Tuesday, May 17, 2016

Here are the 17 countries that hold the most US debt

Here are the 17 countries that hold the most US debt

Donald TrumpReuters/Joel PageDonald Trump.
US sovereign debt is one of the safest assets in finance.
But that safety was called into question this month by US presidential candidate Donald Trump, who suggested that the US could negotiate with creditors and wouldn't need to pay the whole $13 trillion back.
The US Treasury, for the first time since the 1970s, has published more detailed data on who owns that debt, giving a breakdown of Saudi Arabia's holding.
The report gave details on specific countries that were previously lumped together in groups such as "oil exporting nations" and "Caribbean banking centers," according to the Associated Press.
The Treasury showed that Saudi Arabia held $116.8 billion of US debt in March, down 2.5% from February.
Here's how the rest of the world's US debt holders measure up, as of March:

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17. South Korea — $84.1 billion (£57.99 billion).

17. South Korea — $84.1 billion (£57.99 billion).
REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji

16. Russia — $86 billion (£59.3 billion).

16. Russia — $86 billion (£59.3 billion).
David Burdeny

15. Germany — $90.1 billion (£62.14 billion).

15. Germany — $90.1 billion (£62.14 billion).
REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch

14. Singapore — $112.7 billion (£77.74 billion).

14. Singapore — $112.7 billion (£77.74 billion).
Edgar Su/Reuters

13. Saudi Arabia — $116.8 billion (£80.58 billion).

12. India — $118.9 billion (£82.02 billion).

12. India — $118.9 billion (£82.02 billion).
Reuters/Anindito Mukherjee

11. Belgium — $153.8 billion (£106.09 billion).

10. Taiwan — $182.3 billion (£125.75 billion).

10. Taiwan — $182.3 billion (£125.75 billion).
Reuters

9. Hong Kong — $200.3 billion (£138.17 billion).

8. Luxembourg — $221.3 billion (£152.66 billion).

8. Luxembourg — $221.3 billion (£152.66 billion).
Wikimedia

7. United Kingdom — $227.6 billion (£157.03 billion).

7. United Kingdom — $227.6 billion (£157.03 billion).
AP Photo / Matt Dunham

6. Switzerland — $230 billion (£158.68 billion).

5. Brazil — $246.4 billion (£169.97 billion).

5. Brazil — $246.4 billion (£169.97 billion).
REUTERS/Bruno Kelly

4. Ireland — $264.3 billion (£182.33 billion).

3. Cayman Islands — $265 billion (£182.81 billion).

2. Japan — $1.137 trillion (£784.68 billion).

1. Mainland China — $1.244 trillion (£857.99 billion).

1. Mainland China — $1.244 trillion (£857.99 billion).
Reuters

Twitter is about to fix one of the most annoying parts of its product

Twitter is about to fix one of the most annoying parts of its product

Twitter is about to make a long-needed change that will make everyone's lives easier.
The company will no longer include web links or photos in the 140-character limit for tweets, according to a report by Bloomberg's Sarah Frier.
The report notes that the changes could come within weeks.
That might sound like a small change, but for users of the service who have wasted a lot of time editing their tweets just so that they could include a link or photo, this is sure to be welcome news.
Links in a tweet take up 23 characters, Bloomberg reports.
That said, Twitter's 140-character limit is a touchy issue.
When reports surfaced in January that Twitter was considering scrapping the limit entirely, many Twitter users revolted, claiming that the service would lose the quality that makes it unique.
Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey was forced to weigh in to defuse the situation, promising the limit was not going away.
Twitter declined to comment.
You can read the full Bloomberg report here.

The short seller who helped bring down Valeant has now invested in the company

The short seller who helped bring down Valeant has now invested in the company

Andrew LeftScreenshot, CNBCAndrew Left of Citron Research.
Andrew Left is long on Valeant.
The noted short seller and head of Citron Research told The Street's Real Money blog that he has taken a stake in the troubled pharmaceutical company even though he still has some out-of-the-money puts, a type of short position.
Left, you'll remember, was the author of a damning report in October 2015 that accused Valeant of being a "pharmaceutical Enron"and helped bring up questions regarding the firm's accounting and relationship with specialty pharmacy Philidor.
Now Left says, "I don't think they're going to make any decisions that are going to torpedo their company," according to The Street.
Left previously said that he has closed his short position, calling the stock "uninvestable" in March. It appears that he has since changed his mind.
Valeant was again in the news on Monday with an announcement that it was lowering the price of some of the drugs in its portfolio.
It has had its practice of buying drugs and raising the prices come under fire by everyone from Hillary Clinton to the US Senate. Additionally, accounting discrepancies highlighted by Left led the company to sever ties with distributor Philidor and completely overhaul its financial statements from the past two years.
Valeant's stock is up 3.5% for the day at $26.79 a share. It had been negative for the day up until roughly 2:50 p.m.

