Category: Pandemic

  • MIL-OSI Security: Texas Woman Pleaded Guilty to Fraudulently Obtaining Emergency Rental Assistance Under A COVID-19 Relief Program

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    BOISE – Tanisha Gray, 39, of Houston, Texas, pleaded guilty to wire fraud, Acting U.S. Attorney Justin Whatcott announced today.  Gray fraudulently obtained emergency rental assistance from Idaho Housing and Finance Association (IHFA) and other states’ housing programs that were providing housing assistance for individuals unable to pay rent due to a financial hardship related to the COVID-19 pandemic.

    In early 2021, Congress established the Emergency Rental Assistance (ERA) program to provide financial assistance to eligible low-income households to cover the costs of rent, rental arrears, utilities, and other housing-related expenses during the COVID-19 pandemic.  IHFA was an administrator of the ERA program for the state of Idaho and received federal funds to provide housing assistance during the pandemic.  IHFA provided emergency rent and utility assistance to eligible Idaho renters who had experienced a financial hardship due to or during the COVID-19 pandemic. Eligible households could receive assistance with their rental arrearages, plus three months of future rent, and utility assistance, if requested.

    According to court records, from in or around 2022 through 2023, Gray sought rental assistance from the IHFA and other housing programs by submitting false and fraudulent applications that falsely identified herself as a landlord for various properties.  As part of the scheme, Gray also submitted fraudulent supporting documentation including fictitious leases, property management agreements, ledgers for rental arrears, tenant income records, addresses, and certifications of eligibility.  As a result of the fraudulent applications Gray submitted and caused to be submitted to the various emergency rental assistance programs in Idaho and other states, Gray received more than $62,000 in fraud proceeds.

    Senior U.S. District Judge B. Lynn Winmill will sentence Gray on May 14, 2025.  The charge in this case is punishable by up to 20 years in federal prison, a maximum fine of $250,000, and up to three years of supervised release.

    Acting U.S. Attorney Whatcott commended the investigations by the Boise Police Department and the United States Secret Service, as well as the assistance of the Idaho Housing and Finance Association, which led to the charges.  Assistant U.S Attorney Brittney Campbell is prosecuting this case.

    ###

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Global: USAID’s apparent demise and the US withdrawal from WHO put millions of lives worldwide at risk and imperil US national security

    Source: The Conversation – USA – By Nicole Hassoun, Professor of Philosophy, Binghamton University, State University of New York

    USAID was established by President John F. Kennedy in 1961 as a way to consolidate existing foreign aid programs. JAM STA ROSA/AFP via Getty Images

    On his first day in office, Jan. 20, 2025, President Donald Trump began a drastic reshaping of the United States’ role in global health as part of the first 26 executive orders of his new term.

    He initiated the process of withdrawing the U.S. from the World Health Organization, which works to promote and advance global health, following through on his first attempt in 2020. He also ordered staff members of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to cut off all communications with WHO representatives.

    In his first week, Trump also issued a stop-work order pending a 90-day review on nearly all programs of the United States Agency for International Development, or USAID.

    Many experts view this as a first step in dismantling the organization, which facilitates global efforts to improve health and education and to alleviate poverty. The sweeping move left aid workers and the people who depend on them in a panic and interrupted dozens of clinical trials across the world.

    President Trump’s executive order sparked legal action from international health care organizations, resulting in a federal judge ordering a temporary halt to the Trump administration’s freeze on foreign aid. Ultimately, that legal action was unsuccessful.

    On Feb. 23, the Trump administration put nearly all of USAID’s 4,700 workers on paid administrative leave globally and stated that it would be terminating 1,600 of those positions.

    Most recently, on Feb. 25, a federal judge ordered the Trump administration to allow some USAID funding to resume and required that it pay all of its invoices for work completed before the foreign aid freeze went into effect.

    I am the executive director of the Global Health Impact project, an organization that aims to advance access to essential medicines in part by evaluating their health consequences around the world, and a researcher focusing on global health and development ethics and policy.

