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High Speed Hitters acquire Royse Tubino from Army

ROYSE TUBINO — PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

THE PLDT High Speed Hitters have added more firepower by acquiring Royse Tubino from Army as they gear towards a better showing in next month’s Premier Volleyball League Invitational Conference.

“We have Royse Tubino,” said PLDT manager Bajjie del Rosario yesterday.

The arrival of the former NCAA MVP should bolster a roster already teeming with talent in skipper Mika Reyes, Michelle Morente, Dell Palomata, Mean Mendrez and Jules Samonte among others.

Ms. Tubino should provide the scoring punch PLDT needed after emerging the scoring leader for the Army Lady Troopers, who took a leave of absence, in the All-Filipino Conference early this year.

Mr. Del Rosario, however, revealed they would need a back-up setter after letting go of Wendy Semana.

“We’re still looking for one,” he said. — Joey Villar

Converge clashes with Magnolia in PBA On Tour at Ynares Arena 

Games Today
(Ynares Sports Arena, Pasig)

5 p.m. — Blackwater vs Terrafirma
7:30 p.m. — Converge vs Magnolia

CONVERGE and Magnolia face off in the PBA On Tour today (May 31) at the Ynares Sports Arena in Pasig City, each bent on sustaining its flying start in the pre-season meet.

The FiberXers demolished Terrafirma, 119-82, while the Hotshots clobbered Blackwater, 117-83, building strong momentum for the 7:30 p.m. dogfight.

The Bossing (1-1) and the Dyip (0-1), meanwhile, seek a quick bounceback when they clash in the 5 p.m. curtain-raiser.

Converge drew big games from Justin Arana and Jerrick Balanza, who fired identical 24 points, and solid debuts from trade acquisitions Mike Nieto (12) and Adrian Wong (11) in kicking off the campaign with a 37-point win.

But Coach Aldin Ayo maintained the team is very much a work in progress at this point.

Magnolia, for its part, leaned on James Laput’s 12-12 breakout game and Abu Tratter’s 14-point debut to beat Blackwater by 34.

The Hotshots overcame the absence of key players Ian Sangalang, Calvin Abueva and Jio Jalalon, who are still recovering from various injuries, in the big victory. — Olmin Leyba

Culture stands out

Head coach Erik Spoelstra was disconsolate when he faced members of the media in the aftermath of the Heat’s bridesmaid finish in the 2020 National Basketball Association Finals. At the time, their inability to meet what he felt was their date with destiny hit him hard. He really thought they were going to win, he said. Never mind that the Lakers were heavily favored. He deemed the bubble environment a great equalizer for the black and red, whose uniquely united front made them greater than the sum of their parts.

Throughout the 2023 Playoffs, Spoelstra has been just as determined in his belief that the Heat are fated to succeed. It didn’t matter that they flubbed their first match in the play-in tournament, and that they then had to climb back from a fourth-quarter deficit in the next just to secure the last postseason spot in the East. And, no doubt, his charges took heart from his resolve — not merely in forging an extremely unlikely path to the conferences finals, but in thereafter upending the superior-on-paper Celtics.

Indeed, Spoelstra never wavered, not even when the Celtics charged from zero-to-three down to force a winner-take-all affair. And the Heat prepped for Game Seven yesterday, it was clear that those around him shared in his faith. Irrational confidence? Perhaps. That said, there can be no arguing the final score: They didn’t simply win. They won big, and on the road to boot. When the battlesmoke cleared, the TD Garden faithful had already dwindled and, out of courtesy, gave the Celtics a smattering of applause.

