Home Blog Page 7735

China is getting closer to its Lehman moment

By Anjani Trivedi and Shuli Ren

WALL STREET’s movers and shakers are largely seen as part of the solution to the coronavirus-ravaged US economy. Chastened by the collapse of Lehman Brothers and the great recession over a decade ago, they were forced to scale back businesses considered risky and clean up their balance sheets. In this crisis, they’re no longer the problem.

The same can’t be said of China. Beijing has made martyrs of its banks and insurers, asking them to lend to the needy, forgo profits and support the animal spirits of its trillion-dollar capital markets. But, along with brokers, they’re still a troubled bunch, far from being sturdy pillars of the financial system. If anything, COVID-19 has exacerbated credit risks. China’s Lehman moment, when isolated events cross the line into systemic effects, is just lurking around the corner.

Last Friday, regulators took control of nine troubled firms, controlled by fallen billionaire Xiao Jianhua’s empire under Tomorrow Holding Co., totaling more than 1.2 trillion yuan ($171.5 billion) in total assets. It’s one of the largest seizures in China’s recent history. Xiao was taken from Hong Kong’s Four Seasons hotel by Chinese authorities three years ago and has disappeared from the public eye since.

That is unsurprising: Insurers have been problematic since at least 2017. A review then found that their corporate governance scores were deteriorating. Companies like Huaxia Life Insurance Co., one of the seized firms, were selling policies that flouted rules and improperly disclosed policyholders’ information. The insurance regulator said it was “determined to weed out illegal and improper practices.” It also found that companies were falsifying funding sources and leveraging the same assets for multiple loans.

The takeovers come a year after the seizure of Baoshang Bank Co., when we wrote that counterparty and solvency risks had arrived — together. Regulators tried to say then that it was a one-time solution. Yet, the most recent events point to these issues becoming acute, and spreading. At some point, the chain of lending and liquidity will be disrupted.

Beijing has once again shied away from letting the market price such likelihoods. “The dilemma is fundamental,” as analysts at Rhodium Group wrote after the Baoshang incident. Authorities can allow the market to digest failures, or try to maintain “stable” production of ever-riskier forms of credit. They can’t have both. By effectively assuming counterparty risk, regulators are hurting market credibility at a time of rising jitters as financing channels are squeezed.

To be fair, they didn’t have much choice. Heavily leveraged, a single-digit percentage drop in asset value induced by COVID-19 could wipe out these firms’ equity book value. Take Huaxia Life. Over the last decade, via aggressive selling of high-yield savings products, it has become the fourth-largest insurer in China, with close to 600 billion yuan in total assets at the end of 2019. Its assets-to-equity ratio stood at a whopping 26 times.

It’s not hard to imagine large asset write downs behind closed doors. As the impacts of COVID-19 distressed businesses in the second quarter, the worst bond rout in a decade caused investors to nurse losses on even relatively safe wealth management products, not to mention riskier non-credit investments. In the first three months of the year, data provided by CLSA Ltd. show that Huaxia Life’s book value shrank by 23% quarter on quarter, due to mark-to-market losses of its investments. It’s no wonder that the insurer is on regulators’ radar, or that they’re trying to send a message.

Still, China’s financial woes extend beyond a fugitive businessman’s overly extended balance sheet. Since 1995, only 12 firms have been seized by the central bank or other agencies — half of them over the last year, excluding the ones last week. Some large trust companies have fallen afoul of authorities, unable to pay back investors’ principal and interest in recent months.

Under the latest takeovers, regulators will send teams to take the roles of shareholders, directors and management. Other financial firms, including some of China’s largest insurers and securities houses, will end up as trustees. In theory, they’ll push to shrink the troubled businesses and monetize assets.

Call it what you want, but this is China’s version of financial contagion. Just plugging holes will no longer cut it. How many firms can regulators try to salvage? How much capital will be injected? Can they find willing shareholders and white knights?

The answers to such questions won’t come without pain. According to CLSA, 11 insurers with about 15% of the market and 2.4 trillion yuan in total assets would be “walking a tightrope” with regulators. On average, if their asset value was 2% to 5% less than what they showed in 2019, their surplus capital — the capital over the minimum regulatory red line — would have been wiped out. If Beijing ever needs to rescue them all, the costs would be enormous. If not, the insurers would have no choice but to dump assets, which could threaten the broader market.