    In my view and that of many other public health scholars, closing down USAID will imperil our national security and put millions of lives at risk.

    Because of the USAID stop-work order, 500,000 metric tons of food are at risk of spoiling.

    20 million with HIV treated

    USAID works with both nongovernmental organizations and private companies to help distribute medicines and vaccines around the world. The agency also helps improve government policies and invest in research and development to contain and address epidemics and pandemics.

    Starting in the late 1960s, for instance, USAID helped lead the effort to eliminate smallpox and has also helped fight polio and other devastating diseases over the past six decades.

    The smallpox pandemic was one of the worst of all time – it killed one-third of the people infected, causing an estimated 300 million to 500 million deaths worldwide in the 20th century. By contrast, COVID-19 killed less than 1% of those infected.

    These efforts have brought immense financial as well as health benefits to the U.S. and the rest of the world. Some economists estimate that the Global Polio Eradication Initiative, created in 1988, alone saved the world more than US$27 billion as of 2017, and that it will save a total of $40 billion to $50 billion by 2035.

    USAID also plays an important role in promoting global health equity. The agency works to increase access to primary health care, combat hunger and strengthen health systems – ultimately saving lives. In addition, USAID has provided a great deal of funding to fight infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis and HIV.

    For instance, the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, or PEPFAR, provides treatment for 20 million people living with HIV in Africa. Trump’s federal aid freeze has halted funding for PEPFAR projects.

    While the limited waiver under which the agency must now operate means some PEPFAR activities may eventually resume, many are now left without federal funding indefinitely. Unless another organization fills the gap, millions will die without USAID assistance.

    A 2022 photo of men in Afghanistan lining up to receive a monthly food ration, largely supplied by USAID.
    Scott Peterson/Getty Images News via Getty Images

    Mistakes made

    This is not to deny that USAID has made some grave errors in its history.

    For instance, USAID provided significant funding to the Democratic Republic of Congo (formerly Zaire) during the murderous regime of Mobutu Sese Seko, who was in power from 1965 to 1997.

    But USAID also has done an immense amount of good. For instance, it has helped contain the Ebola epidemic in the Democratic Republic of Congo since 2018. USAID’s work in preventing epidemics from spreading helps people everywhere, including in the U.S.

    If anything, there is a strong argument for increasing USAID funding. China has invested heavily in Asia and Africa through its Belt and Road Initiative, which is an attempt to recreate ancient trade routes by investing in roads, trains and ports. Some researchers argue that this has shifted diplomatic relations in favor of China. They believe that if the U.S. does not make similar investments and instead cuts foreign aid, it will affect the United States’ ability to achieve its foreign policy objectives.

    Similarly, there is a strong argument for increasing U.S. support for the WHO rather than withdrawing from the organization.

    Trump’s withdrawal order cites what he sees as the organization’s failures in addressing the COVID-19 pandemic as the rationale. But the WHO helped lead efforts to accelerate vaccine development and distribution, and retrospective reports claim that even more deaths could have been avoided with greater international cooperation.

    While dismantling USAID will cause irreparable harm to global health, these actions taken together are likely to deal a devastating blow to efforts to protect Americans and everyone else in the world from sickness and death.

    Alyssa Figueroa, an undergraduate student at Binghamton University, contributed to this article.

    Nicole Hassoun has received funding for research from the World Health Organization and the United Nations. She is the executive director of Global Health Impact (global-health-impact.org) which participates in the Pandemic Action Network.

    ref. USAID’s apparent demise and the US withdrawal from WHO put millions of lives worldwide at risk and imperil US national security – https://theconversation.com/usaids-apparent-demise-and-the-us-withdrawal-from-who-put-millions-of-lives-worldwide-at-risk-and-imperil-us-national-security-249260

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI: SiriusPoint Announces Secondary Offering of 4,106,631 Common Shares by Entities Associated with Daniel S. Loeb and Potential Repurchase of up to 2,000,000 Common Shares by SiriusPoint

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    HAMILTON, Bermuda, Feb. 25, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — SiriusPoint Ltd.  (“SiriusPoint” or the “Company”) (NYSE: SPNT) today announced that entities associated with Daniel S. Loeb (collectively, the “Loeb Entities”) are offering an aggregate of 4,106,631 common shares through a registered secondary offering.

