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Dollar Pain Spreads from Emerging to Developed Economies

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Dollar Pain Spreads from Emerging to Developed Economies
Dollar Pain Spreads from Emerging to Developed Economies
Dollar Pain Spreads from Emerging to Developed Economies
Dollar Pain Spreads from Emerging to Developed Economies

Developed economies are taking a hit from dollar appreciation to multi-decade highs in ways once more familiar to their emerging-market peers.

The dollar is driven by the Federal Reserve’s most aggressive tightening cycle in more than a generation. A stronger dollar pushes rival currencies lower and raises the cost of imported goods. The dollar also tightened financial conditions and fueled inflation in other economies.

The global waves of the Fed’s tightening are not new. In the first episode in recent years, the serious strength of the dollar has been more noticeable. It had noticed against the currencies of developed nations as a group than against emerging economies.

“A stronger dollar usually comes with higher short- and long-term interest rates in the United States. Interest rates also depend on stress on global markets and a flight to the perceived safety of the dollar,” said Maurice Obstfeld. Maurice Obstfeld is a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. “Those tighter financial conditions are slowing developed economies around the world.”

The Fed’s trade-weighted dollar index against advanced economies has soared 10% this year to its most substantial level since 2002. The emerging market measure has risen a more modest 3.7% and remains well below its 2020 pandemic high.

“By raising policy rates, other countries are unlikely to stop the depreciation of their currencies,” said Sayuri Shirai. Sayuri Shirai is a former Bank of Japan board member who is now a professor at Keio University.

This is because “the strength of the dollar increased demand for U.S. fixed income assets. It reflects global recessionary risks from larger-than-expected policy rate increases around the world.”  Spoke.

That conundrum will be illustrated in the coming day. The European Central Bank may consider a record rate hike of 75 basis points. As it grapples with record inflation and the euro is below parity with the dollar. The Bank of Canada is inclined to rise by the same amount. The Reserve Bank of Australia has offered another half-percentage-point rate increase.

In the UK, which is already in recession, according to a business lobby, the Bank of England could tighten further on Sept. 15. The Bank of England faces a loss of investor faith that has pushed the pound to the brink of its lowest level since 1985.

And the yen’s drop to a quarter-century low is making it difficult for BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda to stick to his line. Massive monetary support is still needed, even in the face of rising prices.

The Fed is not done rising yet. The relief on the currency front for the world’s central bankers can only come once U.S. counterparts control consumer prices.

It became clear that the Fed would switch to Change mode about a year ago. The developed-market currencies have struggled at least as much as their emerging-nation counterparts. Across the top 31 exchange rates tracked by Bloomberg. Four developed rates were among the top 10 losers. The Canadian dollar was among the top 10 performers.

The ECB currency is the most traded with the dollar. The current energy crisis has provided their policymakers. The provision was a particularly sharp reminder of the euro’s role as an inflation channel. Especially due to the use of the dollar in the denomination of global commodity prices.

“I would say that, in this particular situation of an energy supply shock, the exchange rate matters more. ECB Executive Board member Isabel Schnabel told Reuters last month when asked about previous research suggesting that the pass-through to inflation has slowed.

Japan, whose currency is the second most traded with the dollar, is also feeling the brunt. Having surpassed the level of 143, the coin is not far from the 146 mark that prompted a joint action with the United States in 1998 to prop it up. It also increases the odds that inflation will exceed 3%, well above Kuroda’s 2% target.

While the BOJ chief insists that a recent supply-driven consumer price hike won’t last. The households and businesses are becoming restless as the yen plummets, turbocharging rising energy and import costs. Officials warn against excessive volatility.

“Sudden movements in the foreign exchange market are not desirable,” Japan’s Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki told reporters after an online meeting of G-7 finance ministers. “Recent moves in the currency markets are a bit on the big side,” he said.

The biggest concern for many countries could be that local rate increases may do little to curb their currencies because their economies appear more fragile than those of the United States.

Sterling is poised to fall past its March 2020 low, even as swap traders set the price for the BOE to overtake the Fed, with bets showing the UK benchmark index topping 4.25% in six months, topping 4% in the US by then.

Some, such as Chile and India, have also stepped in to support their currencies. It is more difficult for their peers in developed nations.

One possibility of relief would be a slowdown in the U.S. economy. It will remove steam from the Fed’s tightening pace and, by extension, causes the dollar to weaken.

