VW to scrap models and focus on premium market -CFO tells FT

VW to scrap models and focus on premium market -CFO tells FT

A new logo of German carmaker Volkswagen is unveiled at the VW headquarters in Wolfsburg, Germany September 9, 2019. REUTERS/Fabian BimmerRegister now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterBERLIN, April 6 (Reuters) – German carmaker Volkswagen (VOWG_p.DE) will axe many combustion engine models by the end of the decade and sell fewer cars overall to concentrate on producing more profitable premium vehicles, its finance chief was quoted as saying on Wednesday.”The key target is not growth,” Arno Antlitz told the Financial Times newspaper. “We are (more focused) on quality and on margins, rather than on volume and market share.”Antlitz said VW would reduce its range of petrol and diesel cars, consisting of at least 100 models spread across several brands, by 60% in Europe over the next eight years.The paper said VW’s new strategy was a sign of profound changes in the auto sector, which has attempted for decades to increase profits by selling more cars each year, even if that required heavy discounting.Former VW chief executive Martin Winterkorn, who resigned in the wake of a diesel emissions scandal, had made it his goal to beat Toyota and General Motors to the title of “volume number one” by 2018.Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterReporting by Emma Thomasson; Editing by Clarence FernandezOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. .

Column: Elusive bond risk premium misses its curtain call: Mike Dolan

Column: Elusive bond risk premium misses its curtain call: Mike Dolan

LONDON, March 30 (Reuters) – If not now, when? Investors typically demand some added compensation for holding a security over many years to cover all the unknowables over long horizons – making the absence of such a premium in bond markets right now seem slightly bizarre.Disappearance of the so-called “term premium” in 10-year U.S. Treasury bonds over the past 5 years has puzzled analysts and policymakers and been blamed variously on subdued inflation expectations or distortions related to central bank bond buying.And yet it’s rarely, if ever, been more difficult to fathom the decade ahead – at least in terms of inflation, interest rates or indeed quantitative easing or tightening.Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterInflation is running at a 40-year high after the pandemic forced wild swings in economic activity and supply bottlenecks and was then compounded by an energy price spike due to war in Ukraine that may redraw the geopolitical map.The U.S. Federal Reserve and other central banks are scrambling to normalise super easy monetary policies to cope – not really knowing whether to focus on reining in runaway prices or tackle what Bank of England chief Andrew Bailey this week described as a “historic shock” to real household incomes.Bond yields have surged, much like they did in the first quarter of last year. But this time bond funds have suffered one of their worst quarters in more than 20 years and some measures of Treasury price volatility are at their highest since banking crash of 2008. (.MOVE3M)But the most-followed estimates of term premia embedded in bond markets remain deeply negative. And this matters a lot to a whole host of critical bond market signals, not least the unfolding inversion of the U.S. Treasury curve between short and long-term yields that has presaged recessions in the past.”The 10-year term premium has barely budged even as inflation spiked to 8%, suggesting that long-dated yields are probably still capped by the Fed’s record-high balance sheet,” said Franklin Templeton’s fixed income chief Sonal Desai. “Or maybe investors think the Fed will blink and ease policy again once asset prices start a meaningful correction.””In either case, I think markets are still underestimating the magnitude of the monetary policy tightening ahead,” said Desai, adding that expectations of another more than 2 percentage points of Fed hikes this year still likely leaves real policy rates deeply negative by December even if inflation eases to 5%.US 'term premium' stays negativeUS ‘term premium’ stays negativeFed contrast between Yield Curve and Near Term Forward SpreadFed contrast between Yield Curve and Near Term Forward SpreadBUMP IN THE NIGHTSo what’s the beef with the term premium?In effect, the Treasury term premium is meant to measure the additional yield demanded by investors for buying and holding a 10-year bond to maturity as opposed to buying a one year bond and rolling it over for 10 years with a new coupon.In theory it covers all the things that might go bump in the night over a decade hence – including the outside chance of credit or even political risk – but it mostly reflects uncertainty about future Fed rates and inflation expectations.At zero, you’d assume investors are indifferent to holding the 10-year today as opposed to rolling 10 one-year notes.But the New York Fed’s measure of the 10-year term premium remains deeply negative to the tune of -32 basis points – ostensibly suggesting investors actually prefer holding the longer-duration asset.Although the premium popped back positive in the first half of last year, it’s been stuck around zero or below since 2017 – oddly in the face of the Fed’s last attempt to unwind its balance sheet.And the persistent and puzzling erosion of the term premium to zero and below brings it back to the 1960s, not the much-vaunted inflation-ravaged 1970s that everyone seems to think we’re back in.It matters a lot now as the debate about the inversion of the 2-10 yield curve heats up and many argue that the signal sent by that inversion is less clear about a coming recession as it’s distorted by the disappearance of the term premium.In the absence of a term premium, the long-term yield curve is just a reflection of long-run policy rate expectations that will inevitably see some retreat if the Fed is successful in taming inflation over the next two years.Fed Board economists Eric Engstrom and Steven Sharpe late last week also dismissed the market’s obsession with a 2-10 year yield inversion signalling recession.In a blog called ‘(Don’t Fear) The Yield Curve’ they said near term forward rate spreads out to 18 months were much more informative about the chance of a looming recession, just as accurate over time and – significantly – heading in the opposite direction right now.The main reason they pushed back on the 2-10s was it contained a whole host of information about the world beyond two years that’s simply less reliable as an economic signal and “buffeted by other significant factors such as risk premiums on long-term bonds.”But what could see the term premium return?Presumably the Fed’s planned balance sheet rundown, or quantitative tightening (QT), would be a prime candidate if indeed its long-term bond buying has distorted term premia.But the last Fed attempt at QT in 2017-19 didn’t do that and Morgan Stanley thinks it will be some time yet before just allowing short-term bonds on its balance sheet to roll off and mature gets replaced by outright sales of longer-term bonds.”QT is not the opposite of QE; asset sales are.”Of course, maybe the world just hasn’t changed that much – in terms of ageing demographics, excess savings and pension fund demand, falling potential growth and negative real interest rates. Once this current storm has passed, investors seem to think that will dominate once more. read more Fed balance sheet and maturitiesFed balance sheet and maturitiesThe author is editor-at-large for finance and markets at Reuters News. Any views expressed here are his ownRegister now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterby Mike Dolan, Twitter: @reutersMikeD. Editing by Jane MerrimanOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias. .