So far, Beijing hasn’t successfully unwound troublesome financial empires. In the two years since the overextended buyer of New York’s Waldorf Astoria, Anbang Insurance Group Co., was seized, attempts to dispose of its assets and find strategic investors have turned into a prolonged and painful process.

It may be time for Beijing to face its fears and let some companies fall off the cliff. In doing so, it may finally be able to save the ones that really matter.

BLOOMBERG OPINION

Internet analyst sees permanent tailwind from lengthy lockdowns

Internet companies are likely to be long-term winners from the pandemic as lockdown measures have now lasted long enough for changes in consumer behavior to become permanent, according to Credit Suisse.

“It takes 66 days for a change in behavior to turn into a habit,” and “we are now well into the time frame for consumer behaviors learned during quarantine to become lasting habits,” the firm wrote.

Analyst Stephen Ju singled out social-media companies as among those that would likely benefit from this tailwind, echoing a growing consensus that has been made elsewhere about e-commerce names.

As part of its call, Credit Suisse raised its price targets on Facebook, Snap, Pinterest, and Google-parent Alphabet, all of which derive most of their revenue from digital advertising.

“One of the biggest questions facing investors is ‘will it stick’ in terms of app engagement” and online purchasing behavior, the firm wrote. The length of the lockdown is “a clear signal that the acceleration in queries, time spent, and e-commerce purchasing should be growing and hopefully accelerating from a higher baseline.” The firm cited a Google Cloud Next session for the statistic about 66 days.

The First Trust Dow Jones Internet Index Fund, an exchange-traded fund that tracks Internet stocks, is up more than 30% in 2020. The S&P 500 is higher by less than 1%.

Credit Suisse’s comments mirror a recent report from Jefferies about e-commerce stocks. “Behavioral changes brought about by the pandemic have permanently increased online consumption,” the firm wrote, adding that e-commerce traffic “has remained robust even after states began reopening.”

Earlier this month, Bloomberg Intelligence calculated that the penetration of digital U.S. retail sales “could double by 2024,” a trend accelerated by coronavirus-related store closings. Citi also expects online retail will continue to gain share. While total U.S. retail sales “are expected to be only 1% above 2019 levels” in 2022, “e-commerce is expected to increase 43%,” while brick-and-mortar retail falls 4%, the firm wrote, citing eMarketer forecasts.

EU leaders agree on massive stimulus plan

European Union leaders agreed on a massive stimulus plan at a pre-dawn meeting on July 21. — REUTERS

BRUSSELS — European Union (EU) leaders agreed on a massive stimulus plan for their coronavirus-blighted economies at a pre-dawn meeting on Tuesday after a fractious summit that lasted almost five days.

Summit Chairman Charles Michel tweeted “Deal” shortly after the 27 leaders reached agreement at a 5.15 a.m. (0315 GMT) plenary session.

“This agreement sends a concrete signal that Europe is a force for action,” Mr. Michel said at a dawn news conference

“It is about a lot more than money. It is about workers and families, their jobs, their health and their well-being. I believe this agreement will be seen as a pivotal moment in Europe’s journey, but it will also launch us into the future.”

French President Emmanuel Macron said the deal was truly historic and that he was convinced the recovery plan and budget could meet the challenge of the coronavirus pandemic.

Officials said the deal, which came after Mr. Michel presented compromises on a 750 billion euro recovery fund, is critical to dispel doubts about the bloc’s very future.

News of the deal saw the Euro rise to a fresh four-month high of $1.1470.

The EU was slow to coordinate its initial response to the COVID-19 pandemic and, already weakened by Britain’s departure from the bloc, a united front on economic aid would demonstrate that it can step up to a crisis and stay united.

“It has been a long summit and a challenging summit…,” Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin said as the Brussels summit approached the record length set at a 2000 meeting in the French city of Nice of almost five full days.

European nations have done a better job of containing the coronavirus than the United States after a devastating early few months that hit Italy and Spain particularly hard, collaborating on medical, travel and economic fronts.

The European Central Bank has pumped unparalleled money into economies to keep them going, while capitals hammer out their recovery fund.

Diplomats said the leaders appeared to put aside the rancour that stood in the way of a compromise over hours of haggling through the weekend.

‘STINGY AND EGOTISTICAL’
Emotions had ran high at a dinner on Sunday as a group of fiscally frugal northern nations led by the Netherlands stood their ground on the level of free grants within a proposed special recovery fund of 750 billion euros overall.

Mr. Macron lost patience in the early hours of Monday, banging his fist on the table in frustration at “sterile blockages” by the “frugals,” two diplomats said.

Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki also railed against the “frugals,” branding them “a group of stingy, egotistic states” that looked at things through the prism of their own interests.

Poland would be a top beneficiary of the recovery package, receiving tens of billions of euros in grants and cheap loans, along with high-debt Mediterranean-rim countries that have taken the brunt of the pandemic in Europe.

But the rhetorical skirmishing faded on Monday, and the leaders homed in on an agreement on the stimulus package and, linked to it, the EU’s 2021-2027 common budget of around 1.1 trillion euros.

Hopes for a deal to help address Europe’s deepest recession since World War Two sent Italy’s borrowing costs to their lowest since early March and pushed the euro to a 19-week high.

Mr. Michel proposed that within the 750 billion euro recovery fund, 390 billion should be non-repayable grants, down from 500 billion originally proposed, and the rest in repayable loans.

The Netherlands had pushed for a veto on aid for countries that backslide on economic reform, but diplomats said it was now willing to back a “stop-the-clock” mechanism by which member states could put a brake on disbursements for three months and have them reviewed.

Disbursements will also be linked to governments observing the rule of law. Hungary, backed by eurosceptic ally Poland, had threatened to veto the package if funds were made conditional on upholding democracy, but diplomats said a way forward on that was found. — Reuters

Singapore grapples with deadly dengue

SINGAPORE is on track to record its worst dengue outbreak in history, with new weekly cases that have surpassed Covid-19 cases in the city-state.

Recorded cases of the disease reached 1,736 in the week ending July 18, the highest number of weekly infections ever recorded, according to the country’s National Environment Agency. Dengue, also known as break-bone fever, is spread via mosquito bites and can cause symptoms like fever and body aches.

Deaths from dengue are creeping up even as health authorities in the country continue to grapple with the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. So far this year, 19 people have died of dengue, the Straits Times reported Monday, about two-thirds the reported death toll of 27 people from Covid-19. Like dengue, new Covid-19 cases are still averaging a triple-digit daily rise, though the figure has tapered off somewhat from previous months.

The country’s environmental agency has warned that the total number of dengue cases this year — currently at more than 18,900 cases — is expected to surpass a historical high of over 22,000 reported in 2013. Last week, Singapore announced stiffer penalties for households and businesses repeatedly found with mosquito breeding grounds on their premises, while vector control efforts like fogging have increased. — Bloomberg

MP Promotions thrilled to have Marcial in its fold

RECOGNIZING how Tokyo Olympics-bound Eumir Felix Marcial brings added dimension to its roster of fighters, Manny Pacquiao (MP) Promotions said it is thrilled to have the boxer in its fold and take the latter’s career to another level.

Met members of media at the online Philippine Sportswriters Association Forum on Tuesday for the first time after agreeing to a promotional deal last week, Mr. Marcial and MP Promotions President Sean Gibbons said they are excited over the newly signed partnership and that they are looking forward to getting things going and exploring the numerous opportunities ahead.

After taking his time to evaluate all his options in turning professional, Mr. Marcial, 24, finally revealed last Thursday that he had made the decision to sign a six-year promotional deal with the group of Filipino boxing legend Manny Pacquiao as he believes under the promotion he would be taken care of and that he would continue to grow as a fighter.

In choosing to sign with MP Promotions, Zamboanga native Marcial said a key factor was the former’s full support of his desire to continue representing the country in international tournaments like the Southeast Asian Games, Asian Games and the Olympics.

Right now, International Boxing Association (AIBA) rules allow professionals to compete in events it sanctions, something the boxer wants to continue pursuing.

With MP Promotions, Mr. Marcial joins world champions Pedro Taduran, Johnriel Casimero and Jerwin Ancajas, whose paths as world-class pro fighters he wants to follow.

Given the circumstances of Mr. Marcial as a “pro-Olympian fighter,” apart from his vast potential to establish a solid professional career, Mr. Gibbons said MP Promotions is thrilled to have welterweight Mr. Marcial on board their team.

“I think we have the brightest, biggest prospect from the Philippines in Eumir. What an honor to have him in MP Promotions. I’m not used to working with amateurs but I’m excited to work with him,” said Mr. Gibbons.

“He takes the promotion to another level. We usually work with top fighters already but Eumir is special because he qualified for the Olympics. He is a unique fighter. The Philippines don’t have big boxers like him. His journey is different because in the Olympics he is also representing the country,” the MP Promotions official added.