The size of the rate hike that Fed officials will opt for on Sept. 20-21 monetary policy meeting will likely be heavily influenced by the latest monthly reading on consumer prices, to be released on Sept. 13. For now, the Fed has signaled that relief may be a long way off, with the need to maintain the tight policy for some time to stifle inflation.

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iPhone XS Specifications and Price in Pakistan

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iPhone XS Specifications and Price in Pakistan
iPhone XS Specifications and Price in Pakistan
iPhone XS Specifications and Price in Pakistan
iPhone XS Specifications and Price in Pakistan
  • AMOLED panels are selected for Apple’s new iPhone XS.
  • 64GB ROM which is wide enough for this phone.
  • It is A12 that has recently been made for Apple.

iPhone XS price in Pakistan

Apple iPhone XS’s retail price in Pakistan is PRs. 141,999/-

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Asia Cup 2022: Shahnawaz Dahani, Pakistani pacer will not play today due to injury

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Asia Cup 2022: Shahnawaz Dahani, Pakistani pacer will not play today due to injury
Asia Cup 2022: Shahnawaz Dahani, Pakistani pacer will not play today due to injury, (IC_API)
Asia Cup 2022: Shahnawaz Dahani, Pakistani pacer will not play today due to injury
Asia Cup 2022: Shahnawaz Dahani, Pakistani pacer will not play today due to injury, (IC_API)

The medical team will monitor Dahani for the next 48-72 hours and then decide whether he can continue his participation in the Asian Cup or not. A PCB official said he “has complained of lateral tension after the match against Hong Kong and is being monitored. The medical team will likely decide to have an examination after 48 to 72 hours.”

“Shahnawaz Dahani is with the team, but the indications are that he might not play in the remaining matches of the tournament. He must require proper rehabilitation,” he added.

Injury problems continue to pile up for Pakistan’s fast battery. Pakistan lost Shaheen Afridi and Mohammad Wasim even before the start of the tournament. Dahani’s injury now stretching their bowling in the match against India. Pakistan could look for Mohammad Hasnain or the experienced Hasan Ali for today’s match.

Shaheen, Wasim and now Dahani facing injuries
Shaheen, Wasim, and now Dahani facing injuries, (IC_twitter)

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NASA Ready for Second Artemis Lunar Attempt

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NASA Ready for Second Artemis Lunar Attempt
NASA Ready for Second Artemis Lunar Attempt
NASA Ready for Second Artemis Lunar Attempt
NASA Ready for Second Artemis Lunar Attempt

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. Ground crews at Kennedy Space Center prepared on Saturday for a second attempt to launch a rocket. It’s NASA’s towering next-generation lunar rocket. The debut flight was hoping to have remedied engineering problems. It thwarted the initial countdown five days earlier.

The 32-story-high Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and its Orion capsule were due to lift off from Cape Canaveral, Florida, at 2:17 p.m. EDT (1817 GMT). Kicking off the ambitious Artemis program of NASA’s Moon-to-Mars program 50 years after the last Apollo lunar mission.

The previous launch offers on Monday ended with technical issues. The issues forced a halt to the countdown and postponed the uncrewed flight.

Tests indicated that technicians have since fixed a leaky fuel line. The line contributed to Monday’s canceled launch, Jeremy Parsons.  Jeremy Parsons deputy program manager at the space center, told reporters Friday.

There are two other key issues with the rocket itself. A faulty engine temperature sensor and some cracks in the insulation foam are a couple of issues. They have been resolved to NASA’s satisfaction; Artemis mission manager Mike Sarafin told reporters Thursday night.

Weather is always more factor beyond NASA’s control. The latest forecast called for a 70% chance of favorable conditions during Saturday’s two-hour launch window, according to the U.S. Space Force at Cape Canaveral.

If the countdown clock were to stop again, NASA could reschedule another launch attempt for Monday or Tuesday.

Dubbed Artemis I, the mission marks the first flight for both the SLS rocket and the Orion capsule. Both were built under NASA contracts with Boeing Co and Lockheed Martin Corp.

It also signals a major shift in the direction of NASA’s post-Apollo manned spaceflight program. It is after decades focused on low-Earth orbit with space shuttles and the International Space Station.

Named after the goddess who was Apollo’s twin sister in ancient Greek mythology. Artemis aims to return astronauts to the surface of the moon as early as 2025.

Twelve astronauts walked on the moon during six Apollo missions from 1969 to 1972. Apollo missions are the only space flights that have yet to place humans on the lunar surface. But Apollo, born out of the space race between the United States and the Soviet Union during the Cold War, was less science-driven than Artemis.

