Arizona's construction workers with foreign construction workers directly contradicts the very purpose for which the Chips Act was enacted".

The website protectazworkers.org, which is also purportedly funded by Arizona Pipe Trades 469, urges Arizona lawmakers to "stand with labour and block TSMC from replacing more than 500 American workers", calling the labour-import plans "a slap in the face".


A Facebook page called IBEW 640 Brotherhood, a Phoenix-based labour group representing electrical workers, has been flooded with screenshots of "disrespectful" posts about America and American workers allegedly made on PTT, a Taiwanese online public forum.


The posts on the Facebook page - which is not run by the brotherhood - claim the social media screenshots support suggestions that TSMC wants to bring in cheap labour from Taiwan to cut costs.


Copyright (c) 2023. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.
Assassination in Ecuador Spurs Investor Rethink of Elections


Ecuador Presidential Candidate Killed
Presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio speaks during a campaign event at a school minutes before he was shot to death outside the same school in Quito, Ecuador, Wednesday, Aug. 9, 2023
 (API via AP)

2/4

Investors Brace for Fallout From Ecuador Candidate’s Killing







Maria Elena Vizcaino, Zijia Song and Ezra Fieser
Thu, August 10, 2023

(Bloomberg) -- As Ecuador grapples with the fallout from the shocking assassination of a top presidential contender, investors are weighing how the tragedy will influence the outcome of the upcoming election.

The killing of Fernando Villavicencio, an anti-graft crusader who was seen as one of the candidates with the best odds of advancing in the presidential race, stands to boost the chances of one of the more conservative challengers against socialist Luisa Gonzalez in the Aug. 20 vote. The possibility led to a jump in the price of Ecuador bonds, which have traded for over a year now at levels that indicate investors believe there’s a high probability of default. The Thursday gains were the biggest since May, and the best in emerging markets on the day.

“This potentially makes a market-friendly candidate more competitive against Gonzalez in the runoff,” said Carlos de Sousa, emerging-markets money manager at Vontobel Asset Management AG in Zurich.

Gonzalez’s center-right competitor Otto Sonnenholzner or Jan Topic, known for his hard-line approach to growing security issues, could pick up votes in the wake of Villavicencio’s murder, de Sousa said. That would in turn increase the chances that there will have to be a run-off vote to decide the winner, an outcome that could work against Gonzalez, a candidate backed by former President Rafael Correa who unnerves investors with her talk of boosting spending on welfare and public works.

Villavicencio, a former reporter, was murdered while leaving a political rally at a school in the capital city of Quito late on Wednesday. Warring cocaine cartels have turned the once-peaceful country into one of the most violent places in the world, making law and order central in the campaigns.

The killing adds to the pressures on a country already reeling from months of political uncertainty after voters rejected referendum proposals and opponents mounted an impeachment campaign against President Guillermo Lasso, prompting him to close congress and trigger a snap vote.

The government’s dollar bonds are among the worst performers in emerging markets this year, losing more than 25%, even after Thursday’s gains.

“Undoubtedly it’s set back for the country, set back for democracy, set back for the institutions in Ecuador,” said Paul Greer, a money manager at Fidelity Investment Management in London.

Ecuador has a checkered financial history. Since its independence, it has defaulted on its external debt 11 times, most recently at the onset of the coronavirus pandemic. While the investment scenario improved under Lasso, with international reserves near record highs, minimal debt service payments and a narrowing fiscal deficit, the return of a hard left administration could upend the outlook for markets.

Gonzalez, who has been leading in polls, is an ex-lawmaker who represents the party of former leftist President Correa, who stopped paying overseas debt in 2008 and called creditors “true monsters.”

Correismo — as the former president’s political philosophy is known — may be weakened in the wake of the killing, giving a boost to the bonds in the short term, said Siobhan Morden, managing director Latin America fixed income strategy at Santander US.

As of 3:30 p.m. in New York, notes due in 2035 rose 1.5 cent to 35.7 cents on the dollar, while debt maturing in 2040 rose 1.4 cents to 32.5 cents on the dollar — the biggest advances since early May — according to indicative pricing compiled by Bloomberg.e

“This is a stark reminder of the sustained degradation in governance, justice, and security in the country, which will take front seat in the policy agenda going forward,” EMFI Group analysts Gerónimo Mansutti Silva, Valeria Garcés Padilla and Guillermo Guerrero wrote in a Thursday note.