SUPPORTING OLYMPIC QUEST
With Mr. Marcial’s contract built around fulfilling his Olympic obligations and pursuing his gold medal dreams, Mr. Gibbons shared that the first year of the contract would largely be dedicated to supporting Mr. Marcial’s preparation.

They are currently working with the boxer for the best possible arrangement for his training, including considering Mr. Marcial’s request to bring over his coaches from the amateur ranks, like Don Abnett and Ronald Chavez, citing familiarity, as well as in consideration of the current situation with the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.

“We are working with Eumir and the federation (Alliance of Boxing Associations of the Philippines),” said Mr. Gibbons.

Mr. Gibbons went on to say that they do not see Mr. Marcial’s decision to turn professional getting in the way of what he wants to accomplish in the rescheduled Olympics next year.

MP Promotions is looking to give Mr. Marcial a couple of fights before he plunges to exclusive Olympic training next year.

The promotion is eyeing one fight in October or November depending on the COVID-19 situation.

Featuring Mr. Marcial in a four or six-rounder undercard of a possible Pacquiao fight, too, is not being discounted, Mr. Gibbons said.

Mr. Marcial booked a spot in the Olympic Games in Tokyo at the 2020 Asia and Oceania Olympic boxing qualifiers in Amman, Jordan, in March. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

PBA on-court team training set to be delayed

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

THE scheduled resumption of on-court team training in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) is set to be delayed as the league is still waiting for the administrative order from pertinent government agencies that would green-light the return of activities.

Targeted to begin on Wednesday, July 22, the on-court team training may be moved to start next week as the league is expecting to receive a copy of the administrative order within this week.

“I had a talk with Games and Amusements Board (GAB) Chairman Baham Mitra Thursday. He expects to get the administrative order this week,” PBA Commissioner Willie Marcial was quoted as saying by the league website on Monday.

Despite the delay, Mr. Marcial said they are still upbeat of team training finally pushing through.

In principle, the PBA’s return for some activities had been approved by the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious after the league submitted its proposed guidelines and protocol for a gradual return to on-court training.

But PBA ball teams still cannot proceed with their workouts until the release of the Joint Administrative Order (JAO) by the GAB, Department of Health and the Philippine Sports Commission.

The JAO contains the implementing guidelines governing the conduct of professional and nonprofessional sports training while the country is under community quarantine brought about by the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.

The league is angling to resume some activities, beginning with the on-court team training, progressing to scrimmages, then eventually returning to competition after the league season was suspended on March 11.

Before teams can start with on-court training, however, their players must undergo the first of a series of swab testing, which the league hopes to complete this week.

During the on-court training, players are expected to abide by the “closed circuit” method that has them confining their travel as much as possible to home-to-practice facility and back.

But if the players have to go somewhere else they have to make a log entry of it and inform the health officer chosen by the team to ensure proper tracing.

Violation of the imposed closed circuit method would merit a P5,000 fine on the initial offense, which would continue to rise for successive offenses.

Protocol for players are also in place during the workouts themselves, including those pertaining to proper distancing and hygiene. Failure to comply with them accompanies a P20,000 fine on the first offense and a higher penalty in the event of continued violation. The workouts, which limit only six individuals on the court, including four players, at a time, will also be overseen by the team’s health officer.

The PBA has not set a definite date yet on when it would resume the currently suspended season but is hoping to make a final decision on it in August.

UP Fighting Maroons look back at their historic UAAP Season 81 run

UAAP Season 81 did not end up with a championship for the men’s basketball team of the University of the Philippines (UP), but for the Fighting Maroons who were part of that historic journey, that year left so many memories to last them a lifetime.

Recently reunited via Zoom call, dubbed Zoomustahan, members of the UP team in the University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP) back in 2018 looked back at what they were able to accomplish that season as well as touched base with one another during this time of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.

Present at the Zoomustahan were Season 81 captain Paul Desiderio, that season’s league most valuable player Bright Akhuetie, Jun Manzo, Juan Gomez de Liaño, Javi Gomez de Liaño, Diego Dario, Jarrell Lim, Gelo Vito, Janjan Jaboneta, Will Gozum, Pio Longa, Jaydee Tungcab, JJ Española and head coach Bo Perasol.

Hosting the get-together were former UP courtside reporter Agatha Uvero and Nowhere To Go But UP: How a Basketball Team Inspired a Nation author Naveen Ganglani.

