Activists say inclusion of oil firms’ debts in bond scheme breaks new governor’s promisesThe Bank of England has been accused of failing to live up to its tough talk on the climate crisis after it revealed it would buy debt from oil companies as part of its coronavirus stimulus programme.The oil firms BP, Royal Dutch Shell and Total are among the companies whose subsidiaries’ debts are eligible for the Bank’s bond purchases, according to an indicative list published on its website this week.Income subsidies Continue reading...
International community can avoid large-scale humanitarian tragedy in vulnerable regionsDeclining coronavirus infection rates and plans to begin easing lockdown measures in some parts of the developed world have provided a ray of hope after weeks of unrelenting gloom. But, for many developing countries, the crisis may barely have begun, and the human toll of a major Covid-19 outbreak would be orders of magnitude larger than in any advanced economy. With the US having recently recorded more than 2,000 deaths in a single day, this is no trivial number. If the international community doesn’t act now, the results could be catastrophic.Sub-Saharan Africa is a case in point. Several countries there would face significant challenges in enforcing physical-distancing rules and other measures to flatten the contagion curve. The region’s already weak healthcare systems could thus quickly become overwhelmed by an outbreak, especially in a high-density area.Related: Donald Trump is wrong, the economic hit of the coronavirus will last for years Continue reading...
Jeremy Cushing, Dr Michael Griffiths and Ian Watson sound warnings over a thinktank’s call to ditch the triple lock on pensions, but Mike Pender is in favour of it. Meanwhile, Malcolm Pugh says raising tax on unearned income makes more sense
JP Morgan’s $8.3bn bad loan provision is steep but it’s guesswork – no one has a clue about the final billAn $8.3bn provision for bad loans is steep, even for JP Morgan Chase, the biggest bank in the US. Is it even roughly the correct number, though?Jamie Dimon, unrivalled titan of Wall Street, didn’t quite shrug his shoulders nor did he indulge his normal habit of assessing the state of the world for lesser mortals. The provision was taken because of “the likelihood of a fairly severe recessionâ€, which is stating the obvious, but then his finance director said the reserves “could be meaningfully higher in aggregate over the next several quarters relative to what we took in the first quarterâ€.Related: JP Morgan sets aside $8.3bn to cover Covid-19 lossesRelated: Banks paid millions in bonuses weeks before ban on cash rewards Continue reading...
Wall Street bank earmarks sum to cover credit cards and oil and gas sector lossesJP Morgan, Wall Street’s biggest bank, has put aside $8.3bn (£6.6bn) to cover potential loan losses as it braces itself for a “fairly severe recession†caused by the Covid-19 outbreak.The provision – much of which is earmarked to cover consumer credit card debts – is the biggest sum put aside for credit losses since the financial crisis in 2009. It resulted in JP Morgan’s earnings for the first three months of the year plunging 69% to $2.9bn compared with $9.2bn a year earlier. Continue reading...
Save the Children says banks, commodity traders and asset management firms should not extract money from poorest countriesCommercial creditors owed money by poor countries should only be eligible for government Covid-19 bailout cash if they agree to sign up to a comprehensive global debt deal, the head of one of the world’s leading charities has said.Despite signs that the G20 group of developed and developing nations are edging towards an agreement on help for the most vulnerable nations, Inger Ashing, chief executive of Save the Children International said the plan would only be fully effective if it included the private sector.Related: IMF has no experience of recession arriving with such ferocityRelated: IMF has no experience of recession arriving with such ferocity Continue reading...
The crisis has brought the economy to a near halt, and left millions of people out of work. But thanks to intervention on an unprecedented scale, a full-scale meltdown has been averted – for now. By Adam ToozeIn the third week of March, while most of our minds were fixed on surging coronavirus death rates and the apocalyptic scenes in hospital wards, global financial markets came as close to a collapse as they have since September 2008. The price of shares in the world’s major corporations plunged. The value of the dollar surged against every currency in the world, squeezing debtors everywhere from Indonesia to Mexico. Trillion-dollar markets for government debt, the basic foundation of the financial system, lurched up and down in terror-stricken cycles.On the terminal screens, interest rates danced. Traders hunched over improvised home workstations – known in the new slang of March 2020 as “Rona rigs†– screaming with frustration as sluggish home wifi systems dragged behind the movement of the markets. At the low point on 23 March, $26tn had been wiped off the value of global equity markets, inflicting huge losses both on the fortunate few who own shares, and on the collective pools of savings held by pension and insurance funds.Related: ‘We can’t go back to normal’: how will coronavirus change the world? Continue reading...
