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War update
Ukraine struck a railway depot and knocked out power in the Russian-occupied city of Melitopol deep behind the front line on Wednesday amid growing talk from Kyiv of a counterassault against Russian forces worn out by a failed winter offensive. This is the scenario that worries me: What if Ukraine embarks on a counteroffensive but fails, or opens up a weakness somewhere else. (The flipside is also in play: What if Ukraine launches a counteroffensive…and kicks Russian butt back across the border?) Zelenskyy is in a very difficult position — he has to show the West he can win to maintain their support, but doing so means opening Ukraine up to substantial risks.
Vladimir Putin made a series of important statements in an interview with journalist Pavel Zarubin.
Michael Kofman notes that while the headline has been Putin bragging about how Russia can out-produce and out-gun Ukraine, Putin also slipped in that Russia has had to limit its use of ammunition as well. Now what concerns us. ”Well, we, the Russian Armed Forces, spent much more. Now I don't want to assess the rationality of decision-making at different levels of military command, but now, as you know, the Ministry of Defense and the General Staff are even forced to introduce certain limits.”
Russia, at the request of the Belarusian side, will deploy its tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus.
My broader takeaway from this is that we’re going to have a global nuclear arms race. Would Russia have invaded Ukraine if the latter had nukes? If I am Poland, Romania, or the Baltics — am I going to trust NATO? Or am I going to establish a nuclear deterrent? Similar logic in MENA region now too. That said, here are a few more considerations: (1) I’m not convinced they’ll deliver given how long they’ve been waving this threat, and anyway the Western response is far more important. It’s standard so far. I expect confidence-building measures from the US, i.e., NATO drills and symbolism. NB: The next big NATO summit is less than two weeks after the Belarusian storage facility is due to be completed in July. (2) This puts to rest Guterres’ bizarre and ill-conceived plan to court Lukashenko. Watch for anti-government protests and sabotage in Minsk. (3) Diplomatically, it’s an own goal. It contradicts the joint statement just signed with China, it undermines their criticisms of Aukus, and it gives the US diplomatic cover to, for instance, deploy nukes in South Korea. Beijing should be furious. Also, it’s a small thing but the Kremlin’s newfound concern for Ukraine’s ecosystem undermines the credibility of Russia’s threats to use nukes against Ukraine.
Ukrainian farmers are warning that the agricultural situation heading into the spring sowing reason is becoming extremely grim. One Ukrainian MEP said that the country will see a general harvest reduction of wheat, warning that this may drop by as much as 34 percent. According to Kyiv School of Economy, the direct damage to the Ukrainian agriculture sector currently stands at $6.6 billion (€6.14 billion), while the overall losses for the sector by the end of 2022 amounted to more than $40 billion (€36.9 billion). Meanwhile, 10 out of 20 regions of Ukraine were occupied or had hostilities taking place on their territory, impacting 42% of all commercial milk production and resulting in a 13 percent drop in cow herds, forecast to drop further by as much as 10 percent. The pig and poultry sectors have also been heavily impacted, with the population of pigs reaching record low numbers – a decrease of 5 million on 2022’s figures – while the poultry sector has battled with power cuts and active hostilities, pushing poultry meat production down by 8 percent and egg production by 35 percent.
More anecdotal bullish wheat data. It is hard to shake the idea that the market is overly complacent about potential Ukrainian production, expecting last year’s performance to be maintained.
Germany’s Finance Ministry wants to allocate more funds to replenish the Bundeswehr’s stocks and continue arming Ukraine indefinitely.
€2.2bn already budgeted + €1.9bn unspent from Covid and the energy crisis + €1.3bn in new spending = €5.4bn for 2023. In addition, €8.4bn is requested for 2024–32 to resupply Ukraine and restock the Bundeswehr. Maybe they’ll finally hit 2%. Also note that the FDP leaked the details before the Bundestag Budget Committee has approved it; could be that they want extra credit, but they might be expecting resistance from the SPD.
Taiwan's president, Tsai Ing-wen, is in the United States as part of a multi-day itinerary through Central and North America. On the way back to Taiwan next week, Tsai is set to stop in Los Angeles and meet House Speaker Kevin McCarthy at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library.