There will be time to hold the green and white accountable for yet another disappointing end to a season that began with much promise. And, when that time comes, officials doing the reckoning will be better served taking a look at how the Heat beat them. More than the accumulation of sheer talent, culture stands out. And that, in a nutshell, is why the East champions consider the Larry O’Brien Trophy theirs to take. They conquered the Bucks, Knicks, and Celtics with will, and have complete trust in themselves to do the same against the Nuggets.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and Human Resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

Uganda enacts harsh anti-LGBTQ law which includes death penalty

A MEMBER of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex and queer community poses for a picture with rainbow colors in Kampala, Uganda, April 4, 2023. — REUTERS

KAMPALA — Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni signed one of the world’s toughest anti-LGBTQ laws, including the death penalty for “aggravated homosexuality,” drawing Western condemnation and risking sanctions from aid donors.

Same-sex relations were already illegal in Uganda, as in more than 30 African countries, but the new law goes further.

It stipulates capital punishment for “serial offenders” against the law and transmission of a terminal illness like HIV/AIDS through gay sex. It also decrees a 20-year sentence for “promoting” homosexuality. “The Ugandan president has today legalized state-sponsored homophobia and transphobia,” said Clare Byarugaba, a Ugandan rights activist.

United States President Joseph R. Biden called the move “a tragic violation” of human rights and said Washington would evaluate the implications of the law “on all aspects of US engagement with Uganda.”

“We are considering additional steps, including the application of sanctions and restriction of entry into the United States against anyone involved in serious human rights abuses or corruption,” he said.

A presidency photo of Mr. Museveni showed him signing the law with a golden pen at his desk. The 78-year-old has called homosexuality a “deviation from normal” and urged lawmakers to resist “imperialist” pressure.

A local organization, Human Rights Awareness and Promotion Forum, and 10 other individuals later filed a complaint against the law at the constitutional court, one of the petitioners, Busingye Kabumba, told Reuters.

Mr. Museveni had sent the original bill passed in March back, asking parliament to tone down some provisions. But his ultimate approval was not seen as in doubt in a conservative country where anti-LGBTQ attitudes have hardened in recent years, in part due to campaigning by Western evangelical church groups.

Uganda receives billions of dollars in foreign aid each year and could now face adverse measures from donors and investors, as happened with a similar bill nine years ago.

REPRISALS?
The bill’s sponsor, Asuman Basalirwa, told reporters that parliament speaker Anita Among’s US visa was canceled after the law was signed. Among and the US embassy in Uganda did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

In a joint statement, the US’s flagship HIV/AIDS programme PEPFAR, the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, and the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) said the law put Uganda’s anti-HIV fight “in grave jeopardy”.

Dominic Arnall, chief executive of Open For Business, a coalition of companies that includes Google and Microsoft, said the group was deeply disappointed and the law ran counter to Ugandans’ economic interests.

The U.N. human rights body declared itself “appalled”.

Uganda’s move could encourage lawmakers in neighboring Kenya and Tanzania seeking similar measures.

“What a leader we’ve in Africa!” tweeted George Kaluma, a Kenyan member of parliament who submitted an anti-LGBTQ bill in April.

“Kenya is following you in this endeavour to save humanity.”

The inclusion of the death penalty for offences like transmitting HIV has drawn particular outrage internationally.

Existing Ugandan law calls for a maximum 10-year sentence for intentionally transmitting HIV and does not apply when the person who contracted the infection was aware of their sexual partner’s HIV status.

By contrast, the new law makes no distinction between intentional and unintentional transmission and contains no exception based on awareness of HIV status.

The amended version of the bill, adopted earlier this month after Mr. Museveni returned it to parliament, stipulated that merely identifying as LGBTQ is not a crime and revised a measure that obliged people to report homosexual activity to only require reporting when a child is involved.

‘LIKE APARTHEID’
LGBTQ Ugandans called those changes useless, saying law enforcement regularly exceeds its legal authorities to harass them. They said passage of the bill in March unleashed a wave of arrests, evictions and mob attacks.

The issue has been a long-running one in Uganda.

A less restrictive 2014 anti-LGBTQ law was struck down by a Ugandan court on procedural grounds, after Western governments had initially suspended some aid, imposed visa restrictions and curtailed security cooperation.

In 2009, a bill dubbed “kill the gays” for initially proposing executing homosexuals was introduced after a conference in Kampala drew representatives from the United States including prominent anti-gay evangelical Scott Lively.