    SiriusPoint has indicated its intent to repurchase an aggregate of up to 2,000,000 of the common shares being offered in the offering at the public offering price. SiriusPoint would cancel any common shares it repurchases in the offering.

    Immediately following the completion of the offering and our previously announced repurchase of all of common shares and warrants currently held by CM Bermuda, it is expected that the Loeb Entities will own approximately 9.67% of SiriusPoint’s issued and outstanding common shares, up from approximately 9.4% prior to the offering and the CM Bermuda repurchase.

    Under the terms of the transaction, the remaining shares owned by the Loeb Entities will be subject to a 90 day lock-up agreement with the sole bookrunning manager.

    Jefferies is acting as the sole bookrunning manager for the proposed offering.

    The offering will be made only by means of an effective registration statement and a prospectus. The Company has previously filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) a registration statement (including a prospectus) on Form S-3 (File No. 333-283827), dated December 16, 2024, and a preliminary prospectus supplement for the offering to which this communication relates. Before you invest, you should read the prospectus in that registration statement, the accompanying prospectus supplement, and other documents the Company has filed with the SEC for more complete information about the Company and this offering. When available, copies of the preliminary prospectus supplement and the accompanying prospectus relating to the offering may be obtained from: Jefferies LLC, Attention: Equity Syndicate Prospectus Department, 520 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10022, by telephone at (877) 821-7388, or by email at prospectus_department@jefferies.com. Electronic copies of the preliminary prospectus supplement and accompanying prospectus will also be available on the website of the SEC at http://www.sec.gov. This press release shall not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy, nor shall there be any sale of these securities in any state or jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful prior to registration or qualification under the securities laws of any such state or jurisdiction.

    Contacts
    Investor Relations
    Liam Blackledge, SiriusPoint
    Liam.Blackledge@siriuspt.com
    + 44 203 772 3082
    Media
    Sarah Hills, Rein4ce
    Sarah.Hills@rein4ce.co.uk
    + 44 7718 882011 

    About SiriusPoint

    SiriusPoint is a global underwriter of insurance and reinsurance providing solutions to clients and brokers around the world. Bermuda-headquartered with offices in New York, London, Stockholm and other locations, we are listed on the New York Stock Exchange (SPNT). We have licenses to write Property & Casualty and Accident & Health insurance and reinsurance globally. Our offering and distribution capabilities are strengthened by a portfolio of strategic partnerships with Managing General Agents and Program Administrators within our Insurance & Services segment. With over $2.6 billion total capital, SiriusPoint’s operating companies have a financial strength rating of A- (Excellent) from AM Best, S&P and Fitch, and A3 from Moody’s.

    FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

    We make statements in this press release that are forward-looking statements within the meaning of the U.S. federal securities laws. We intend these forward-looking statements to be covered by the safe harbor provisions for forward-looking statements in the U.S. federal securities laws. These statements involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in the forward-looking statements. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, the impact of general economic conditions and conditions affecting the insurance and reinsurance industry; the adequacy of our reserves; fluctuation in the results of operations; pandemic or other catastrophic event; uncertainty of success in investing in early-stage companies, such as the risk of loss of an initial investment, highly variable returns on investments, delay in receiving return on investment and difficulty in liquidating the investment; our ability to assess underwriting risk, trends in rates for property and casualty insurance and reinsurance, competition, investment market and investment income fluctuations; trends in insured and paid losses; regulatory and legal uncertainties; and other risk factors described in SiriusPoint’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the period ended December 31, 2024.