I am having a bit of déjà vu. Last June, the Biden White house was leaking the notion that it would temporarily suspend Trump-era tariffs against China. Then-Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi decided that was a good time to visit Taiwan, and the resulting military and diplomatic tension resulted in the U.S. doubling and even tripling down on the tech/trade war and months of relative lack of communication between the two sides. China does not have good options to respond here, and notably it hosted Taiwan's former President Ma Ying-jeou for a visit to China this week to underscore China-Taiwanese ties. Expect at minimum a symbolic military response from Beijing that could temporarily disrupt shipping in the South China Sea.
Yes, you read that correctly, a former Taiwanese President visited China this week!
Poll after poll shows the majority of Taiwanese people do not want independence and do not want reunification. They want the preservation of the status quo. I think it is striking that Taiwan’s top two parties are engaging in visits/statesmanship that are on the fringes of these demands. I also think this is an important reminder for Western observers to recognize that there is a strong, gravitational pull toward China for Taiwan. China is the country they share history, language, and culture with. Taiwan has developed its own culture, to be sure — but so did Hong Kong. Geopolitically speaking, it is a matter of when, not if, Taiwan is aligned with the mainland. [Note from Jacob: One of our analysts accused me of behaving like a Baidu bot in writing that analytical note…but does anyone actually think Taiwan won’t eventually become part of China again one way or another?]
China's top cyberspace watchdog said Tuesday it will launch a campaign to crack down on "malicious damage" done to the image and reputation of entrepreneurs amid rising concerns over Beijing's stance toward the private sector.
Launching a crackdown to reverse the impact of the previous crackdown is deliciously circular.
ihon Keizai Shimbun and TV Tokyo conducted public opinion polls from the 24th to the 26th. Fumio Kishida's approval rating is 48%, up 5 percentage points from the previous survey in February. For the first time in seven months, 44% of respondents said they did not support the cabinet.
Don’t look now, but on the back of a the ROK-Japan summit and a visit to Ukraine, Kishida’s approval ratings are rising. It’s the first time in 7 months more respondents approved of rather than disapproved of Kishida. After Abe was assassinated, a “sympathy bump” for Kishida never materialized — but perhaps his slightly stolid, steady leadership is finally paying some dividends.
Japan's Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group is set to invest about 35.9 trillion Vietnamese dong ($1.5 billion) in a major bank in Vietnam.
Another narrative we keep emphasizing — when you look at actual dollars (or in this case dong) spent, Japan’s moves to strengthen its position in the region are more advanced, organized, and welcomed than China’s.
China’s state-run Global Times insists that China's hog production capacity and prices remain stable and resilient with no particular impact from African swine fever, thanks to ramped up efforts already in place to secure safe manufacturing and supply.
The Global Situation Report is the only place in the world where you can get up-to-date information on global pork market developments from a fallen Jewish analyst who went the first 25 years of his life not knowing what bacon tasted like. Jokes aside: of course the Global Times is going to say this. China has done an impressive job rebuilding its pork herd as fast as it has and has also emphasized stabilizing prices. That said — the recent news about ASF in China comes after Lunar New Year (when people travel a lot and can carry virus with them), and all seems to be sourced to one Reuters report, that in turn cites a research firm called “Huachuang Securities” that estimates northern pork production areas have a 50 percent infection rate. But most pork production is in southern or central China (here is a semantics question, how far north is north)?
A Chinese coast guard ship and a Vietnamese fisheries patrol boat apparently had a tense encounter during the weekend in the South China Sea, coming as close as 10 meters to each other.
There’s been a few of these lately involving the Philippines and the US, and now Vietnam. Is there any reason to think China’s tactics are becoming more aggressive? We’re probably due an incident, especially in the context of the Taiwanese president visiting the U.S. The problem for China though is the more aggressive it is, the more it confirms regional suspicion about its intentions. Note that Vietnam, despite stronger ties to China in general, is having none of China’s presence in its waters.
Igor Sechin, Chief Executive Officer of Rosneft Oil Company, made a working trip to India, during which he met with officials from the Indian government, as well as with the heads of some of the country's largest oil and gas companies. During the trip, Rosneft Oil Company and Indian Oil Company signed a term agreement to substantially increase oil supplies as well diversify the grades to India.