As well as religious campaigning, Africa’s anti-LGBTQ attitudes also have their roots in the colonial era, including an anti-sodomy section of Britain’s penal code. By the time the UK legalized same-sex acts in 1967, many former colonies were independent and did not inherit the legal change.

“To reduce any kind of human being, irrespective of their sexuality, to a death sentence based on who they identify as and how they choose to live their lives is something that we should all feel very ashamed about as a continent,” said South African filmmaker Lerato.  Reuters

Japan court rules that a bar on same-sex marriage is unconstitutional

A person holds Japan’s national flag at the Imperial Palace in Tokyo, Japan, Jan. 2, 2020. — REUTERS

TOKYO — A Japanese court ruled on Tuesday that not allowing same-sex marriage was unconstitutional, a decision activists welcomed as a step towards marriage equality in the only Group of Seven (G7) nation with no legal protection for same-sex unions.

The ruling by the Nagoya District Court was the second to find a ban against same-sex marriage unconstitutional, out of four cases on the issue over the past two years. Japan’s constitution says marriage is between a man and a woman.

“This ruling has rescued us from the hurt of last year’s ruling that said there was nothing wrong with the ban, and the hurt of what the government keeps saying,” lead lawyer Yoko Mizushima told journalists and supporters outside the court.

She was referring to a ruling in Osaka last year that the ban was not out of line with the constitution.

A Tokyo court later upheld the ban on same-sex marriage but said a lack of legal protection for same-sex families violated their human rights.

Tuesday’s ruling was greeted with cheers from the activists and supporters waving rainbow flags outside the court.

Though opinion polls show some 70% of the public supports same-sex marriage, the conservative ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) of Prime Minister Fumio Kishida opposes it.

Mr. Kishida in February sacked an aide who sparked outrage by saying people would flee Japan if same-sex marriage was allowed, but the premier remains noncommittal about it and has said discussions must proceed “carefully”.

Nevertheless, more than 300 Japanese municipalities covering some 65% of the population allow same-sex couples to enter partnership agreements.

But the right is limited in scope. Partners can’t inherit each other’s assets or have parental rights to each other’s children. Hospital visits are not guaranteed.

Ms. Mizushima said the court in its ruling had noted that such partnership agreements were not fully sufficient, which she took as an encouraging sign.

The government pledged to pass a law promoting “understanding” of LGBT people before hosting the G7 summit, but opposition from conservatives delayed the law so much a watered-down version was only submitted to parliament the day before the summit began.

The initial draft stipulated discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity should “not be tolerated” but was changed to “there should be no unfair discrimination,” wording that critics say tacitly allows bigotry.

Japan has come under increasing pressure to change, both from other G7 members but also from economic lobbies, with businesses arguing that greater diversity is needed for international competitiveness. — Reuters

North Korea plans to launch first military spy satellite in June

SEOUL — North Korea will launch its first military reconnaissance satellite in June for monitoring US activities, state media KCNA reported on Tuesday, drawing criticism over its potential use of banned missile technology.

Ri Pyong Chol, vice-chairman of the Central Military Commission of the North’s ruling Workers’ Party, denounced ongoing joint military exercises by the US and South Korea as openly showing “reckless ambition for aggression.”

US and South Korean forces have carried out various training exercises in recent months, including the biggest-ever live-fire exercises last week, after many drills were scaled back amid COVID-19 restrictions and diplomatic efforts with North Korea.

Mr. Ri said the drills required Pyongyang to have the “means capable of gathering information about the military acts of the enemy in real time.” “We will comprehensively consider the present and future threats and put into more thoroughgoing practice the activities for strengthening all-inclusive and practical war deterrents,” Mr. Ri said in the statement carried by the KCNA news agency.

Nuclear-armed North Korea has said it has completed development of its first military spy satellite, and leader Kim Jong Un has approved final preparations for the launch.