The killing could also diminish the chances for Indigenous leader Yaku Perez, since his campaign focused on water, hydrocarbon and mining issues as opposed to security and corruption, according to Nathalie Marshik, a managing director for fixed income at BNP Paribas.

Investors are now mulling which candidate is likely to challenge Gonzalez, but uncertainty is still high, said Fernando Losada, managing director at Oppenheimer & Co.

“Some investors may be interpreting that the more moderate candidates have a better chance of performing well in the upcoming elections,” he said. “As the political climate is very rarefied, it is premature to reach such a conclusion. We maintain a cautious view of the credit.”

--With assistance from Netty Ismail and Philip Sanders.

(Updates market moves in 12th paragraph, adds investor comments starting in 13th paragraph)

Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek
Wildfire smoke is warming the planet more than previously thought, scientists say

Sharmila Kuthunur
Thu, August 10, 2023 

The wing of an airplane hangs over the right side of the image, a dimmed sun shines behind brown smoke above a dark, mountainous landscape.

Among the complex mix of particles that make up wildfire smoke, an abundant but thus far unknown kind has been shown to trap a surprising amount of heat, according to new research.

These results indicate that wildfires, which are expected to become harsher and more frequent in the coming years due to human-induced climate change, are heating Earth to a greater extent than previously thought.

Using NASA's Douglas DC-8 aircraft, which is a 54-year-old quadjet (a jet powered by four engines) that was turned into a flying science lab, scientists performed smoke analysis of three specific lightning-caused fires. All three had burnt large swaths of land in the western United States in 2019 — the Shady Creek in Idaho, Castle and Ikes in Arizona and the 204 Cow of Oregon.

Their findings showed that a new kind of particle associated with these fires, dubbed organic "dark brown carbon," strongly absorbs heat — so much so that they account for more than half of the total heat absorbed by the collected wildfire smoke.

"It's likely that they form similarly to soot in the high-temperature flames along the leading edges of wildfires," Rohan Mishra, an associate professor of mechanical engineering and materials science at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri and a co-author of the new study, said in a statement.

In July and August of 2019, scientists used instruments onboard NASA's flying science lab to collect smoke samples at about 6.2 miles (10 km) above ground. On ground, they used a mobile laboratory to collect samples of wildfire smoke about 1.8 miles (3 km) from selected fire management areas.

Related: Satellites watch as wildfires rage across Greece (photos)

The new particles are fewer in number when compared to another wildfire smoke particle known as black carbon or soot, which absorbs sunlight, then turns that sunlight into heat. Black carbon is the second largest contributor to global warming after carbon dioxide — however, these newly studied dark brown carbon particles appear to be four times more abundant in smoke than black carbon. That ultimately spikes the potential for wildfires to warm our planet far beyond what has been accounted for.

The results of this latest research, which was a collaboration between NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), add a strong urgency to better understand the warming effects of brown carbon. These particles are technically included in existing climate models, but their warming effects remain a huge uncertainty, and it's also worth noting that they're released into the atmosphere during the burning of fossil fuels as well.

"Typically, climate models ignore or dismiss organic carbon as insignificant compared to black carbon when it comes to warming, but that is not what field observations reveal," Rajan Chakrabarty, an associate professor of energy, environment and chemical engineering at the Washington University in St. Louis and the new study's lead author, said in the statement.

The newly found particles seem to absorb light across the visible spectrum, from ultraviolet wavelengths to near-infrared. They are also capable of resisting light-induced bleaching, which is a naturally occurring process that's expected to strip brown carbon particles of their capacity to absorb heat, usually within a day after they're released into the atmosphere.

Related Stories:

Smoke from Canadian wildfires chokes US Midwest, reaches Europe (satellite photos)

Climate change: Causes and effects

NASA searches for climate solutions as global temperatures reach record highs

However, lab experiments showed that the dark brown carbon particles indicated no change in heat absorption for at least three days.

Previous research has shown that such bleaching is "heavily dependent" on the height of the smoke and local atmospheric conditions. Closer to the ground, where there are higher chances of warm and humid climates, brown carbon loses its color or bleaches in as quickly as a day.

The higher the wildfire smoke is from the ground, the cooler the air gets, so brown carbon in the smoke loses its water content, making chemical reactions that much harder. At high altitudes, it wafts in the atmosphere for as long as a year.