Consumer and business spending will stay cautious but the state can fill the gap. We must not turn off the taps too early, like in 2010Donald Trump tells us that once Covid-19 is contained and it is safe to go back to work, the economy will be “great againâ€. Is the US president right?There is at least one reason to think he is. After all, unlike a hurricane or earthquake, the pandemic has caused no damage to the physical capital stock. It follows, Trump and his advisers argue, that we can pick up where we left off. The economy took a time-out but now output will rebound swiftly to pre-crisis levels and growth will proceed as before.Related: The 2008 financial crisis will be seen as a dry run for Covid-19 cataclysm | Kenneth Rogoff Continue reading...
The Bank of England’s extension of the ‘ways and means’ facility adds to a mountain of loans too big to be temporaryRishi Sunak avoided calling the Bank of England last week to beg for an extension of the Treasury’s overdraft facility to meet his Covid-19 spending commitments.The chancellor was saved that job by Andrew Bailey, the central bank’s governor, who saw the red flashing signs on the side of the Treasury’s headquarters from his Threadneedle Street offices almost three miles away. In a joint statement, the Treasury and the Bank said they had agreed to extend the use of the “ways and means†facility as a temporary measure during the disruption caused by Covid-19. Continue reading...
With the IMF and World Bank spring conference approaching, research underlines need to bail out world’s poorest countriesFor more than two years the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund have warned that sub-Saharan Africa stands on the verge of a debt crisis. Ever since commodity prices began to fall in 2015, the public finances of nations stretching from Nigeria to Kenya and Chad to South Africa have deteriorated.If China is the manufacturing centre of the world, Africa is its chief supplier of essential materials, from oil and copper to the rare-earth minerals used in mobile phones. As China’s manufacturing waned in the middle of the last decade, so did the crucial foreign earnings that keep African nations afloat. Continue reading...
Anthony Matheson is a doctor who wants to help but can’t, Peter Kaan is convinced the Tories will only do right by the NHS temporarily, and Karen Barratt is fearful that low-paid workers in essential services will end up footing the bill
The arguing over a financial rescue package for hard-hit states shows that even member states don’t trust Europe• Coronavirus latest updates• See all our coronavirus coverageThe European Union has scraped through its latest crisis by the skin of its teeth. The past week has been a disgrace. When ministerial talks collapsed on Thursday over the plan for a “coronabondâ€, the reaction seemed terminal. Germans and Dutch insulted Italians and Spaniards. Italy’s prime minister, Giuseppe Conte, said his country faced an “economic and social emergencyâ€, and the EU appeared not to care. The Danes spoke of “a financial crisis on steroidsâ€. The European commission’s vice-president, Frans Timmermans, predicted “the EU as we know it will not survive thisâ€.Finally a last-minute package was agreed, for €500bn of emergency loan finance. This was little more than an extension of the existing European stability mechanism, designed to help individual countries in short-term emergencies. Even then, it was a mere third of what the European Central Bank had said was needed, €1.5tn euros. What was specifically not agreed was any sharing of the economic burden of the pandemic across European treasuries in general. It was mostly more loans. Continue reading...
The Bank of England is right to step in to fund the Treasury’s coronavirus stimulus package, because there are more important things to worry about than government debt
Report warns 80% of firms face a highly uncertain future if stores close for two monthsThe coronavirus pandemic has plunged the $2.5tn (£2tn) global fashion industry into crisis with a “significant number†of firms expected to go bust in the next 18 months, putting millions of jobs at risk.Global fashion sales are predicted to fall by up to 30% in 2020 and the luxury end of the market will be even harder hit, with sales slumping by up to 40%, according to a bleak report by the Business of Fashion (BoF) and consultants McKinsey.Related: Primark announces wage fund for garment workers Continue reading...