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Japanese investors dump Eurozone bonds at fastest pace in a decade

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Japanese investors dump Eurozone bonds at fastest pace in a decade

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Japanese investors have been selling Eurozone government debt at the fastest pace in more than a decade, with analysts warning that the move by one of the bloc’s cornerstone bondholders could lead to sharp market sell-offs.

Net sales by Japanese investors rose to €41bn in the six months to November — the latest figures to be released — according to data from Japan’s ministry of finance and the Bank of Japan, compiled by Goldman Sachs.

The prospect of higher bond yields at home and political upheaval in Europe — including the collapse of the ruling coalition in Germany leading to elections next month, and turmoil in France which has been operating under an emergency budget law — have accelerated the sales, analysts say. French bonds were the most sold during the period at €26bn.

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The sales add further pressure to indebted European governments already facing a jump in borrowing costs, and highlight how rising Japanese interest rates after years in negative territory are reshaping financial markets around the world.

Japanese investors returning home is a “game changer for Japan and global markets,” said Alain Bokobza, head of global asset allocation at Société Générale.

Although Japanese investors have been net sellers of Eurozone bonds for most of the past few years, the pace has picked up in recent months.

Japanese investment flows have been “a stable source of [European] government bond demand for a long time,” said Tomasz Wieladek, an economist at asset manager T Rowe Price. But markets are now “entering an era of bond vigilance” where “rapid and violent sell-offs” could happen more often.

Gareth Hill, a bond fund manager at Royal London Asset Management, said the scenario had “long been a concern for holders of European government bonds, given the historically high holdings [among] Japanese investors” and could put pressure on the market.

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In addition, soaring costs of hedging against swings in the value of the yen have made overseas debt increasingly unappealing. Despite coming down from a 2022 peak, when hedging costs are accounted for, the 10-year Italian government bond yield for Japanese investors is just over 1 per cent, which is roughly the same as the Japanese 10-year yield, according to Noriatsu Tanji, chief bond strategist of Mizuho Securities in Tokyo. He pointed to regional banks in Japan as being among the main sellers of European debt.

“Japanese investors must be asking themselves quite hard to what extent they should be holding foreign bonds,” said Andres Sanchez Balcazar, head of global bonds at Pictet, Europe’s largest asset manager.

Norinchukin — one of Japan’s largest institutional investors — last year said it planned to offload more than ¥10tn of foreign bonds this financial year. In November, it recorded a loss of around $3bn in the second quarter after realising losses on its large holdings of foreign government bonds.

The pullback by Japanese investors is putting upward pressure on bond yields that have already moved higher since the European Central Bank started to reduce its balance sheet after a vast emergency bond-buying programme during the coronavirus pandemic, said analysts.

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Bar chart of $, tn showing Japan is a huge holder of foreign government debt

France — which has one of Europe’s deepest bond markets and has historically been a favourite among Japanese investors due to the additional yield it offers over benchmark German debt — has seen large Japanese outflows in recent months.

Between June and November, as a political crisis deepened that resulted in the fall of Michel Barnier’s government, Japanese funds’ total outflows reached €26bn, compared with sales of just €4bn in the same period the previous year.

“There is no question that for France the buyer base has changed,” said Seamus Mac Gorain, head of global rates at JPMorgan Asset management.

Over the past 20 years, Japanese investors have become a cornerstone investor in several bond markets as ultra-low yields at home have made foreign investments more attractive, including for big investors such as pension funds who need to buy safe sovereign debt.

Total holdings of foreign bonds by Japanese institutional investors reached $3 trillion at their peak in late 2020, according to IMF.

However, as Japanese investors have started to search for returns at home, their net buying of global debt securities have shrunk to just $15bn in total over the past five years — a far cry from the roughly $500bn in such purchases they made in the previous five years, according to calculations by Alex Etra, a macro strategist at Exante.

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“Whereas Japanese bonds were quite unattractive for domestic investors in the past, they are more attractive now,” said JPMorgan’s Gorain. “That is a structural change.”

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Southern California Rainstorms Raise Risks of Mudslides

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Southern California Rainstorms Raise Risks of Mudslides

A slow-moving rainstorm system settled over Southern California on Sunday, bringing a reprieve from a lengthy dry spell but also the risk of mudslides in areas scarred by this month’s wildfires.