Ironically this might make ties between India and China even worse? They are the two countries now competing for cheap Russian crude. If India can get access to it on a guaranteed/longer-term basis at competitive rates, suddenly we’re looking at an India that has lower energy costs buttressing its demographic strengths. The embargoes and price cap sequestered Russian energy from the rest of the market. Russia’s competing with Saudi Arabia et al. on unfavorable terms for a much smaller market than before. We’ve already seen how discounts are creating frictions in Russia (over taxation) and to a lesser extent with buyers. It makes sense that Russia’s desperation will create #Risks&Opportunities for other exporters as well as customers.
S&P Global reports the Indian government is worried that high temperatures, early rainfall, and damaging hailstorms could cause further downward revisions for India’s wheat yield. An export ban and relaxing of procurement norms to ensure adequate stocks are both on the table. According to government sources, the production estimates for marketing year 2022-23 (April-March) are likely to reduce by 1 million-2 million mt from the projected output of 112.2 million mt, a record harvest.
Based on last year and the poor weather conditions, a 1-2 million mt reduction is likely not even close to enough. This could keep wheat prices elevated, especially if India has to turn to larger imports from abroad. (Perhaps Russia is considering “restricting exports” because it wants to be able to sell to India if a worst-case scenario emerges? That’s conspiracy-theory style thinking but not out of the realm of possibility.)
U.S. consumer goods imports continued to fall in February. February saw $63.4B of imports (seasonally-adjusted), and the trendline remains down. Note the comparison to the huge surge in early 2022, which happened as businesses responded to the shortages of the 2021 holiday season by over-ordering.
We are still working off those inventories, it seems. Will imports continue trending down - or will March numbers show evidence of bottoming, as companies finish making their 2023 projections and upgrade their expectations higher for consumer demand? We will see. This is one of the most important questions in macro right now.
Former U.S. President Donald Trump was indicted for paying hush money to porn star Stormy Daniels. It is the first time in U.S. history a former president has faced criminal charges. There are several other investigations into former President Trump ongoing.I am not going to wade into the politics of this. It is already sucking up all the oxygen in U.S. mainstream media – I suffered through CNN on in the background this morning and it was 3 hours of non-stop Trump coverage. Two things to keep in mind: 1) I think this will make the American electorate/media landscape dumber. I think we will see less focus and information on key issues and more Trump fever – on both sides. 2) The scenario that is geopolitical and would affect the U.S. role in the world is if Trump can use his 2020 election loss and now these investigations to foment a “stabbed-in-the-back” narrative that catapults him back to power or even just withers Republican unity from within. To the extent we follow any developments related to Trump, it is these two we should focus on, and leave the politics/ideology to others.
After more than 30 hours of intense negotiations — stretched over three days — Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s three-party coalition reached a deal on Tuesday evening on how to move forward with climate protection measures and infrastructure improvements. The main items in the package are money for trains, an extension of the German Autobahn network, a softening of annual emission targets (which Germany has been constantly missing for years in the transport sector), a mandatory shift to climate-friendly heat pumps for new heating systems, as well as a boost for synthetic fuels (more on that below).
Scholz never had a strong mandate and has struggled to keep his government on the same page. The market-friendly FDP was sinking fast, so it started whaling on the Greens and clawed back some votes; the Greens are reeling; and Scholz is Scholzing. The moderate success of the FDP’s tougher tack doesn’t bode well for budget negotiations, revised EU spending rules, or EU banking union.
French President Emmanuel Macron’s allies in the National Assembly are still backing his controversial pension reform but several of them are urging the president to find a way to take the heat out of demonstrations. With increasing numbers of police confronting protesters on the streets, they are worried that someone could be killed, unleashing a new wave of anger.Reports confirm that Macron intends to wait for the constitutional court’s ruling (due by April 20) and that Macron is considering trying to appease young people with new legislation, including on climate change and the cost of living. The evidence that his political allies are turning on him is sparse.
Washington has offered to make five minerals used in batteries eligible for subsidies under its green tech promoting Inflation Reduction Act if they are mined or processed in the EU.
Congress and labor unions will not be happy.
Politicoreports that Britain is expected to reach an agreement in principle to join the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) by the end of this week.
The bigger story here is that Britain did not have these kinds of trade deals already locked up by the time Brexit was nigh. A day late and a pound short. Can the UK now pressure the U.S. to also reverse course? That would be a bigger deal.
Hungary's foreign minister held telephone talks with Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak about gas and oil shipments as well as nuclear co-operation.
Evidently, the FT was wrong about Hungary pivoting from Russia to France.
Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki met with Romanian President Nicolae Ciucă. After the meeting, Morawiecki said, “I deeply believe that in the “triangle” between Poland, Ukraine and Romania, it will soon be possible to build investment, business and military strategic plans for the future and create a new economic community in the region of Central and Eastern Europe."
We agree, Mateusz.
Kazakhstan successfully tested sending oil shipments across the Caspian and into a pipeline running from Azerbaijan to Turkey and projects it will ship 125,000 tons of oil via this route in April.
That sounds impressive, but it is far short of the 1.5-million-ton goal Kazakhstan set for itself at the beginning of the year. If you are bullish oil, you can look at this and say Kazakhstan is not close to reaching its goals for exporting via Turkey (rather than Russia) and that means less oil will reach global markets. If you are bearish, you can point out that just because Kazakhstan is a few months behind shouldn’t obscure the monumental shift happening here — Kazakhstan lessening dependence on Russia for oil exports. I am inclined to take the latter interpretation, at least for this particular item. This is also a win for Turkey — which views itself as a natural leader of Central Asia.
Uzbekistan’s President Shavkat Mirziyoyev announced a new initiative to increase a stalled privatization drive. Mirziyoyev announced three key measures: 1) Putting up state-owned stakes in 1,000 companies for sale, 2) Auctioning off 1,000 real estate parcels totaling 1 million square miles, and 3) selling 2 percent of shares in large state-owned enterprises to the Uzbek people.
As we’ve noted here previously, Uzbekistan has tremendous economic potential and is one of the last true frontier markets out there. But I have been disappointed at the pace and quality of Uzbekistan’s previous attempts to privatization and political reform, and as Eurasianet reports, this latest initiative was announced around the same time a large Western investor filed an arbitration dispute with a joint venture in the chemicals sector.
A senior energy official in Kyrgyzstan has said that the government is poised to reach an agreement with Russia to import 875 million kilowatt hours of power in 2023-24, an amount equivalent to more than 5 percent of annual national consumption.
The gravitational pull of Russian power in Central Asia is diminished – but it has not disappeared entirely.
China and Brazil have reportedly reached a deal to trade in their own currencies, ditching the US dollar as an intermediary.
Pair this with the broad Brazilian business delegation that went to China this week (without Lula because he got pneumonia and could not travel). As we discussed in our internal meeting this week, this may not be important from the standpoint of the use of the U.S. dollar as a reference point — i.e., Brazil and China will still be pricing soybeans in dollar terms even if their transaction will be carried out in local currencies. But it is important for a few key reasons: 1) As a signpost for multipolarity, 2) As a signpost for tighter Brazil-China trade relations (with attendant implications for Brazil’s relations with the rest of South America and the U.S.), and 3) As a signpost for the massive challenge Brazil is posing to U.S. agricultural exports, which continue to bank on access to the Chinese market going forward despite the rise of Brazil.
The Brazilian government zeroed taxes levied on solar panels. The exemption is valid until December 31, 2026.China is the top supplier of solar panels in the world. Is it just a happy coincidence that Brazil is offering government incentives for solar power development amidst the currency deal and the agricultural business delegation? (Rhetorical question.)
The Brazilian government proposed a new fiscal rule that foresees a real growth in expenses between 0.6% and 2.5% per year. These are the floor and maximum limit for advancing spending. The proposal also provides for a minimum level for investments. Finance Minister Fernando Haddad notes that the formula proposed by the government is not a "silver bullet" to resolve the situation of public accounts and added that there will be a new package to increase government revenue by up to R$ 150 billion. "This fiscal rule is not a silver bullet that solves everything. It is the beginning of a long journey.We need to understand this proposal in more depth, and we also need to see if it garners enough support to stand – but at first glance, this does not look like a firebrand, leftist proposal. It is a fairly sober and moderate attempt to increase government spending.
On Sunday, state-owned Saudi Aramco announced that the long-delayed construction of a new 300,000 barrel-a-day refinery in China would go ahead in the second quarter after securing all administrative approvals. Aramco owns 30% of the project and said it would supply 210,000 barrels a day of crude to the new complex. On Monday, Aramco said it would buy a 10% stake, worth $3.6 billion, in a Rongsheng Petrochemical Co. Ltd., which co-owns the largest refinery in China, one with a capacity of 800,000 barrels a day. As part of the deal, Aramco said it would supply 480,000 barrels a day to the refinery.
