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By Fergal SmithTORONTO (Reuters) - Canada's hot inflation and recovering job market are raising pressure on the Bank of ...
10/27/2021

By Fergal Smith

TORONTO (Reuters) - Canada's hot inflation and recovering job market are raising pressure on the Bank of Canada to hike interest rates ahead of schedule, with investors looking to a policy announcement this week for clues that the central bank is turning more hawkish.

The BoC, led by Governor Tiff Macklem, is expected on Wednesday to raise its inflation forecast and to largely end stimulus from its pandemic-era bond buying program, starting a countdown of sorts to the first interest rate hike since October 2018.

The central bank has pledged to keep rates at a record low 0.25% until economic slack is absorbed, which would happen in the second half of 2022 in its latest forecast, and has long maintained that the factors pushing up inflation are transitory.

But money markets see a different path, pricing in the first hike by April and nearly 100 basis points of tightening in total next year, up from 35 basis points in September. Investors also see rates rising sooner in other large economies.

The Bank of England could bow to inflation pressures and become the first major central bank to raise rates in November, while there is a growing view that the U.S. Federal Reserve will feel compelled to tighten policy earlier and more aggressively than it would like.

"Worldwide, markets are playing chicken with central bankers, betting that policymakers will follow the Bank of England in capitulating to hotter-than-expected inflation rates," said Karl Schamotta, chief market strategist at Cambridge Global Payment.

Canadian inflation has stayed above the BoC's 1%-to-3% target range for six straight months, climbing in September to an 18-year high of 4.4%, and the economy has regained all the jobs it lost during the pandemic.

If the BoC were to hike before the second half of next year, it would likely adjust its guidance in advance, say analysts, adding that the bank would not want investor expectations to stray too far from its outlook for fear of market turbulence.

The Canadian dollar has climbed in recent days to a four-month high near 1.23 per greenback, or 81.30 U.S. cents, while the gap between Canadian and U.S. 2-year yields has doubled since last month to 41 basis points in favor of the Canadian bond.

"Investors are overwhelmingly convinced that the Bank of Canada will choose to do battle against inflation, assuming that the underlying economy has enough momentum to absorb slack even if monetary conditions turn less accommodative," Schamotta said.

SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea's economy grew at a slower-than-expected pace in the third quarter, as subdued private con...
10/27/2021

SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea's economy grew at a slower-than-expected pace in the third quarter, as subdued private consumption and weak construction and facility investment offset robust exports.

Gross domestic product (GDP) grew a seasonally adjusted 0.3% in the third quarter, the Bank of Korea (BOK) data showed on Tuesday, the slowest in five quarters and following a 0.8% rise in the preceding three months. It also fell short of the 0.6% growth tipped in a Reuters survey.

Private consumption, which generates nearly half of South Korean GDP, contracted 0.3% in the September quarter after a 3.6% rise in the second quarter, while construction and facility investments also swung to declines of 3.0% and 2.3%, respectively.

Exports grew 1.5%, recovering from the June quarter's 2.0% contraction, on strong sales of semiconductors and petroleum products.

"The toughened social distancing measures and impacts from the heat wave and rising raw material prices that continued over the third quarter seem to have limited the recovery in domestic demand ... but exports were seen propping up the economy," Finance Minister Hong Nam-ki said.

From a year earlier, the economy expanded 4.0%, in part because of the low base last year, while both exports and imports picked up further on global economic recovery.

That was, however, a significant slowdown from the second quarter's 6.0% growth, and missed market forecast growth of 4.2%.

"The data does not diverge much from the August projection. Annual growth of 4% will be possible should the economy expand 1.04% on a sequential basis during the fourth quarter," a senior BOK official Hwang Sang-pil told reporters.

The BOK currently sees the economy growing 4% for the whole of 2021 after shrinking 0.9% last year.

HONG KONG (Reuters) -Shares of cash-strapped China Evergrande Group and its electric vehicle unit fell early on Wednesda...
10/27/2021

HONG KONG (Reuters) -Shares of cash-strapped China Evergrande Group and its electric vehicle unit fell early on Wednesday, as the country's state planner called on companies in "key sectors" to "optimise" offshore debt structures.

Evergrande and China Evergrande New Energy Vehicle Group Ltd both fell less than 1% by 0155 GMT. The Hang Seng Index slumped 1.7%.

China Evergrande Group is reeling under more than $300 billion in liabilities, fuelling worries about the impact of its fate on global markets.

Late on Tuesday, China's National Development and Reform Commission said that it and the State Administration for Foreign Exchange had met with foreign debt issuers, advising them to use funds for approved purposes and "jointly maintain their own reputations and the overall order of the market".

Evergrande said on Tuesday it has resumed work on some projects in the Pearl River Delta region and it would deliver 31 real estate projects by the end of 2021. That number will rise to 40 by the end of June 2022.

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