    Except as required by applicable law or regulation, we disclaim any obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statement to reflect changes in underlying assumptions or factors, or new information, data or methods, future events, or other circumstances after the date of this press release.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: SLR Investment Corp. Announces Quarter and Year Ended December 31, 2024 Financial Results

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Net Investment Income of $0.44 Per Share for Q4 2024;

    Declared Quarterly Distribution of $0.41 Per Share;

    Stable NAV/Strong Credit Quality

    NEW YORK, Feb. 25, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — SLR Investment Corp. (NASDAQ: SLRC) (the “Company”, “SLRC”, “we”, “us”, or “our”) today reported net investment income (“NII”) of $23.8 million, or $0.44 per share, for the fourth quarter of 2024. On February 25, 2025, the Board declared a quarterly distribution of $0.41 per share payable on March 28, 2025, to holders of record as of March 14, 2025.

    As of December 31, 2024, net asset value (“NAV”) was $18.20 per share, unchanged from the prior quarter ended September 30, 2024.

    “This month, SLRC celebrated its 15th anniversary since its initial public offering and more than 18 years of operating history as a private credit manager for SLR Capital Partners, our investment adviser,” said Michael Gross, Co-CEO of SLR Investment Corp. “Since inception in 2010, SLRC has made approximately $7.5 billion of investments including five platform specialty finance acquisitions and four related tuck-in acquisitions. Our asset mix across specialty and sponsor finance investment strategies and conservative underwriting approach has created a differentiated and attractive risk-adjusted return profile compared to sponsor finance only portfolios.” 

    “SLRC generated strong NII per share for both the fourth quarter and full year. In addition, NAV increased to $18.20 from $18.09 per share a year ago, reflecting solid credit performance from a diversified portfolio and disciplined underwriting in an environment of elevated rates and tighter cash flow coverage,” said Bruce Spohler, Co-CEO of SLR Investment Corp. “The ongoing retreat of regional banks from asset-based lending has resulted in a significant pipeline of specialty finance investment opportunities. Our flexibility to pivot to the most attractive investment strategies allows us to protect capital and perform across market cycles.”

    FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS FOR THE QUARTER AND YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2024:

    At December 31, 2024:

    Investment portfolio fair value: $2.0 billion | Comprehensive Investment Portfolio fair value:(1) $3.1 billion
    Net assets: $992.9 million or $18.20 per share
    Leverage: 1.03x net debt-to-equity

    Operating Results for the Quarter Ended December 31, 2024:

    Net investment income: $23.8 million or $0.44 per share
    Net realized and unrealized losses: $1.2 million or $0.02 per share
    Net increase in net assets from operations: $22.6 million or $0.41 per share

    Operating Results for the Year Ended December 31, 2024:

    Net investment income: $96.3 million or $1.77 per share
    Net realized and unrealized loss: $0.6 million or $0.01 per share
    Net increase in net assets from operations: $95.8 million or $1.76 per share

    Comprehensive Investment Portfolio Activity(2) for the Quarter and Year Ended December 31, 2024:

    Investments made during the quarter: $338.4 million
    Investments prepaid and sold during the quarter: $442.7 million
    Investments made during the year: $1,352.6 million
    Investments prepaid and sold during the year: $1,377.8 million

    (1) The Comprehensive Investment Portfolio for the quarter ended December 31, 2024 is comprised of SLRC’s investment portfolio and SLR Credit Solutions’ (“SLR-CS”) portfolio, SLR Equipment Finance’s (“SLR-EF”) portfolio, Kingsbridge Holdings, LLC’s (“KBH”) portfolio, SLR Business Credit’s (“SLR-BC”) portfolio, SLR Healthcare ABL’s (“SLR-HC ABL”) portfolio owned by the Company (collectively, the Company’s “Commercial Finance Portfolio Companies”), and the senior secured loans held by the SLR Senior Lending Program LLC (“SSLP”) attributable to the Company, and excludes the Company’s fair value of the equity interests in SSLP and the Commercial Finance Portfolio Companies and also excludes SLRC’s loans to KBH, SLR-EF, and SLR HC ABL.
    (2) Comprehensive Investment Portfolio activity for the quarter ended December 31, 2024, includes investment activity of the Commercial Finance Portfolio Companies and SSLP attributable to the Company.