In Season 81, the Fighting Maroons ended 32 years of finals appearance drought in the UAAP, doing it in a manner where they overcame numerous challenges both as individuals and as a team.

UP began that year slow, finishing the opening round of the eliminations with a 3-4 record.

In the second round, the Maroons showed firmer footing, winning 5-of-7 of their matches, including their last three games that propelled them to the Final Four.

The last of the three matches came at the expense of the De La Salle Green Archers, 97-81, which took a huge toll on the latter’s playoff hopes.

The victory over La Salle thrust UP to the UAAP semifinals for the first time in 21 years, meeting the Adamson Soaring Falcons who enjoyed a twice-to-beat advantage.

But instead of being content on reaching the Final Four, UP showed no let-up and continued to carve its path to the Big Dance.

The Maroons fashioned out dig-deep performances in the semifinals against the Falcons, including a huge play in the dying seconds of their 73-71 Game One victory where Akhuetie scored the winning basket off an inbounds play.

“That was a classic. There was no way to rehearse that the way it happened, even if it was a play that was designed by Coach Ronnie (Magsanoc) at practice. Nobody could have prepared for the way it was executed,” said Desiderio of the winning play that had Juan Gomez de Liaño on the passing end . “That’s why we still talk about it today.”

UP followed it up with another gutsy performance in Game Two to complete the upset of Adamson, 89-87, and advance to the finals against defending champions Ateneo Blue Eagles.

In the finals, however, the Maroons bowed to the Eagles in two games.

Looking back at their run in Season 81, Mr. Perasol said it was truly something to be proud of. It might not have ended with a title in their hands but it displayed the resolve of the team and the vast improvement of the school’s basketball program.

“You don’t win with ‘magic.’ You have to have the skills and you have to put in the effort. Even if you keep on fighting, if you do not have the set of skills to match up with other teams, it will be difficult. You cannot achieve anything,” said the UP coach.

“There were a lot of times in UP history where the teams really fought hard, and you cannot discount the fighting heart of UP. But this bunch of guys, they not only had the heart to compete but they also had the skills to back it up,” Mr. Perasol added.

The recent Zoomustahan was the second among Fighting Maroons alumni.

In April, members of the 2014 UP men’s basketball team, which broke a 27-game losing streak that led the controversial bonfire celebration, also had a Zoom call hosted by former player Mikee Reyes. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

NBA says no player tested positive for COVID-19 in the past week

TORONTO — The National Basketball Association (NBA) said on Monday that none of the 346 players who have been tested for COVID-19 over the last week on its bubble-like campus at Disney World in Florida returned positive tests.

When the NBA, which will resume its season on July 30 at Disney World without spectators, released its previous COVID-19 update on July 13 it said two of the 322 players who arrived at the campus since July 7 had tested positive.

In the event that a player on the campus returns a confirmed positive test in the future, the NBA said he will be isolated until he clears the rules established by the league and union representing its players.

The NBA, which halted its season in March, will have 22 of its 30 teams play eight seeding games to determine a full 16-team playoff field that will follow the traditional postseason format with four best-of-seven series.

All games, practices and housing are at the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex inside the Orlando resort, which has multiple hotels and arenas, and allows the league to limit outside exposure.

WESTBROOK SET TO JOIN TEAMMATES
Meanwhile, Houston Rockets coach Mike D’Antoni said star point guard Russell Westbrook will arrive in Florida on Monday.

Westbrook, who announced July 13 he had tested positive for the coronavirus, will quarantine in his hotel room at the Walt Disney World resort until he has negative readings on two COVID-19 tests at least 24 hours apart.

“He is about ready to land here pretty soon,” D’Antoni told reporters. “It will give everyone a little pep in their step.”

D’Antoni said the former NBA Most Valuable Player is unlikely to play in the first of Houston’s three scrimmages, but the Rockets are hopeful to have him back this weekend.

The Rockets resume the season on July 31 against the Dallas Mavericks at the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex near Orlando.

Westbrook, 31, averaged 27.5 points, 8.0 rebounds and 7.0 assists in 53 games before the season came to a halt on March 11 amid the pandemic.

The nine-time All-Star was playing in his first season with the Rockets after being acquired in a trade with the Oklahoma City Thunder last summer. He played 11 seasons with the Thunder, highlighted by a 2016-17 campaign in which he earned NBA MVP honors after averaging a career-best 31.6 points to go along with 10.7 rebounds and 10.4 assists. — Reuters

Red Bull sees Albon getting stronger and stronger

LONDON — Red Bull sees plenty of untapped potential in Alex Albon and are happy with the British-born Thai, according to team boss Christian Horner.