The new moon program has recruited commercial partners such as SpaceX and space agencies from Europe, Canada, and Japan. They eventually established a long-term lunar home base as a springboard for even more ambitious human travel to Mars.

Getting the SLS-Orion spacecraft off the ground is a key first step. Its first trip is meant to test the 5.75-million-pound vehicle in a rigorous test flight. This flight exceeds its design limits and proves that the spacecraft is suitable for flying astronauts.

If the mission is successful, a manned Artemis II flight around the moon and back could arrive as early as 2024. It follows a few more years with the first lunar landing of the astronaut program, one of them a woman, with Artemis III.

Regarded as the world’s most powerful and complex rocket, the SLS represents the largest new vertical launch system the U.S. space agency has built since the Apollo-era Saturn V.

Saturday’s countdown should end with the rocket’s four main R-25 engines. Twin solid rocket boosters fire up to produce 8.8 million pounds of thrust, about 15% more thrust than the Saturn V, sending the spacecraft into the sky.

About 90 minutes after launch, the rocket’s upper stage will push Orion out of ongoing Earth orbit for a 37-day flight. The flight will take it within 60 miles of the lunar surface before navigating 40,000 miles (64,374 km) beyond the moon and back to Earth. The capsule is expected to fall into the Pacific on October 11.

Although there will be no humans on board, Orion will carry a simulated crew of three mannequins. One male and two female, equipped with sensors to measure radiation levels and other stresses that real-life astronauts would experience.

The primary goal of the mission is to test the durability of Orion’s heat shield during reentry. It hits Earth’s atmosphere at 24,500 miles (39,429 km) per hour, or 32 times the speed of sound, upon its return from lunar orbit. It is much faster than the more common re-entries of capsules returning from Earth orbit.

The heat shield is designed to withstand reentry friction that expects to raise temperatures outside the capsule to 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit (2,760 degrees Celsius).

More than a decade in development with years of delays and budget overruns. The SLS-Orion spacecraft has so far cost NASA at least $37 billion, including design, construction, testing, and ground facilities. NASA’s Office of Inspector General has projected that Artemis’ total costs will amount to $93 billion by 2025.

NASA defends the program as a boon to space exploration that has generated tens of thousands of jobs and billions of dollars in trade.

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Sri Lanka Deal with IMF for $2.9 Billion Loan

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Sri Lanka Deal with IMF for $2.9 Billion Loan
Sri Lanka Deal with IMF for $2.9 Billion Loan
Sri Lanka Deal with IMF for $2.9 Billion Loan
Sri Lanka Deal with IMF for $2.9 Billion Loan

Sri Lanka has reached a staff-level agreement with the International Monetary Fund for a $2.9 billion loan. It would be a key step for the crisis-hit country to unlock more funds and restructure its debt.

“In this context, the authorities’ program, supported by the Fund, would aim to stabilize the economy. They will protect the livelihoods of the Sri Lankan people. And pave the way for economic recovery and the promotion of sustainable and inclusive growth,” the IMF said.

THE KEY ELEMENTS OF THE PROGRAM ARE:

  • Sri Lanka must implement major tax reforms. It includes personal income tax easing while expanding the corporate income tax base and VAT to achieve a primary surplus of 2.3% of GDP by 2024
  • Introduce cost-recovery-based pricing for fuel and electricity to minimize tax risks from state-owned enterprises
  • Mitigating the impact of the current crisis on the poor by increasing social spending
  • Rebuild foreign exchange reserves by restoring a flexible, market-determined exchange rate
  • Restoring price stability through data-driven monetary policy measures, fiscal consolidation, phasing out monetary financing
  • Safeguard financial stability by ensuring a healthy and adequately capitalized banking system
  • Reduce corruption vulnerabilities through improved fiscal transparency and public financial management

Ahead of the pact with the IMF, Sri Lanka raised the value-added tax to 15% from 12% on September 1. And revealed plans earlier this week to increase revenues to 15% of gross domestic product by 2025. It reduces the debt-to-GDP ratio to 100%, achieves economic growth of 5% in the medium term, and cools inflation that has accelerated above 60% to less than 10%.

The CSE All Share index rose 1.9%, for the third day in a row. Sri Lanka’s 2030-dollar bond of 7.55% fell 0.5 cents to 31.5 cents on the dollar after gaining 2 cents on the dollar on Wednesday.