    Comprehensive Investment Portfolio

    Portfolio Activity

    During the three months ended December 31, 2024, SLRC had Comprehensive Investment Portfolio originations of $338.4 million and repayments of $442.7 million across the Company’s four investment strategies:

     For the Quarter Ended December 31, 2024
    ($mm)

    Asset Class Sponsor
    Finance(1)
    Asset-based
    Lending(2)
    Equipment
    Finance(3)
    Life Science
    Finance
    Total
    Comprehensive Investment
    Portfolio Activity
    Originations $20.7 $128.6 $182.5 $6.6 $338.4
    Repayments / Amortization $102.3 $205.3 $101.7 $33.4 $442.7
    Net Portfolio Activity ($81.6) ($76.7) $80.8 ($26.8) ($ 104.3)

    During the year ended December 31, 2024, SLRC had Comprehensive Investment Portfolio originations of $1,352.6 million and repayments of $1,377.8 million across the Company’s four investment strategies:

    For the Year Ended December 31, 2024
    ($mm)
    Asset Class Sponsor
    Finance(1)
    Asset-based
    Lending(2)
    Equipment
    Finance(3)
    Life Science
    Finance
    Total
    Comprehensive Investment Portfolio Activity
    Originations $113.0 $555.7 $649.4 $34.5 $1,352.6
    Repayments / Amortization $190.2 $515.8 $508.5 $163.3 $1,377.8
    Net Portfolio Activity ($77.2) $39.9 $140.9 ($128.8) ($ 25.2)

    (1) Sponsor Finance refers to cash flow loans to sponsor-owned companies including cash flow loans held in SSLP attributable to the Company.
    (2) Includes SLR-CS, SLR-BC and SLR-HC ABL’s portfolios, as well as asset-based loans on the Company’s balance sheet.
    (3) Includes SLR-EF’s portfolio and equipment financings on the Company’s balance sheet and Kingsbridge Holdings’ (KBH) portfolio.

    Comprehensive Investment Portfolio Composition

    The Comprehensive Investment Portfolio is diversified across approximately 890 unique issuers, operating in over 110 industries, and resulting in an average exposure of $3.5 million or 0.1% per issuer. As of December 31, 2024, 98.2% of the Company’s Comprehensive Investment Portfolio was invested in senior secured loans of which 96.4% was held in first lien senior secured loans. Second lien ABL exposure was 1.5% and second lien cash flow exposure was 0.3% of the Comprehensive Investment Portfolio as of December 31, 2024.

    SLRC’s Comprehensive Investment Portfolio composition by asset class as of December 31, 2024 was as follows:

    Comprehensive Investment
    Portfolio Composition
    (at fair value) 
    Amount Weighted Average
    ($mm) % Asset Yield(5)
    Senior Secured Investments      
    Cash Flow Loans (Sponsor Finance)(1) $633.8 20.6% 10.6%
    Asset-Based Loans(2) $1,037.3 33.6% 14.6%
    Equipment Financings(3) $1,147.9 37.2% 10.7%
    Life Science Loans $208.8 6.8% 12.1%
    Total Senior Secured Investments $3,027.8 98.2% 12.1%
    Equity and Equity-like Securities $54.8 1.8%  
    Total Comprehensive Investment Portfolio $3,082.6 100.0%  
    Floating Rate Investments(4) $1,866.7 61.0%  
    First Lien Senior Secured Loans $2,972.1 96.4%  
    Second Lien Senior Secured Asset-Based Loans $47.8 1.5%  
    Second Lien Senior Secured Cash Flow Loans $7.8 0.3%  