The statement did not specify the exact launch date, but North Korea has notified Japan of a planned launch between May 31 and June 11, prompting Tokyo to put its ballistic missile defenses on alert.

Japan has said it would shoot down any projectile that threatens its territory.

“Even if North Korea might call it a ‘satellite,’ this is a violation of relevant U.N. Security Council resolutions that prohibit North Korea from all launches using the ballistic missile technology,” Japanese Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi told a news conference on Tuesday.

South Korea’s foreign ministry also slammed the North’s use of ballistic missile technology as a clear violation of the U.N. sanctions, saying Mr. Ri was making a “farfetched excuse” to bolster its weapons programmes.

“It is a nonsense to use our legitimate joint training and combined defence posture with the US, which were to respond to North Korea’s advanced nuclear and missile threats, as an excuse for launching a reconnaissance satellite,” ministry spokesman Lim Soo-suk told a briefing.

Lim urged Pyongyang to drop its plan, and vowed to sternly respond any launches.

A US State Department spokesperson said on Monday any North Korean launch using ballistic missile technology, including for a satellite, would violate U.N. resolutions.

The launch would be the North’s latest in a series of missile launches and weapons tests, including one of a new, solid-fuel intercontinental ballistic missile last month.

Analysts say the satellite will improve North Korea’s surveillance capability, enabling it to strike targets more accurately in the event of war. — Reuters

Debt deal welcomed by investors, though risks loom

TIMIS ALEXANDRA-UNSPLASH

GLOBAL investors are gaming out how a tentative deal to raise the United States debt ceiling could ripple through markets, as lawmakers strive to pass the agreement through Congress before a June 5 deadline.

A deal to lift the $31.4-trillion debt limit announced by the White House and House Republicans late Saturday would avert a catastrophic US default and boost overall appetite for risk, while also buoying some of the sectors that have been left behind in this year’s tech-led equity rally, such as cyclical stocks and small caps, investors said.

The initial reaction was positive. Wall Street futures rose, with S&P 500 e-minis up 0.3% and Nasdaq e-minis up 0.5%. US Treasury note futures were up around 0.2% in a sign that US Treasury yields, which move inversely to prices, will fall when bond trading resumes. US markets were closed on Monday for a public holiday.

US five-year credit default swaps narrowed, meaning that the cost of insuring against exposure to a US debt default fell. The US dollar index was steady at 104.26.

But some investors are wary that proposed spending cuts could weigh on US growth. At the same time, a negotiation process that barely avoided a default threatens to undermine the U.S. standing with credit ratings agencies.

“While the White House’s debt ceiling agreement is great news, the US government still has a cash flow problem and time is of the essence to finalize the agreements,” said Bob Stark, global head of market strategy at treasury and financial management firm Kyriba. “The debt ceiling agreement is only the first step in saving the government from the brink of illiquidity.”

The deal suspends the debt ceiling until January 2025 in exchange for caps on spending and cuts in government programs. Narrow margins in the House of Representatives and Senate mean that moderates from both sides will have to support the bill.

US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen on Friday set a deadline for raising the federal debt limit, saying the government would default if Congress does not increase the debt ceiling by June 5.

Spending freezes will force the economy to function more on its own than it has had to do for several years, said Steven Ricchiuto, US chief economist at Mizuho Securities USA LLC in New York.

“That’s going to be an adjustment process, especially this shrinking in real spending,” he said. “It’s more of an economic situation than a market situation.”

NEAR MISS?
Since the $24.3 trillion US Treasury market underpins the global financial system, a default — or even a close call — could trigger massive volatility across global markets.

The uncertainty periodically weighed on stock markets over the last week, although most investors and analysts said they had expected an 11th-hour agreement. Optimism that a debt ceiling deal was near and hefty gains in artificial intelligence (AI)-related stocks helped the S&P 500 close at its highest level since August 2022 on Friday. The benchmark index is up 9.5% year to date.