Williams driver George Russell defended his friend and rival at the weekend’s Hungarian Grand Prix, saying he was “being made to look like an idiot and he’s absolutely not” after Albon qualified 13th.

The Thai, a Formula One rookie last year alongside established race winner Max Verstappen, ultimately put in a strong performance to finish fifth while his Dutch teammate was second.

“I’m very pleased with Alex. He’s picked up a bit of criticism which has been very harsh on him,” Horner told Sky Sports television.

“We made a mistake in the timing [in qualifying], we put too much pressure on him. We have to take responsibility to that.

“He’s done the passing maneuvers when he needed to, he’s responded very well. I really believe that Alex has got a lot more potential that we just haven’t uncovered yet.”

Albon has yet to stand on the podium but is fifth in the championship. Verstappen has already enjoyed two podium finishes this season.

Horner recognized the Red Bull was a difficult car to drive at the moment, with both drivers spinning frequently and struggling in practice in Hungary.

“Max’s ability to drive around those problems, that’s experience on Max’s side that Alex doesn’t have,” said the principal.

“He (Albon) will get, and is getting, stronger and stronger.” — Reuters

LeBron’s focus

Considering that LeBron James was still facing an uphill battle when the National Basketball Association suspended the 2019-20 season in the middle of March, the decision not to include the upcoming seeding games in voters’ consideration for individual awards all but formalizes Giannis Antetokounmpo’s claim to the Maurice Podoloff Trophy. Forget that the 16-time All-Star managed to put together an outstanding run after the break; he normed an even 30 markers (on 55% shooting from the field), 8.2 caroms, and 9.4 dimes in steering the Lakers to an 8-2 slate. For all his exertions during the run (including against such notables as the Clippers, Bucks, and Celtics), he failed to definitively bridge the gap the reigning Most Valuable Player built early on.

Under the circumstances, James was right to focus on things he can influence, and to note the uselessness of delving in those he can’t. “I’m not disappointed because things happen,” he said in his scheduled virtual presser yesterday. “You control what you can control, and I can’t control” the schedule disrupted by the novel coronavirus pandemic. In any case, he argued, he has done more than enough to make his case for the accolade. “I think that I’ve shown what I’m capable of doing. Not only individually, but from a team’s perspective, us being Number One in the West.”

James was, needless to say, aiming to counter criticism that he built his body of work — which includes an eye-popping eight straight trips to the Finals — while situated in the so-called Leastern Conference. “To be able to have our team at the top of the Western Conference and playing the way that we were playing at that time and the way I was playing, it’s definitely a good feeling,” he disclosed. And the numbers do bear him out: he figures to be just the sixth player in league annals to post 25 and 10 for a whole season, and the oldest ever to top the assists category for the first time.

The flipside, of course, is that the Bucks aren’t merely pacing the East. Starring the ultra-efficient Antetokounmpo, they’re ahead of everyone else in the standings. They’re likewise heavily favored to make the Finals. Meanwhile, the Lakers need to deal with a crowd en route, and while stripped of the definite homecourt advantage the Staples Center would have provided. James isn’t fazed, though; he’s determined to hoist the Larry O’Brien Trophy when all is said and done, and not simply because he’s an old 35 with a fast-closing window of opportunity.

Will James be able to add a fifth MVP hardware to his mantel this year? The answer is no. Will he be able to get a fourth ring, instead? It’s much less clear, at least to those from the outside looking in. As far as he’s concerned, it’s already his to lose.

 

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.

‘Follow the Fed’ rally may soon fizzle across bond markets

After a torrid rally sparked by the Federal Reserve’s announcement in March that it would begin buying corporate debt, investment-grade bonds have stalled near record levels. — REUTERS

A breakneck rally across bond markets may slow as traders come to grips with the notion that the Federal Reserve’s support isn’t unconditional.

After a torrid rally sparked by the Fed’s announcement in March that it would begin buying corporate debt, investment-grade bonds have stalled near record levels. A similar pattern holds true for high-yield markets, where spreads are broadly trading sideways after the asset class’s best returns in a decade brought them close to pre-pandemic levels. And the central bank’s oft-repeated commitment to keeping interest rates low have locked benchmark Treasury yields into an unrelenting range close to historic lows.

