By Charles Riley • Sunday, December 8 | | | Good morning. Hope you're having a pleasant Sunday. In today's newsletter: It's a pivotal week for the trade war between the United States and China, and British voters head to the polls in what could be a crucial election. Plus, our top weekend reads. ▸ Forwarded this newsletter? Want global markets news and analysis from CNN Business reporters every morning? You can sign up here. | | TRADE WARS A crucial week for global trade | | There's just one week to go before the United States is scheduled to impose a new round of tariffs on $156 billion of Chinese imports. Meanwhile, both sides are still working toward an elusive "phase one" trade deal that could bring some relief to battered global economies. President Donald Trump said this week that it might be better to wait until after the 2020 US presidential election to strike a deal with China. That assessment came just a week after he said negotiations were in their "final throes." Investors should by now be wise to jawboning from the White House. Yet the consensus is that both countries are in fact moving toward a deal. Beijing offered a concession on Friday that may prove pivotal, pledging to reduce tariffs on US soybeans and pork. "The deal is close. It's probably even closer than in mid-November," White House National Economic Council director Larry Kudlow told CNBC on Friday. It's worth stepping back to consider two important points: 1) It's still not clear what a "phase one" deal would cover, and the details really matter. 2) Even if an agreement is reached, tariffs will still be higher than before the trade war started. According to Neil Shearing, group chief economist at Capital Economics, the average US tariff on imports from China has risen from 3% at the start of 2018 to 21%. Even rolling back all the tariffs imposed in September would only take the average down to 18%. Here's Shearing with the big picture: "The fact that both sides have had to resort to a 'phase one' deal in the first place underlines just how difficult it is proving to address more fundamental issues such as industrial policy, technology and intellectual property that will form part of 'phase two.' " "The trade war isn't ending, it's merely shifting away from a narrow focus on tariffs and towards broader issues around technology, investment, industrial strategy and security." | | VOICES How can Boeing fix itself? "A new CEO will show that Boeing is ready to change. A new leader will also be more open and willing to accept and implement a third party's suggestions for systemwide cultural changes." ASHLEY FULMER OF GEORGIA STATE UNIVERSITY Read more from CNN Business on how the US planemaker can regain trust | | TRADE MATTERS A crucial election looms in Britain | | My colleague Hadas Gold wrote a story last week on UK newspapers that are having trouble finding candidates to endorse for the general election on Thursday. Investors may be feeling the same way. On one side of the election is Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who has promised to quickly take the United Kingdom out of the European Union if voters return him to Downing Street. A majority for Johnson's Conservatives could break the political logjam that has caused more than three years of uncertainty over Brexit. But the agreement he's struck with the European Union would erect significant trade barriers for companies operating in the United Kingdom, reduce growth and leave the country poorer. Johnson claims he can negotiate a free trade agreement with Brussels before the end of 2020, but experts doubt a comprehensive deal can be done so quickly. His main opponent is Labour's Jeremy Corbyn. On his wish list: nationalize major utilities, bring about a 32-hour work week, give 10% of corporate shares to workers, increase the power of unions and freeze the retirement age at 66. Labour has pledged to finance higher spending with big tax hikes for corporations and Britain's wealthiest 5%. On Brexit, Corbyn supports a second referendum that includes an option to remain in the European Union. "We agree that a Conservative majority is the best outcome for UK assets and the economy's near-term prospects," said analysts at Capital Economics. But the economic upside is limited. "A fiscal stimulus, some recovery in global growth and the risk of a no deal Brexit being postponed to the end of the year will probably allow growth to pick up a bit. But we now think the increase will be more limited," they added. | | UP NEXT Monday: German trade data; Japan GDP Tuesday: German ZEW survey, China inflation Wednesday: US Federal Reserve decision; US inflation data Thursday: ECB decision; UK general election; Eurozone industrial output; German IFO business climate index Friday: US retail sales | | WHAT WE'RE READING AND WATCHING ▸ India's tech cities are choking on their own success (CNN Business) ▸ The class of 2000 'could have been anything' (NYT) ▸ Hong Kong and the art of dissent (FT) ▸ Metal credit cards are turning up everywhere (WSJ) ▸ I worked for Alex Jones. I regret it (NYT Magazine) ▸ Blood and soil in Narendra Modi's India (The New Yorker) | | | | | |
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