Among the market sectors that stand to benefit from a deal are defense stocks, which have lagged during the negotiations, as well as cyclical sectors of the market and energy stocks, said Quincy Krosby, chief global strategist at LPL Financial.

“The hope is that the approval of this tentative deal will help underpin the broader market and not just the handful of big tech names that have kept the market well in positive territory,” she said.

Stuart Kaiser, head of equity trading strategy at Citi, said a deal could be a “modest positive” for equity markets at the index level but could provide a greater boost for sectors that have lagged this year, including shares of companies with weaker balance sheets and small-cap stocks.

But market participants are also wary of how proposed spending caps will impact specific sectors as well as the broader US economy.

“What investors will now focus on is the cost of the spending cuts to the health of the American economy,” Kyriba’s Stark said. “How much impact will these spending cuts have on GDP and economic growth?”

The brinkmanship in Washington could also prompt rating agencies to downgrade US debt. Ratings agency Fitch late Wednesday put the United States on credit watch for a possible downgrade while DBRS Morningstar on Thursday placed US credit ratings under review with “negative implications.”

S&P Global Ratings stripped the United States of its coveted top rating over a debt ceiling showdown in 2011, a few days after a last-minute agreement that the agency at the time said did not stabilize “medium-term debt dynamics.”

The downgrade contributed to a decline in US stocks that saw the S&P 500 lose some 17% between late July and mid-August of 2011.

“The risks of a downgrade are still there. It’s important that lawmakers take this seriously and are not posturing, or trying to appease their bases,” said Edward Moya, senior market analyst at OANDA in New York.

S&P Global Ratings, Fitch and Moody’s did not respond to Reuters requests for comment.

Investors are also bracing for potential volatility in U.S. government bonds as the Treasury is expected to quickly refill its empty coffers with bond issuance once the debt ceiling is raised, potentially sucking hundreds of billions of dollars of cash from the market.

“We will get the optimism that a deal is done and that a real crisis is averted, and the dreaded liquidity drain at the same time,” said Damien Boey, macro strategist at BarrenJoey in Sydney, Australia. “I think you will find that interest rate volatility will rise, and this will cause banks and non-AI growth stocks to be laggards.” — Reuters

Ukraine launches major drone attack on Moscow, Russia says all shot down

REUTERS

MOSCOW — Ukraine launched one of its biggest drone attacks on Moscow on Tuesday, according to Russia, whose defense ministry said all were destroyed approaching the city.

There were no reports of deaths.

Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said two people were injured, one of whom was hospitalized, in the early morning attack. The residents of several parts of two apartment blocks had been evacuated but later returned.

“Early this morning, as a result of the drone attack, minor damage occurred in several buildings,” Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said. “No one has been seriously injured.”

Video posted on social media showed what appeared to be a drone being shot down and a plume of smoke rising over the Moscow skyline.

Moscow’s airports remained open.

Russia’s defence ministry said the drones were sent by Kyiv but were all destroyed, according to Russian news agencies.

Russian lawmaker Maxim Ivanov said it was the most serious attack on Moscow since Nazi attacks during World War II, saying no citizen could now avoid what he said was “the new reality”.

“You will either defeat the enemy as a single fist with our Motherland, or the indelible shame of cowardice, collaboration and betrayal will engulf your family,” he said.

Ukrainian drone attacks inside Russia have been growing in intensity in recent weeks. The New York Times reported that US intelligence believes Ukraine was behind a drone attack on the Kremlin earlier this month.

Ukraine has not publicly acknowledged launching attacks against targets inside Russia.

Russia’s investigative committee said a number of drones were shot down and that there was minor damage due to the falling wreckage, but did not say how many drones attacked.

The Telegram channel Baza, which has good sources among Russia’s security services, said around 25 drones attacked Moscow. Russia’s RBK cited an unidentified interior ministry source as saying that more than 10 drones were shot down.

Andrei Vorobyov, governor of the Moscow region, said on the Telegram channel that several drones were shot down on their approach to Moscow. — Reuters

Vietnam capital dims street lights to save energy during heatwave

REUTERS

HANOI — Authorities in Vietnam’s capital of Hanoi are turning off street lights to keep the national power system running amid record temperatures bringing a surge in demand in some parts of the Southeast Asian nation.