The showers were expected to continue into Monday afternoon, with light rain across the region and intermittent bursts of heavy rain, forecasters said. The rain could reduce fire risks and help vegetation parched by the driest start to a rainy season on record in Los Angeles.

But the National Weather Service also assessed there was a 10 to 20 percent chance of significant mudslides in several Los Angeles County burn scars, sensitive areas where fires devoured trees and brush.

In the burn scars, the charred soil could act like slick pavement when soaked by rain, creating the conditions for mudslides, said Marc Chenard, a meteorologist with the service.

“You just don’t get any absorption of the water,” Mr. Chenard said. “It just all immediately turns into runoff.”

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The highest intensity rain was expected between 4 p.m. on Sunday and 4 p.m. on Monday, according to the service. Los Angeles and Ventura Counties were expected to get up to an inch of total rainfall, and up to three inches was forecast in the mountains around Los Angeles.

The burn scars include areas scorched by the Palisades fire in the Pacific Palisades section of Los Angeles; the Hurst fire near the Sylmar area of the city; the Sunset fire near West Hollywood; the Eaton fire near Pasadena; the Hughes fire near Castaic Lake; and the Franklin fire near Malibu, among others.

Burn scars outside Los Angeles County had a 5 to 10 percent chance of experiencing mudslides, the Weather Service said.

Residents were urged to stock up on supplies and protect property with sandbags. A flood watch was in effect in Los Angeles County until Monday afternoon.

Light rain arrived in Ventura County, north of Los Angeles, on Saturday evening, and picked up across the region on Sunday, the service said.

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The system was drifting southeast through Los Angeles County, delivering lightning and hail in some areas, according to the service. Through Sunday afternoon, the highest rates of rainfall — about three-quarters of an inch per hour — were limited to isolated areas.

Rates over half an inch of rain per hour in the burn scars could pose “some significant issues,” Mr. Chenard warned.

The Los Angeles region had endured a brutal drought for months, feeding this month’s devastating wildfires, which burned across thousands of acres and displaced more than 100,000 people.

Before Saturday, there had been no measurable rain in downtown Los Angeles this year, said John Feerick, a senior meteorologist at AccuWeather. He described the rain as welcome news.

“In general, this is beneficial rain,” Mr. Feerick said. “It should help with the fire situation immensely.”

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“Now, with that comes the risk, because there are burn scars,” he added.

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Mediators aim to shore up fragile ceasefires in Gaza and Lebanon

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Mediators aim to shore up fragile ceasefires in Gaza and Lebanon

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International mediators resolved disagreements over fragile ceasefires in Gaza and Lebanon late on Sunday, after clashes involving the Israeli military and civilians threatened to undermine both accords.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office announced Hamas would be releasing three hostages in Gaza on Thursday, including Arbel Yehud, resolving the first major crisis of the Gaza ceasefire agreement, which took effect one week ago.

In return, Israel will allow displaced Palestinians in Gaza to return to their homes in the north of the shattered territory starting on Monday.

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The issue of Yehud’s release had strained the US-brokered truce between Israel and Hamas despite the release on Saturday of four female Israeli soldiers from Gaza, and 200 Palestinian prisoners from Israeli jails.

Israeli officials claimed Hamas, the Palestinian militant group that controls Gaza, had violated the agreement when it released the soldiers before Yehud, who is the last civilian female hostage still believed to be alive in Gaza.  

Israel retaliated by delaying its withdrawal from the strategic Netzarim corridor, which bisects north and south Gaza, blocking hundreds of thousands of Palestinians from crossing back into the northern part of the territory, as stipulated in the accord.

Over the weekend masses of Palestinians congregated near the corridor, with some families sleeping outside in the winter cold.

The Israeli military said it had fired “warning shots at several gatherings of dozens of suspects who were advancing toward the troops and posed a threat to them”.

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Health authorities in Gaza said two people were killed and nine others injured in the clashes on Sunday.

US, Qatari and Egyptian mediators were able to resolve the crisis by effectively securing an additional hostage release this Thursday, including Yehud.