Column: European smelter squeeze keeps zinc close to record highs

Column: European smelter squeeze keeps zinc close to record highs

LONDON, March 29 (Reuters) – London Metal Exchange (LME) zinc recorded a new all-time high of $4,896 per tonne earlier this month, eclipsing the previous 2006 peak of $4,580 per tonne.True, the March 8 spike was over in a matter of hours and looked very much like the forced close-out of positions to cover margin calls in the LME nickel contract, which was imploding at the time before being suspended.But zinc has since re-established itself above the $4,000 level, last trading at $4,100 per tonne, amid escalating supply chain tensions.Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterRussia’s invasion of Ukraine, which Moscow calls a special military operation, doesn’t have any direct impact on zinc supply as Russian exports are negligible.But the resulting increase in energy prices is piling more pressure on already struggling European smelters.European buyers are paying record physical premiums over and above record high LME prices, a tangible sign of scarcity which is now starting to spread to the North American market.The world is not yet running out of the galvanising metal but a market that even a few months ago was expected to be in comfortable supply surplus is turning out to be anything but.LME zinc hits all-time highs as European smelter problems mountLME zinc price and stocks, Shanghai stocksEUROPEAN POWER-DOWNOne European smelter – Nyrstar’s Auby plant in France – has returned to partial production after being shuttered in January due to soaring power costs. But run-rates across the company’s three European smelters with combined annual capacity of 720,000 tonnes will continue to be flexed “with anticipated total production cuts of up to 50%”, Nyrstar said.High electricity prices across Europe mean “it is not economically feasible to operate any of our sites at full capacity”, it said.Still on full care and maintenance is Glencore’s (GLEN.L) 100,000-tonne-per-year Portovesme site in Italy, another power-crisis casualty.Zinc smelting is an energy-intensive business and these smelters were already in trouble before Russia’s invasion sent European electricity prices spiralling yet higher.Record-high physical premiums, paid on top of the LME cash price, attest to the regional shortage of metal. The premium for special-high-grade zinc at the Belgian port of Antwerp has risen to $450 per tonne from $170 last October before the winter heating crisis kicked in.The Italian premium has exploded from $215.00 to $462.50 per tonne over the same time frame, according to Fastmarkets.LME warehouses in Europe hold just 500 tonnes of zinc – all of it at the Spanish port of Bilbao and just about all of it bar 25 tonnes cancelled in preparation for physical load-out.Tightness in Europe is rippling over the Atlantic. Fastmarkets has just hiked its assessment of the U.S. Midwest physical premium by 24% to 26-30 cents per lb ($573-$661 per tonne).LME-registered stocks in the United States total a low 25,925 tonnes and available tonnage is lower still at 19,825 tonnes. This time last year New Orleans alone held almost 100,000 tonnes of zinc.European physical zinc premiums at new highs as supply dwindlesFastmarkets Assessments of Antwerp and Italian physical zinc premiumsREBALANCING ACTAbout 80% of the LME’s registered zinc inventory is currently located at Asian locations, first and foremost Singapore, which holds 81,950 tonnes.There is also plenty of metal sitting in Shanghai Futures Exchange warehouses. Registered stocks have seen their usual seasonal Lunar New Year holiday surge, rising from 58,000 tonnes at the start of January to a current 177,826 tonnes.Quite evidently Asian buyers haven’t yet been affected by the unfolding supply crunch in Europe and there is plenty of potential for a wholesale redistribution of stocks from east to west.This is what happened last year in the lead market, China exporting its surplus to help plug gaps in the Western supply chain. Lead, however, should also serve as a warning that global rebalancing can be a slow, protracted affair due to continuing log-jams in the shipping sector.MOVING THE GLOBAL DIALWhile there is undoubted slack in the global zinc market, Europe is still big enough a refined metal producer to move the market dial.The continent accounts for around 16% of global refined output and the loss of production due to the regional energy crisis has upended the zinc market narrative.When the International Lead and Zinc Study Group (ILZSG) last met in October, it forecast a global supply surplus of 217,000 tonnes for 2021.That was already a sharp reduction from its earlier April assessment of a 353,000-tonne production overhang. The Group’s most recent calculation is that the expected surplus turned into a 194,000-tonne shortfall last year. The difference was almost wholly down to lower-than-forecast refined production growth, which came in at just 0.5% compared with an October forecast of 2.5%.With Chinese smelters recovering from their own power problems earlier in the year, the fourth-quarter deceleration was largely due to lower run-rates at Europe’s smelters.The ILZSG’s monthly statistical updates are inevitably a rear-view mirror but Europe’s production losses have continued unabated over the first quarter of 2022.Moreover, the scale of the shift higher in power pricing, not just spot but along the length of the forward curve, poses a longer-term question mark over the viability of European zinc production.A redistribution of global stocks westwards can provide some medium-term relief but zinc supply is facing a new structural challenge which is not going away any time soon.The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterEditing by David ClarkeOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias. .