As weather officials warn the heatwave could run into June, several cities have cut back on public lighting after state utility EVN said rising demand for air conditioning could burden the national grid further.

“It’s so harsh and hot outside that people have to wear protective clothing to cool down and not get burned,” said Hanoi resident Tran Van Hung, 67.

Temperatures this week are expected to range between 26 and 38 degrees Celsius, weather officials say.

To deal with the problem, Hanoi turns on its public lighting half an hour later than usual, and switches it off half an hour sooner, while halving illumination on some major roads and in public parks.

“If people all save energy, all will have enough electricity to use, but if not, there will be a partial electrical overload that will put the power grid at risk,” said Luong Minh Quan, an electrician with EVN in Hanoi.

Last week Vietnam called for electrical devices to be turned off when not in use, and for air-conditioning to be kept above 26 degrees C (78.8°F).

Some chose to cool off at a waterpark, though experts say activity in extreme heat can cause dehydration and exhaustion.

“The water can help overcome the heat, as there are no other immediate solutions,” said Tran Minh Trung, 48. — Reuters

OPEC will welcome Iran’s full return to oil market when sanctions lifted -secretary general

REUTERS

 – OPEC will welcome Iran’s full return to the oil market when sanctions are liftedthe secretary general of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) told the Iranian oil ministry’s website SHANA on Monday.

Iran is an OPEC member, although its oil exports are subject to US sanctions aimed at curbing Tehran’s nuclear program.

Secretary General Haitham Al Ghais, who is visiting Tehran for the first time, added that Iran has the capacity to bring on significant production volumes within a short period of time.

“We believe that Iran is a responsible player amongst its family members, the countries in the OPEC group. I’m sure there will be good work together, in synchronization, to ensure that the market will remain balanced as OPEC has continued to do over the past many years,” SHANA’s English-language website cited him as saying.

Asked about OPEC’s voluntary production cut and its effect on oil prices, Ghais said, “In OPEC…we don’t target a certain price level. All our actions, all our decisions are made in order to have a good balance between global oil demand and global oil supply.”

In a surprise move in early April, Saudi Arabia and other members of OPEC+, which comprises OPEC and allies including Russia, announced further oil output cuts of around 1.2 million barrels per day, bringing the total volume of cuts by OPEC+ to 3.66 million barrels per day, according to Reuters calculations.

Saudi Arabia, the kingpin of OPEC, and Iran announced in March that they would restore diplomatic relations after years of hostility, in a deal brokered by China, the world’s No. 2 oil consumer. – Reuters

Investors react to tentative US debt ceiling deal

Official White House Photo by Cameron Smith

 – US President Joe Biden and top congressional Republican Kevin McCarthy have reached a tentative deal to suspend the federal government’s $31.4 trillion debt ceiling, ending a months-long stalemate.

But the deal still faces a difficult path to pass through Congress before the US runs out of money to pay its debts in early June.

 

COMMENTS:

EDWARD MOYA, SENIOR MARKET ANALYST AT OANDA IN NEW YORK

“The risks of a downgrade are still there. It’s important that lawmakers take this serious and are not posturing, or trying to appease their bases.

“The dollar is still the reserve currency, but it’s going to lose some of that status.”

 

STEVEN RICCHIUTO, U.S. CHIEF ECONOMIST AT MIZUHO SECURITIES USA LLC, NEW YORK.

“The importance of passing the debt limit is critical. They all want to get it out past the election process and they did get a freeze on spending, which creates a real decline in a number of spending programs. The radicals on each side are not going to vote for this, it’s the people in the middle.

 

ANDRZEJ SKIBA, HEAD OF BLUEBAY U.S. FIXED INCOME AT RBC GLOBAL ASSET MANAGEMENT, NEW YORK.