The island nation needs about $5 billion for essential imports over six months. Ranil Wickremesinghe said this in June when he was still prime minister. The country, which earlier this year defaulted on its foreign debt for the first time. The country is also looking to negotiate with global funds that hold about $12.6 billion of its bonds.

Debt Restructuring

Sri Lanka is turning to India, Japan, and China for bridge financing. The country would need an agreement between its official creditors before approaching bondholders, Wickremesinghe said.

“The need is more color in debt restructuring.” How or whether creditors will commit or not given the large proportion of private bondholders,” said Junyu Tan. Junyu Tan is an economist at Natixis SA in Singapore. “This is key to short-term debt sustainability” and sustained improvement in bond and currency markets, he said.

Sri Lanka’s foreign exchange reserves fell to $1.82 billion at the end of July, from $1.86 billion the previous month. The nation continued to turn to its dollar stack to buy fuel and other essentials. The amount includes a $1.5 billion exchange deal with China that Sri Lanka can only access if reserves increase to a certain level.

Sri Lanka is seeking up to $4 billion in aid from China, including triggering the swap. The bankrupt nation has received about $3.8 billion from neighboring India and is negotiating for more. India has urged the IMF to treat all of Sri Lanka’s creditors on a par.

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Toyota to Invest $5.6 Billion in US and Japanese EV Battery Production

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Toyota to Invest $5.6 Billion in US and Japanese EV Battery Production
Toyota to Invest $5.6 Billion in US and Japanese EV Battery Production
Toyota to Invest $5.6 Billion in US and Japanese EV Battery Production
Toyota to Invest $5.6 Billion in US and Japanese EV Battery Production

Battery production is expected to begin between 2024 and 2026, the world’s largest automaker said in a statement on Wednesday.

“This investment aims to enable Toyota to flexibly meet the needs of its diverse customers in all countries and regions by offering multiple powertrains and providing as many options as possible,” Toyota said.

Although Toyota sees hybrid and even hydrogen fuel cell cars as part of a green future. It has accelerated its push to electrify more of its lineup in recent months. In December, it promised to be ready to sell only zero-emission cars in Europe by 2035. That aligns with European Union green deal measures proposed in early 2021.

“This is a positive move,” said Hiroki Ihara, an analyst at Tachibana Securities Co. “In the United States, the shift to electric vehicles is accelerating faster than anticipated and there is also a move to eliminate hybrids.”

With the investment, Toyota plans to increase its combined battery production capacity in Japan and the United States by up to 40 GWh. In Japan, about 400 billion yen will be invested in Prime Planet Energy & Solutions Co.’s Himeji plant and Toyota plants and properties. While in the United States, 325 billion yen will go to a plant in North Carolina.

“Toyota believes there is more than one option to achieve carbon neutrality,” the Japanese automaker said on Wednesday. “He also believes that the means to reduce CO2 emissions as much as possible and as quickly as possible, while protecting the livelihoods of his customers, vary greatly by country and region.”

Automakers and cell phone makers around the world are ramping up battery plant plans to keep up with demand.

Panasonic Holdings Corp., which supplies batteries to Tesla Inc., is in talks to build another plant in the U.S. worth about $4 billion. While Korean battery makers have several plans for U.S. facilities, building four for General Motors Co., two for Stellantis NV, and three for Ford Motor Co.

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IMF Expects the US Economy to Experience High Inflation for at Least Another Year or Two

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IMF Expects the US Economy to Experience High Inflation for at Least Another Year or Two
IMF Expects the US Economy to Experience High Inflation for at Least Another Year or Two
IMF Expects the US Economy to Experience High Inflation for at Least Another Year or Two
IMF Expects the US Economy to Experience High Inflation for at Least Another Year or Two

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) expects the U.S. economy to experience high inflation. It would be for at least another year or two. “I would be careful when looking at a data point for the United States,” warned the IMF’s first deputy managing director, Gita Gopinath.

IMF on the US Economy and Global Inflation

The first deputy managing director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Gita Gopinath, spoke about global inflation and the U.S. economy in an interview with Bloomberg on Friday in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

“There are global factors like energy prices and food prices that are driving it. There are also stickier components of inflation that are high.”

Commenting on Powell’s speech, Gopinath opined, “What was great was that he came out firm and determined to reduce inflation to the target. It’s making sure that inflation expectations don’t unwind. I think, is exactly what it takes to make sure that the economic health of the world is in a good place in the medium to long term.”

On Friday, the latest U.S. personal consumption expenditure (PCE) inflation data was released. The PCE price index showed a year-on-year increase of 6.3% in July, down from 6.8% in June. The PCE is the Federal Reserve’s preferred measure of inflation.