Bloomberg hits it on the nose: “In two days, the Saudis have secured an outlet for nearly 700,000 barrels a day of their production – that’s more than daily consumption of a medium-sized European economy like the Netherlands.” That seems like very bad news for Russia. If China can get oil cheaper from Saudi Arabia than from Russia, could Beijing stop importing such high quantities of Russian crude, and take a bite out of oil supply for the rest of the world?
Saudi Arabia's cabinet approved on Wednesday a decision to join the Shanghai Cooperation Organization.
This is a trend we were on very early: we’ve been highlighting it since early 2021. It continues apace. The real question for me is at what point does the U.S. wake up and realize Saudi Arabia isn’t only not an ally — it is a partner of the country the U.S. has identified as its biggest peer competitor.
Oil production in Iraq's semi-autonomous Kurdistan region (KRI) is at risk after a halt in northern exports has forced firms operating there to cease output or divert crude to storage, where capacity is limited. Iraq was forced to halt around 450,000 barrels per day (bpd) of crude exports.450,000 bpd isn’t huge, but it’s also not nothing.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip ErdoÄŸan announced 15 percent cuts in residential and business electricity rates next month and a 20 percent discount on natural gas bills for industrial groups. He also said he would raise the minimum wage by an unspecified amount in July – after raising it 55 percent in January.And all of this in addition to a 100 billion lira program to provide relief to families affected by the recent earthquake. More stimulus from Turkey. ErdoÄŸan is feeling the heat of a tighter election.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu postponed legislation that has sparked large protests throughout Israel and which would significantly degrade the independence and power of Israel’s judiciary.If you missed our emergency podcast episode on this topic, check it out. The media is presenting this as a major victory for the protesters. It is anything but. Netanyahu agreed to postpone the judicial “reforms” for a single legislative session. He also created a new National Guard under the leadership of National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, a far-right religious reactionary in order to secure Ben-Gvir’s approval of the postponement. Watch Israeli Arabs. If they join the protests and align with the rest of Israel at a political level, Netanyahu’s reforms can be stopped and his government could fall. Absent that, however, expect those judicial reforms to pass…and expect trouble from the creation of a de facto paramilitary organization led by a true radical.
Tunisian authorities have started cutting off drinking water at night in areas of the capital and other cities to reduce consumption amid a severe drought.
Rising authoritarianism. Declining support/legitimacy of the government. Rising food prices (Tunisia imports from Russia and Ukraine). A drought on top of it and now water cuts. At what point does Tunisia finally break?
The UN envoy to the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) warned the Security Council on Wednesday that the security situation in eastern Congo has "deteriorated considerably" in recent months and that the humanitarian situation has become "increasingly dramatic". In North Kivu in particular, fighting between M23 rebels and the FARDC have displaced 900,000 people. Humanitarian needs, already immense, “continue to increase.”
So far, this anarchy has not impacted mining interests in the region, but the size and scope of the unrest is continuing to grow despite regional efforts to keep it in check.
Ethiopia’s government dropped criminal charges against leaders of the rebel Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF), in line with a peace deal in its northern region.
These are small breadcrumbs, but remember: before the Ethiopian civil war, this was one of the countries we thought was most exciting from a deglobalization/reshoring perspective. Ethiopia is huge, cheap, and strategically located. If the country can put itself back together again and restore confidence, it could be a huge growth story.
Nigerian civil society organizations have been holding daily protests to pressure the Independent National Electoral Commission, or INEC, and Nigerian authorities to review the February and March elections.
Just noting this story is not yet fading away.
U.S. Vice-President Kamala Harris went on a brief tour of several African states, including Ghana and Tanzania. During the visit, the Export-Import Bank of the United States (EXIM) and the government of Tanzania signed an MoU to facilitate up to $500 million in financing to help US companies export goods and services to Tanzania in sectors including infrastructure, transportation, digital technology, climate and energy security and power generation. Harris also mentioned a new partnership in 5G technology and cybersecurity, as well as a US-supported plan by LifeZone Metals to open a new processing plant in Tanzania for minerals that go into electric vehicle batteries.The U.S. is showing early signs of paying attention to sub-Saharan Africa in a more serious way. It is hard to miss the overtones between the 19th century Great Game for Central Asia and Scramble for Africa.
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