British inflation just fell for the first time in 8 months

British inflation just fell for the first time in 8 months

hot air balloon inflateAP Photo/Andres LeightoA pilot inflates his hot air balloon during the 44th International Balloon Fiesta in Albuquerque, N.M., Sunday, Oct. 4, 2015.
UK inflation fell for the first time since September 2015 in April, coming in at 0.3%, according to official figures released on Tuesday.
The Office for National Statistics says the consumer price index — the key measure of inflation in Britain — was up 0.3% on a year-on-year basis in April, missing the 0.5% consensus forecast of economists and down from March's reading. Inflation was exactly in line with the Bank of England's most recent forecast.
The month-on-month figure came in at 0.1%, down from 0.4% in March, and a miss on the 0.3% rise expected.
Core inflation figures, which strip out volatile goods like oil and food, came in at 1.2%, again down from the last month, when the core number was 1.5%
Prior to the last few months, inflation had stayed between -0.1% and 0.1% for 10 months due to a collapse in oil prices and a supermarket price war that led to slashed prices, but prices are now starting to pick up. Here's the inflation picture for the UK since 2006.
UK CPI april 2016ONS
While inflation has broadly improved in recent months, April's reading is a first fall in eight months, and well below the 2% wanted by Britain's policymakers. UK inflation hasn't been higher than 2% since late 2013.
Alongside the core figures, the ONS releases a breakdown of inflation by sector. Last month, people spending more money in hotels and on dining out, helped pull inflation higher, but in April, inflation was dragged by lower transport costs and the falling price of food and non-alcoholic beverages.
Here's the sector-by-sector breakdown for April:
ONs uk inflation breakdown april 2016ONs
And here's the ONS' take on its sector-by-sector numbers:
Falls in air fares and prices for clothing, vehicles and social housing rent were the main contributors to the decrease in the rate.
These downward pressures were partially offset by rising prices for motor fuels and for certain recreational goods and cultural services, and by food prices, which were unchanged between March and April 2016, having fallen between the same two months a year ago.  
While the fall doesn't look promising for the British economy, Pantheon Macroeconomics notes that much of the fall is down to a return to normal for the cost of airfares, and doesn't represent an easing of inflationary pressures. Here's Pantheon's chief UK economists Samuel Tombs (emphasis ours):
The sharp fall in inflation in April is not a signal that inflation pressure is easing.  The fall mainly reflected a decline in airline fares inflation to -3.2% in April from March’s Easter-boosted rate of 17.2%. The recent increase in oil prices and sterling’s depreciation suggest that airline fares inflation will bounce back to a positive rate soon. The other main downward influence on inflation was a fall in clothing inflation to 0.3% from 1.4%, which merely seems to reflect retailers discounting in response to unusually bad weather. Sterling’s decline has boosted apparel retailers’ costs and will compel them to raise their prices soon.
The pound fell on the inflation news. Just after 10:00 a.m. BST (5:00 a.m. ET) sterling is up by 0.46% against the dollar, having been up as much as 1% earlier in the day after a bunch of polls showed the remain camp pulling away ahead of the UK's EU referendum. Here's how things look:
pound cpi may 17thInvesting.com

Nigerian militants are controlling the world's oil prices right now

Nigerian militants are controlling the world's oil prices right now

nigeriamilitantReuters
Oil prices are close to hitting $50 per barrel for the first time since November — but it has nothing to do with Saudi Arabia and Iran cutting oil production, as so much of the market has hoped.
It's all down to Nigerian militants.
Nigeria was dethroned as Africa's largest oil producer this monthbecause the deteriorating political and security situations pose such a threat to Nigeria's oil output.
Militant activity from group Niger Delta Avengers is forcing supply disruptions and has made the country's output fall by 800,000 barrels per day to 1.4 million barrels per day, according to Nigeria's oil minister Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu.
Data cited by RBC Capital Markets' commodities team in an early May research note said Nigeria's oil production slipped to 1.69 million barrels per day.
Regardless of either assessment, this is still below the production level of Angola, which held steady in April, at 1.8 million barrels per day.
You can see the effect of the Nigerian militant activity on the oil market on Tuesday, reducing supply and boosting the price:
oilnigeriaInvesting.com
brentnigeriaInvesting.com

Monday, May 16, 2016

The biggest sovereign wealth fund in the world will sue Volkswagen

The biggest sovereign wealth fund in the world will sue Volkswagen

Volkswagen's admission that illegal software was installed on 11 million diesel engines to cheat emissions tests sparked a global scandal and forced it to recall vehicles from around the world© AFP/File Ronny HartmannVolkswagen's admission that illegal software was installed on 11 million diesel engines to cheat emissions tests sparked a global scandal and forced it to recall vehicles from around the world
London (AFP) - Norway's sovereign wealth fund, the world's largest, is to sue German carmaker Volkswagen over an emissions-cheating scandal that caused it huge losses, the Financial Times reported Sunday.
"We have been advised by our lawyers that the company's conduct gives rise to legal claims under German law. As an investor it is our responsibility to safeguard the fund's holding in Volkswagen," Peter Johnsen, the chief executive of the fund's manager Norges Bank Investment Management, told the newspaper.
The German automobile giant is already facing a slew of lawsuits from shareholders seeking damages after deep falls in its share price, as well as from angry car owners.
Volkswagen's admission that illegal software was installed on 11 million diesel engines to cheat emissions tests sparked a global scandal and forced it to recall vehicles from around the world.
The carmaker has set aside 16.2 billion euros ($19 billion) in provisions to cover potential fines, lawsuits and recall costs, resulting in its first annual loss since 1993.
Volkswagen did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A spokesperson for Norges Bank Investment Management could not be reached for comment.

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