“Now, I would be careful when looking at a data point for the United States,” Gopinath emphasized.

“I think last year, around the same time, there was a good reading of inflation and everyone thought we were on track for inflation to come down. And then October inflation rose again. So, I think you have to be very careful with an inflation rating,” the IMF’s first deputy managing director said, explaining:

“We’re in a period where inflation is likely to be high for a while, at least for another year or two.”

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PKR Gains Almost Rs3 Against the Dollar in the Interbank Market

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PKR Gains Almost Rs3 Against the Dollar in the Interbank Market
PKR Gains Almost Rs3 Against the Dollar in the Interbank Market
PKR Gains Almost Rs3 Against the Dollar in the Interbank Market
PKR Gains Almost Rs3 Against the Dollar in the Interbank Market

According to the Forex Association of Pakistan (FAP), the local currency was trading at Rs219 per dollar at the time after appreciating 1.31 percent.

The rupee’s recovery comes after the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) Executive Board completed the combined 7th and 8th revisions of a loan line for Pakistan. Which allows for the immediate disbursement of $1.1 billion to the country, an official IMF announcement said.

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India Works to Avoid Rice Panic with a Brake on Exports

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India Works to Avoid Rice Panic with a Brake on Exports
India Works to Avoid Rice Panic with a Brake on Exports
India Works to Avoid Rice Panic with a Brake on Exports
India Works to Avoid Rice Panic with a Brake on Exports

India has a possible crackdown on broken rice exports. It shows the world’s top carrier trying to thread the needle to cool domestic inflation without causing a global panic.

The government is discussing restrictions on broken rice exports. The exports account for under 20% of the country’s overseas shipments. While such a move has the potential to further disrupt global crop markets and worsen a hunger crisis. The impact is less severe than if it restricted all rice exports.

Potential restrictions on broken rice are unlikely to lead to a crisis like that of 2007-08, said Peter Timmer. Peter Timmer is a professor emeritus at Harvard University. He worked with Asian governments on their policy responses during that crisis.

“This is a very responsible way for India to act, and I doubt there will be a lot of foreign criticism,” he said.

India has responded to rising global commodity prices this year by limiting exports of sugar and wheat. After Russia invaded Ukraine, Prime Minister Narendra Modi declared his country ready to “feed the world”. Changed course weeks later by restricting wheat exports to protect its food supplies. This drew criticism from agriculture ministers from a group of seven nations. They said such measures worsen the global food crisis.

With potential trade restrictions on broken rice, the affected rice exports will be only about a fifth of India’s rice. This type of rice is fragmented during processing. The main buyers are China, which uses the grain for animal feed, and some poor African countries that import the grain for feed, as it tends to be cheaper.

Any restriction on broken rice will hurt some countries but will not cause a full-blown crisis in the global market, according to Satish Deodhar a professor at the Indian Institute of Management in Ahmedabad. India will want to maintain a balance between its domestic needs and the export market, he said.

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Gas Prices in Asia Rise After the Maintenance of Russia Pipeline Sending Europe to a Record

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Gas Prices in Asia Rise After the Maintenance of Russia Pipeline Sending Europe to a Record
Gas Prices in Asia Rise After the Maintenance of Russia Pipeline Sending Europe to a Record
Gas Prices in Asia Rise After the Maintenance of Russia Pipeline Sending Europe to a Record
Gas Prices in Asia Rise After the Maintenance of Russia Pipeline Sending Europe to a Record

Prices for Asian liquefied natural gas extended gains. Russia’s announcement of maintenance on a key pipeline to Europe will further restrict global supplies.

Producers offered spot loads of LNG for the winter above $60 per million British thermal units on Monday, traders said. The japan-Korea Marker spot benchmark index fell 1.3% to $55.277 per million Btu on Friday ahead of Gazprom PJSC’s announcement, they said. It is citing data from S&P Global. Prices rose for five consecutive weeks and are trading at three times last year’s level.

Gazprom said on Friday it would halt the key Nord Stream pipeline for three days of maintenance on Aug. 31. The helping is to push Europe’s benchmark price to a record high. LNG traders in Asia have expressed concern that the link will not return to service as planned. It would further narrow global markets after Russia reduced deliveries to Europe, its biggest customer.

Gazprom said on Friday that shipments via the link under the Baltic Sea to Germany restoration would be at current levels. The level is equal to around 20% of capacity, “once the completion of work and the absence of technical failures.”

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