In the past, wildfire smoke has drifted to polar regions, and brown carbon was cited as the leading contributor to the accelerated melting of glaciers and sea ice in the Arctic, which is now warming faster than the rest of the planet.

The new paper was published on Monday (Aug. 07) in the journal Nature Geoscience.
Signs of Chinese business life return to Afghanistan 2 years after the Taliban's takeover

South China Morning Post
Sat, August 12, 2023 

Duan Yi, a Chinese gemstone trader who moved to Afghanistan about 18 months ago, has noticed clear changes on the streets of Kabul in recent months.

Foreign tourists - mostly from Europe and the United States, and now an increasing number of Chinese - are back to the once deserted capital city.

Li Xijing has seen the same trend.

As a director of Kabul's Chinatown, Li has greeted dozens of Chinese businessmen making tentative steps back into the city. Journalists, from Britain to Japan, have also knocked on his door since spring.

"[Chinatown] is getting crowded," he said.

Since the Taliban took control of the war-torn country in 2021, Afghanistan's economy and security has not collapsed as some had expected. Instead, the central Asian country has begun to slowly pick up the pieces.

But for Chinese businessmen who have chosen to return and stay, they know to take the good news with a grain of salt, and to be patient. While the Taliban regime has brought security since coming to power, terrorist attacks have not stopped.

Moreover, the international community, including China, is yet to recognise the regime, with human rights - particularly while severe restrictions are imposed on women and girls - among concerns cited.

In April, China's then-foreign minister Qin Gang said Beijing hoped the Afghan Taliban would heed the concerns of the international community and resolve issues relating to women's rights.

However, he said that while the issue of women's rights and interests was very important, "it is not the whole of the Afghan issue and nor is it the core or root cause of the Afghan issue", according to a ministry statement.

While most businesses on the street are back to normal as the Taliban promised, the country's economy still suffers as a result of foreign sanctions.

"Afghanistan is not as scary as it was portrayed in the media, but you are always on edge," Duan said.

Li, as an executive in Kabul's Chinatown, said his growing contact with businessmen in recent weeks was a sign of recovery.

Located in Kabul's city centre, the Chinatown community is the first stop for most Chinese people who are new to the country.

But when the Taliban took control of Afghanistan two years ago, only about a dozen Chinese chose to stay. Li said that in the whole of Afghanistan, fewer than 20 Chinese people remained.

"In the past two years, when it comes to Afghanistan, the Chinese people always think that there are wars and terrorist attacks, but more are coming back now," he said.

As Chinese people began to look to do business and invest in the country again, Li said they "need to choose the right way or method".

"In the absence of normal diplomatic relations between countries, businesses are cautious about investing," he said.

China may not have formally recognised the Taliban regime, but senior Chinese officials have held high-level meetings with their Afghanistan counterparts.


Food aid from China is stored in a warehouse in Kabul, Afghanistan. 


Jennifer Brick Murtazashvili, founding director at the University of Pittsburgh's Centre for Governance and Markets, said China was hesitant to establish formal ties with the regime because of concerns about its stability.

"Neighbours [of Afghanistan] are most familiar with Afghanistan's history and governance dynamics, and they recognise that without a more inclusive government, Afghanistan will be unstable for years to come."

Zhu Yongbiao, a professor in Lanzhou University's school of politics and international relations, said security remained China's biggest concern.

"At this stage, the essential problem [for China] is to urge Afghanistan to draw a line with terrorism," he said.

In April, China issued its most comprehensive position paper on Afghanistan since the Taliban took power, listing 11 points on the regime.

"China's Position on the Afghan Issue" appealed to the Taliban government to "adopt moderate and prudent domestic and foreign policies", and three of the 11 points in the paper referred directly to the Taliban's counterterrorism activities.

The paper highlighted the East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM), a Uygur separatist group that Beijing has blamed in part for ethnic tensions in its far western Xinjiang region.

Murtazashvili said Uygur separatist groups remained China's key worry in its counterterrorism ambitions.

"China wants Afghanistan to be able to eliminate the terrorist groups, especially the small Uygur groups that have remained in the country. These groups are the biggest threats to China from a strategic perspective," she said.

Beyond the separatist groups of concern to Beijing, Chinese people in Afghanistan also felt threatened by Isis-K, or Islamic State Khorasan, an Isis affiliate in Afghanistan.