HP seeks to ride hybrid work boom with $1.7 billion Poly buyout

HP seeks to ride hybrid work boom with $1.7 billion Poly buyout

March 28 (Reuters) – HP Inc (HPQ.N) said on Monday it would buy audio and video devices maker Poly (POLY.N) for $1.7 billion in cash as it looks to capitalise on the hybrid work led boom in demand for electronic products.Shares in HP, which expects the deal will position it for long-term growth, fell 1.4% in premarket trade.The company has offered $40 for each share of Poly, formerly known as Plantronics, which represents a premium of about 53% to the stock’s last closing price. Including debt, the deal is valued at $3.3 billion.Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegister“The rise of the hybrid office creates a once-in-a-generation opportunity to redefine the way work gets done,” HP Chief Executive Officer Enrique Lores said.With the global healthcare crisis boosting the need for hybrid work, the market has seen several acquisitions, including business software maker Salesforce.com’s (CRM.N) $27.7-billion purchase of workplace messaging app Slack Technologies Inc last year. read more Poly, whose shares rose 49% in premarket trade, said it would be required to pay a fee of $66 million if the deal is terminated.The transaction is expected to close by the end of 2022.Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterReporting by Tiyashi Datta in Bengaluru; Editing by Aditya Soni and Vinay DwivediOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. .

Nigeria offers premium to raise $1.25 billion Eurobond

Nigeria offers premium to raise $1.25 billion Eurobond

Nigerian Finance Minister Zainab Ahmed attends the IMF and World Bank’s 2019 Annual Spring Meetings, in Washington, File. REUTERS/James Lawler DugganRegister now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterLAGOS/ABUJA, March 17 (Reuters) – Nigeria has priced a $1.25 billion Eurobond issue at 8.375%, its debt office said on Thursday, a premium compared to existing tenors as the country sought to raise cash to fund a costly petrol subsidy scheme in the face of limited oil revenue.The latest debt issue marks Nigeria’s eight outing on the Eurobond market after it sold a $4 billion debt in September and had been considering more issues before fears around the Omicron coronavirus variant led it to shelve plans. read more “The choice to go ahead with the Eurobond issue in the current adverse market conditions is likely connected to continued force majeure reducing oil revenue, while retained fuel subsidies are spiralling in tandem with the higher oil price,” said Mark Bohlund, senior analyst at Redd Intelligence.Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterFinance Minister Zainab Ahmed told Reuters on Monday that Nigeria planned to tap 2 billion euros ($2.2 billion) this month or next of the money it raised in a eurobond sale last year and target more local borrowing in 2022 to help fund its costly petrol subsidies as oil prices rise. read more The government in January reversed a pledge to end its subsidies then, and instead extended them by 18 months amid heightened inflation to avert any protests in the run-up to presidential elections next year.At the same time, the price of oil has soared, so also has its cost as the country depends almost entirely on imports to meet its domestic gasoline needs. It also faces crude theft and vandalism in the Niger Delta, disrupting oil production.With Thursday’s bond sale, Nigeria offered more than existing eurobonds of 7.143%, creating extra debt service headache for the government struggling to boost growth with limited buffers.President Muhammadu Buhari has said the country’s deficit would rise by 1.01 trillion naira to 7.40 trillion or 4% of GDP as the government eyes new borrowing for fuel subsidy. The deficit was originally set at 3.42% of GDP.Analysts say deficit could rise above 10 trillion naira ($24 billion) in 2022 on higher fuel subsidy cost amid rising oil prices.($1 = 415.42 naira)Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterAdditional reporting by Rachel Savage in London;
Writing by Chijioke Ohuocha;
Editing by Chris Reese, Lisa Shumaker and Aurora Ellis
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