The degree to which bond markets have rebounded after a trading freeze during March’s turmoil is largely the reason why they’re stalling out now. A parade of policy makers have hinted in recent weeks that the central bank won’t have to expand its balance sheet and buy bonds as aggressively as anticipated, with liquidity restored and primary markets buzzing. While bets the Fed isn’t going to be blindly buying bonds has capped gains for now, prospects that it might start again has cushioned any downside, according to Wells Fargo Investment Institute.

“There has been a slight misunderstanding between the markets and the Fed,” said Sameer Samana, Wells Fargo Investment’s senior global market strategist. “What the Fed has basically said is: ‘Our goal is to make sure we have orderly and liquid markets.’ The market has taken that to mean, ‘Okay, we’re going to buy like there’s no tomorrow.’ If the market’s able to trade efficiently, the Fed is starting to see their job as mission accomplished.”

After soaring 150 basis points in March, high-grade spreads tightened by 70 basis points in April and have dropped about 14 basis points so far in July through Friday. Junk-bond spreads have tightened 70 basis points this month, after a 380 basis-point surge amid March’s turmoil.

Weekly figures published Thursday showed that the Fed’s balance sheet edged higher over the past week—after falling for roughly a month—but remained below $7 trillion. It exploded by $3 trillion from early March to mid-June as the central bank pumped liquidity into the financial system to keep credit flowing via short-term loans and bond buying.

To be sure, there’s a reason ‘don’t fight the Fed’ is one of the most commonly deployed refrains in financial markets. The central bank has nearly unlimited firepower at its disposal to support the U.S. economy, the sheer magnitude of which was on display after the Fed slashed rates to near-zero and pumped trillions worth of liquidity into markets. Among the tools yet to be tapped are yield-curve control, an option that Federal Reserve Bank of New York President John Williams didn’t rule out in an interview Thursday.

Now, markets are largely back to normal and policy makers see the balance sheet’s decline as a healthy sign. But that’s after the Fed’s late-March pledge to buy corporate debt set of a wave of front-running flows, with credit ETFs and mutual funds absorbing record amounts of cash. As analysts downsize their forecasts for the central bank’s balance-sheet growth, investors are assessing whether that was overkill.

“People got a little bit carried away, were probably a little bit too positioned, and we forget that bonds often are kind of boring and we’re getting to that stage. If you want quick returns, it’s hard to see how you get them with some of these yields where they are,” said Peter Tchir, head of macro strategy at Academy Securities. “With investment grade and high-yield, you’re back to hoping you can clip a coupon rather than any big price appreciation.”

The slimming-down of the balance sheet also helps explain why the equity market — outside of the megatech stocks—have hit a wall as well, according to Mr. Samana. While the S&P 500 has rebounded about 45% since March’s low to erase this year’s losses, the bulk of those gains came before early June, and are largely thanks to tech heavyweights pushing the index higher. In contrast, the small-cap Russell 2000 Index is still 12% lower year-to-date.

“Equities haven’t really gone anywhere since early June, that dovetails nicely with the slowdown in the balance sheet,” Mr. Samana said. “It’s a very small sliver of the equity market that’s making all-time highs and it’s the part that not only benefits from what the Fed’s done, but also benefits from all the COVID-related things.” — Bloomberg

US airlines face end of business travel as they knew it

Even after 18 to 24 months, business travel will remain at least 25% below pre-pandemic levels and may stay down by as much as half, said Bruno Despujol, a partner at consultant Oliver Wyman. Trips for internal purposes, which account for as much as 40% of business demand, is most likely to decline. — Delta One Suite

US airlines hammered by the catastrophic loss of passengers during the pandemic are confronting a once-unthinkable scenario: that this crisis will obliterate much of the corporate flying they’ve relied on for decades to prop up profits.

“It is likely that business travel will never return to pre-COVID levels,” said Adam Pilarski, senior vice-president at Avitas, an aviation consultant. “It is one of those unfortunate cases where the industry will be permanently impaired and what we lost now is gone, never to come back.”

At stake is the most lucrative part of the airline industry, driven by businesses that accepted—however grudgingly—the need to plop down a few thousand dollars for a last-minute ticket across the US or over an ocean. While millions of customers fly rarely, road warriors are constantly in the air to close a deal, depose a witness or impress a client. Business travel makes up 60% to 70% of industry sales, according to estimates by the trade group Airlines for America.