“There should be enough support across both sides of the aisle to see the agreement gain approval first in the House and then in the Senate. Feels like a race against time before the June 5th deadline, but it should be done in time. Will be noisy, but in the end a default should be avoided.

“What’s more important is that the agreement, as proposed, prevents the debt ceiling drama from re-occurring until after the next election. After a number of tumultuous weeks, most will see that as the biggest achievement.

“The prospect of non-payment on a Treasury bill should go away. Money market funds can stop worrying about what securities they hold and yields for near term maturities should normalize.

“On the flip side, we should now expect an avalanche of Treasury bill issuance over the coming weeks as the government replenishes its coffers. This withdrawal of liquidity from the market is largely expected, however it could still impact valuations across US government fixed-income securities.”

 

KHOON GOH, HEAD OF ASIA RESEARCH, ANZ, SINGAPORE:

“Markets have already responded positively to the agreement. Of course there are still a couple of hurdles to get through … and there’s still potential for some spanner in the works, but for now markets are working off the assumption that the agreement will be passed and have already started to move on from that.

“For the dollar, it’s somewhat of a mixed bag. We have seen the dollar strengthen in the last couple of weeks as a result of the debt ceiling uncertainty. The dollar did manage to stay quite firm even when the agreement was announced. I think part of that is because it’s getting some support from the increased expectations of the June hike and also markets are focusing on the large issuance that the US Treasury will be making once the agreement is signed off. That could potentially tighten liquidity in the near term which could keep US yields elevated hence helping to support the dollar in the near term.

“Markets are pricing in as if the deal is going to get passed, so that is the risk that we face at the moment, if, for whatever reason, the agreement does not get passed … especially if it doesn’t get passed by the time the X-date is due … then the rally that we’ve seen late last week and so far early today, will definitely unravel and will lead to a huge selloff.”

 

BOB STARK, GLOBAL HEAD OF MARKET STRATEGY, KYRIBA, VANCOUVER, CANADA:

“While the White House’s debt ceiling agreement is great news, the US government still has a cash flow problem and time is of the essence to finalize the agreements. The debt ceiling agreement is only the first step in saving the government from the brink of illiquidity.”

“Markets already priced in that an agreement would be made this weekend. What investors will now focus on is the cost of the spending cuts to the health of the American economy. How much impact will these spending cuts have on GDP and economic growth?”

“Already corporate CFOs are updating their cash forecasts to factor in the costs of this debt ceiling agreement, trying to project the impacts of the spending cuts on their own organization’s financial projections. How many businesses will be adversely affected by the fallout from this agreement? The cost of what the Democrats gave up to extend the debt ceiling by two years will be felt for the next decade as the American economy struggles to rebalance itself.”

“One immediate benefit on Monday is that short-term treasury yields will start their return to normal, whereas US T-Bills and treasury notes can march back to their risk-free status and provide security to investors and the American people.”

 

STUART KAISER, HEAD OF EQUITY TRADING STRATEGY, CITI, NEW YORK:

“The debt ceiling deal removes a tail risk to economic growth but doesn’t meaningfully shift the base case. As a result, it’s a modest positive for equity markets at the index level but incrementally more positive for areas such as weak balance sheet stocks, small cap and perhaps cyclicals. Those have underperformed recently and have higher exposure to growth and credit risks.”

 

DAMIEN BOEY, CHIEF MACRO STRATEGIST, BARRENJOEY, SYDNEY:

“We will get the optimism that a deal is done and that a real crisis is averted, and the dreaded liquidity drain at the same time. The net impact is ambiguous, but I think you will find that interest rate volatility .MOVE will rise, and this will cause banks and non-AI growth stocks to be laggards.”

 

MOH SIONG SIM, CURRENCY STRATEGIST, BANK OF SINGAPORE, SINGAPORE:

“The deal still needs to be passed by both the House and Senate. Assuming that the agreed spending cuts do not materially impact the US growth outlook, the debt deal should be both risk and US dollar positive.

“The need for Treasury to rebuild its cash balance could tighten liquidity.”