Five Chinese nationals were seriously wounded in an attack by Isis-K by Kabul's Longan Hotel in December.

In January, the militants reportedly targeted members of the Chinese delegation in another suicide bomb attack outside the foreign ministry in Kabul that officials said killed at least five people.

Isis-K was also known to be responsible for other attacks at the Russian and Pakistan missions in the capital city last year.

Sun Fei, a 37-year-old trader who lives in Kandahar, said Chinese still lived under the shadow of attacks despite an overall improvement in security.

"Security has got better, but [the terrorists] have started to pick on the Chinese and Russians more," he said.

According to Sun, there were widespread rumours about terrorist attacks from Kabul to the southern city of Kandahar a month before the Longan Hotel attack.

"The discrimination [directed at Chinese] is so obvious," he said.

Nishank Motwani, a fellow with the Harvard Kennedy School's Edward S. Mason programme, said that by carrying out the attacks, the militants wanted to undermine the Taliban's legitimacy and sow doubts about security among foreign investors, diplomats and governments.

"Isis-K is likely to execute more attacks against soft targets, which include Chinese nationals, because it amplifies their propaganda, humiliates the Taliban and undermines the security environment that helps them grow."

However, Murtazashvili said she believed that attacks against Chinese people would continue, even as security in Afghanistan improved.

"After two years of Taliban rule, Afghanistan does not have as much widespread fighting ... A big reason for this is that the Taliban now controls the government," she said. "The Taliban itself was the source of most of the insurgent violence we saw in the country."

In January, after the deadly attack, Taliban spokesman Suhail Shaheen promised Chinese nationals would be safe.

"The current government reiterates its obligation to maintain the safety of Chinese nationals and all other nationals who are coming to Afghanistan, either for investment, business or tourism," he said.

Chinese gem trader Duan, who has also lived in Pakistan, is cautiously optimistic about safety in Kabul.


Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi stands next to Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, acting deputy prime minister of the Afghan Taliban's caretaker government, in Kabul, Afghanistan, in March 2022. Photo: Xinhua via AP alt=Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi stands next to Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, acting deputy prime minister of the Afghan Taliban's caretaker government, in Kabul, Afghanistan, in March 2022.
 
Photo: Xinhua via AP>

"To be honest, terrorist attacks targeting Chinese were even more dangerous in Pakistan [than in Afghanistan] but it doesn't mean that we are not worried," he said.

Sun cited the cheaper airfares between Kandahar and Kabul and more road traffic in the past year as signs that security in the country had improved.

"The reason more people are driving is because there are no bomb attacks or terrorist groups roaming the highways now," he said.

But without international recognition and a stable security environment, Afghanistan's economic recovery will remain difficult and take years, if not decades.

The country's economy appears to have benefited from the reopening. According to the World Bank, Afghanistan's government revenue collection for the first quarter of this year increased 8 per cent year on year.

But Zhu said that while the data showed signs of stability or even improvement, it was largely achieved because of international aid.

"There is still a huge hole in the entire budget of the Taliban, which is partly supported by foreign aid, and the country's own economic programmes are largely undeveloped," he said.

"Due to the risk of sanctions and security, Chinese companies are still reluctant to invest in Afghanistan.

"Most companies - after they come and have a real look - will become less interested in investing. And that's actually normal following the rules of economics."

Business talks between Chinese state-owned companies and the Taliban are continuing, but according to Zhu, nearly all negotiations face long delays.

In January, the privately run oil company Xinjiang Central Asia Petroleum and Gas Co (CAPEIC) signed a contract to extract oil from the Amu Darya basin, the first major extraction deal the Taliban administration had signed with a foreign company since retaking power.

CAPEIC will invest US$150 million a year in Afghanistan under the contract, increasing to US$540 million in three years under the 25-year agreement.

"We are optimistic about the future of Afghanistan. After all, it is still a country after [being] at war for so many years," Li said.

He recalled a meeting with Taliban officials in Kabul after they returned to power two years ago.

"All the foreigners have run away, but only you Chinese - you have been here for 20 years - are still here," he quoted a Taliban official saying at the time.


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https://www.marxists.org/archive/bukharin/works/1917/imperial

Nikolai Bukharin. Imperialism and World Economy. Introduction by V.I. Lenin. Written: 1915 and 1917. Source: Nikolai Bukharin "Imperialism and World ...