That’s under threat in the wake of an unprecedented collapse in passengers that started four months ago. Half the respondents in a survey of Fortune 500 CEOs said trips at their companies would never return to what they were before COVID-19, according to Fortune magazine.

Even industry leaders such as Delta Air Lines Inc. Chief Executive Officer Ed Bastian are bowing to the inevitable.

“I don’t think we’ll ever get back entirely to where we were in 2019 on the volume of business traffic,” Mr. Bastian said July 14 after the company reported an adjusted quarterly loss of $2.8 billion, a record. United Airlines Holdings Inc. discloses results Tuesday, followed by Southwest Airlines Co. and American Airlines Group Inc. on Thursday.

Even after 18 to 24 months, business travel will remain at least 25% below pre-pandemic levels and may stay down by as much as half, said Bruno Despujol, a partner at consultant Oliver Wyman. Trips for internal purposes, which account for as much as 40% of business demand, is most likely to decline.

‘LOCKED DOWN’
At Sunnova Energy International Inc., travel next year may prove to be just half of 2019 levels and possibly as little as a quarter, said Chief Executive Officer John Berger. The Houston-based residential solar company, which used to put executives in premium seats or coach depending on the length of the trip, is planning to hold more meetings by video conference.

“We’re pretty much locked down right now,” Mr. Berger said. “We’re not doing much travel—really rare. Now, I’m starting to get worried if we’re going to do much travel in Q1” of next year.

Premium domestic demand collapsed in April with the rest of the market, and those fares cratered in May to the lowest in data going back to 2008. This week, a last-minute ticket for American’s luxury first-class service between New York and Los Angeles listed for $3,322, compared with $8,000 when those flights began in 2014.

Warren Buffett, who returned to airline investing in 2016 after years of shunning the stocks, exited his stakes in American, Delta, Southwest, and United earlier this year as the novel coronavirus caused a collapse in flying.

“The world changed for airlines,” Mr. Buffett told Berkshire Hathaway Inc. investors in May.

Carriers are now weighing job cuts after $25 billion in federal payroll aid expires at the end of September. Southwest said Monday that about 28% of its employees have agreed to leave the company temporarily or permanently. American said last week it would warn 25,000 employees, or 29% of its US workforce, that they’re at risk of losing their positions. United has sent notices of potential layoffs to 45%.

The airline industry is well-versed in failure, with bankruptcies dotting the first two decades of the 21st century after years of heedless growth. Predictions of business travel’s demise proved premature after the Sept. 11 attacks and again after the Great Recession of 2008–09.

Consolidation and job-cutting at the airlines helped drive those comebacks, and some carriers predict the eventual return of their cash-cow customers.

“We believe business travel will come back and come back strong as ever,” said Andrew Nocella, United’s chief commercial officer. “But it will take about six to 12 months to work through the system once a vaccine or treatment becomes widely available.”

VIDEO CONFERENCES
What’s different now isn’t just the depth of airlines’ travails, however. It’s also the opportunities for technological workarounds at the banks, technology giants, law firms and other professional-services companies that once shelled out for first-class seats.

US passengers counts plummeted more than 95% at their worst, with virus-fearing travelers of all types shunning the tight quarters that airlines relied on to maximize revenue from each flight.

Even with some leisure travel perking up, the numbers aren’t enough, and Wall Street is offering a clear verdict: The six largest US airlines ended last week with a combined market value that’s less than the $70 billion of Zoom Video Communications Inc., whose software has made “Zoom calls” a byword in households as well as boardrooms.

Improved video conferences further lower the chances of returning to the heyday of corporate flying as companies look at travel budgets as ripe for cuts, said Eric Bernardini, a managing director at consultant AlixPartners.

“It won’t replace the need to go visit your customer, but there will be an impact on how many people are going to travel and how often,’ he said.

WARY CUSTOMERS
For now, big US carriers are orienting their schedules toward leisure destinations and domestic trips. Meanwhile, companies are grappling with a changing web of government travel restrictions at home and abroad because of the pandemic.

Columbia Sportswear Co. is revising its policies, evaluating the safety protocols of hotels, rental-car companies and ride-share providers. Health risks are joined by concerns an employee could get stuck in two-week quarantines when traveling to other countries and returning to the US.

“Face-to-face contact and visibility is important. That said, no one’s going anywhere,” said Peter Bragdon, Columbia’s chief administrative officer. “It’s pretty easy to imagine how something that was meant to be a few days of travel turns into five weeks of being caught in a snarl.” — Bloomberg