 

VISHNU VARATHAN, HEAD OF ECONOMICS, MIZUHO BANK, SINGAPORE:

“There may be an initial sliver of relief that may send yields a tad lower along with some US dollar bump-up, alongside equities. But the vagaries of pushing the deal through Congress may hold back.

And beyond that the overriding implications on liquidity squeeze from issuances to bolster cash that is running very low at the Treasury may perversely elevate yields and dampen equities. The dollar, though, may be bid.”

 

THIERRY WIZMAN, GLOBAL FX AND INTEREST RATES STRATEGIST, MACQUARIE GROUP, NEW YORK:

“There is certainly going to be a relief in the fixed income markets. Where there were the most distortions from the uncertainty was in the credit markets and in the Treasury bill market… I think on Tuesday, when the market reopens in the US, we should see those two distortions fixed.

“But what this doesn’t solve, is that along the whole Treasury curve yields have gone up recently. And I think they went up in anticipation that there will be a lot of issuance of Treasury bonds and notes and bills in the next few weeks because the U.S. Treasury has to replenish its cash. And so, I think Treasury bond yields will stay high for a while as that supply is absorbed.

“And I think stocks can do okay, here. This was certainly one overhang over the stock market.

“As far as the dollar goes, I’m inclined to think that it could strengthen the dollar a little bit because it will weaken the argument for de-dollarization. But not by much, just a little bit more, because the dollar has already strengthened in the last few weeks quite a bit.”

 

AMO SAHOTA, DIRECTOR, KLARITYFX, SAN FRANCISCO:

“This will be pretty good for the market. I think it will keep the expectations still pretty red hot with how the Nasdaq has been performing. It will be good for equities.

“I think it may also give more reason for the Fed to feel confident about trying to lift up rates again. I think the market may actually seize the opportunity to price in a little bit more tightening in June, if they think that all else being equal, the economy is still running pretty hot. We can see that, the lift up in the tech sector in particular. Spending has been pretty robust as well.

“I think this just holds the dollar up pretty well as well. I think, generally, everybody should be pretty happy with this, although we want to see what the color of the deal looks like. Initially, it looks like this is coming more from cuts, which is really what the Republicans were pushing for.

“And it’ll be important to see how long the deal is for, whether … we’re going to face these same issues again. Or whether those matters are also going to be resolved with a long-term deal. I very, very much doubt it’s a long-term deal.” – Reuters

Blinken says US to consider visa restrictions over Ugandan anti-gay law

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken. Official White House — CAMERON SMITH VIA FLICKR

 – US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Monday said his government would consider visa restrictions against Ugandan officials and others for the abuse of human rights following the implementation of one of the world’s toughest anti-gay laws.

Mr. Blinken said he has instructed the State Department to update travel guidance to US citizens and businesses over travel to Uganda.

The measures follow President Joe Biden’s condemnation of the Ugandan legislation.

Mr. Biden said the United States may impose sanctions and would evaluate the implications of the law “on all aspects of US engagement with Uganda.”

Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni on Monday signed the anti-LGBTQ laws, which includes the death penalty for “aggravated homosexuality,” drawing Western condemnation and raising the risk of sanctions by aid donors.

“This shameful act is the latest development in an alarming trend of human rights abuses and corruption in Uganda,” Mr. Biden said in a statement.

He said he had directed the White House National Security Council to evaluate the implications of the law on all aspects of US engagement with Uganda, including the ability to safely deliver services under the Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief and other forms of assistance and investment.

Mr. Biden said the US government would consider the impact of the law as part of its review of Uganda’s eligibility for the African Growth and Opportunity Act, which provides duty-free access to goods of designated sub-Saharan African countries.

“And we are considering additional steps, including the application of sanctions and restriction of entry into the United States against anyone involved in serious human rights abuses or corruption,” said Mr. Biden.

Same-sex relations were already illegal in Uganda, as in more than 30 African countries but the new law goes further. – Reuters

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