The weekly hostage release that is set to take place next Saturday will move ahead as planned, with three more Israelis expected to be freed, according to Israeli officials.

In return, several hundred Palestinian prisoners will also be released from Israeli jails.

Hamas on Sunday provided Israel with a list of the remaining hostages in captivity and set to be released as part of the initial six week ceasefire, detailing whether they were alive or dead.

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The war in Gaza was triggered by Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, during which fighters from the group killed 1,200 people and took 250 hostages.

Israel responded with an offensive in Gaza that has killed more than 47,000 people and fuelled a humanitarian catastrophe in the territory.

US President Donald Trump has urged Egypt and Jordan to take in most of the population of Gaza, saying it was time to “clean out” the territory, but his proposal was rejected by the two Arab countries.

Meanwhile Trump’s administration announced that the ceasefire agreement between Israel and Lebanon, reached last November through American mediation, would be extended until February 18.

The accord halted more than a year of fighting between Israel and Hizbollah, the Lebanese militant group that was attacking the Jewish state in solidarity with Hamas.

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Israel made clear last week it would not meet the two-month deadline of Sunday for the withdrawal of its military from southern Lebanon.

Israel has claimed the Lebanese army’s deployments in areas vacated by both its troops and Hizbollah fighters had been too slow to meet the deadline.  

With Israeli forces still holding territory inside Lebanon, hundreds of residents came under Israeli fire as they attempted to return on foot to their villages.

According to Lebanon’s health ministry, 22 people were killed and 124 injured on Sunday.

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President Trump hits Colombia with tariffs for refusing deportation flights

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President Trump hits Colombia with tariffs for refusing deportation flights
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WASHINGTON ― President Donald Trump on Sunday announced stiff new tariffs on imports from Colombia and visa restrictions in retaliation to Colombian President Gustavo Petro denying the entry of U.S. military flights deporting Colombian migrants.

Shortly after Trump’s threat, Petro said he would provide a presidential plane for the “dignified return” of Columbia migrants who face deportations from the U.S.

After learning of two repatriation flights that weren’t allowed to land in Colombia, Trump said he would issue 25% tariffs on all goods coming into the U.S. from Colombia and raise it to 50% tariffs after one week. He further announced the immediate revocation of visas and a travel ban to the U.S. for Colombian government officials and their allies and supporters.

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Trump promised financial sanctions on Colombia and said he would heighten customs and border protection inspections of all Colombian nationals and cargo on national security grounds.  “These measures are just the beginning,” Trump said in a post on Truth Social. “We will not allow the Colombian Government to violate its legal obligations with regard to the acceptance and return of the Criminals they forced into the United States!”

Trump’s moves come as he is seeking to aggressively act on his promise of mass deportations of immigrants in the country illegally. During his first week in office, Trump declared a national emergency at the U.S.-Mexico border and ordered U.S. troops to help carry out deportations, which has resulted in deportees flying back to their home countries in handcuffs.

“The US cannot treat Colombian migrants as criminals,” Petro wrote in a Sunday morning post on X that triggered Trump’s actions. “I deny the entry of American planes carrying Colombian migrants into our territory. The United States must establish a protocol for the dignified treatment of migrants before we receive them.”

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The largest U.S. imports from Colombia include crude oil, coffee, and cut flowers, according to the State Department. Trump has discussed plans to issue tariffs on Mexico, Canada, and China, igniting concerns of trade wars as he begins his second term.

Multiple Latin American countries have pushed back at Trump’s militarized deportations.

Brazil has also condemned the conditions in which deportees have been returned. And last week, Mexico refused to accept a deportation flight for the first time in decades.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio issued a statement Sunday defending the deportation policy and demanding cooperation from Latin American nations.

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“President Trump has made it clear that under his administration, America will no longer be lied to nor taken advantage of. It is the responsibility of each nation to take back their citizens who are illegally present in the United States in a serious and expeditious manner,” Rubio said.

“Colombian President Petro had authorized flights and provided all needed authorizations and then canceled his authorization when the planes were in the air,” Rubio added. “As demonstrated by today’s actions, we are unwavering in our commitment to end illegal immigration and bolster America’s border security.”

Reach Joey Garrison X @joeygarrison.

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