    (1) Includes cash flow loans held in the SSLP attributable to the Company and excludes the Company’s equity investment in SSLP.
    (2) Includes SLR-CS, SLR-BC, and SLR-HC ABL’s portfolios, as well as asset-based loans on the Company’s balance sheet, and excludes the Company’s equity investments in each of SLR-CS, SLR-BC, and SLR-HC ABL.
    (3) Includes SLR-EF’s portfolio and equipment financings on the Company’s balance sheet and Kingsbridge Holdings’ (KBH) portfolio. Excludes the Company’s equity and debt investments in each of SLR-EF and KBH.
    (4) Floating rate investments are calculated as a percent of the Company’s income-producing Comprehensive Investment Portfolio. The majority of fixed rate loans are associated with SLR-EF and leases held by KBH. Additionally, SLR-EF and KBH seek to match-fund their fixed rate assets with fixed rate liabilities.
    (5) The weighted average asset yield for income producing cash flow, asset-based and life science loans on balance sheet is based on a yield to maturity calculation. The weighted average asset yield calculation for Life Science loans includes the amortization of expected exit/success fees. The weighted average yield for on-balance sheet equipment financings is calculated based on the expected average life of the investments. The weighted average asset yield for SLR-CS asset-based loans is an Internal Rate of Return (IRR) calculated using actual cash flows received and the expected terminal value. The weighted average asset yield for SLR-BC and SLR-HC ABL represents total interest and fee income for the three-month period ended on December 31, 2024 against the average portfolio over the same fiscal period, annualized. The weighted average asset yield for SLR-EF represents total interest and fee income for the three-month period ended on December 31, 2024 compared to the portfolio as of December 31, 2024, annualized. The weighted average yield for the KBH equipment leasing portfolio represents the blended yield from the company’s 1st lien loan on par value and the annualized dividend yield on the cost basis of the company’s equity investment as of December 31, 2024.

    SLR Investment Corp. Portfolio

    Asset Quality

    As of December 31, 2024, 99.6% of SLRC’s portfolio was performing on a fair value basis and 99.4% on a cost basis, with only one investment on non-accrual.

    The Company puts its largest emphasis on risk control and credit performance. On a quarterly basis, or more frequently if deemed necessary, the Company formally rates each portfolio investment on a scale of one to four, with one representing the least amount of risk.

    As of December 31, 2024, the composition of our investment portfolio, on a risk ratings basis, was as follows:

    Internal Investment Rating Investments at Fair Value ($mm) % of Total Portfolio
    1 $701.0 34.9%
    2 $1,286.9 64.2%
    3 $9.9 0.5%
    4 $7.8 0.4%

    Investment Income Contribution by Asset Class

    Investment Income Contribution by Asset Class(1)
    ($mm)
    For the Quarter
    Ended:
    Sponsor
    Finance
    Asset-based
    Lending
    Equipment
    Finance
    Life Science
    Finance
    Total
    12/31/2024 $18.7 $18.1 $8.8 $10.0 $55.6
    % Contribution 33.7% 32.5% 15.8% 18.0% 100.0%
    Investment Income Contribution by Asset Class(1)
    ($mm)
    For the Year
    Ended:
    Sponsor
    Finance
    Asset-based
    Lending
    Equipment
    Finance
    Life Science
    Finance
    Total
    12/31/2024 $82.6 $62.5 $36.6 $50.7 $232.4
    % Contribution 35.5% 26.9% 15.8% 21.8% 100.0%

    (1) Investment Income Contribution by Asset Class includes: interest income/fees from Sponsor Finance (cash flow) loans on balance sheet and distributions from SSLP; income/fees from asset-based loans on balance sheet and distributions from SLR-CS, SLR-BC, SLR-HC ABL; income/fees from equipment financings and distributions from SLR-EF and distributions from KBH; and income/fees from life science loans on balance sheet.

    SLR Senior Lending Program LLC (SSLP)

    As of December 31, 2024, the Company and its 50% partner, Sunstone Senior Credit L.P., had contributed combined equity capital of $95.8 million of a total equity commitment for $100 million to the SSLP. At year end, SSLP had total commitments of $189.8 million at par and total funded portfolio investments of $178.7 million at fair value, consisting of floating rate senior secured loans to 32 different borrowers and an average investment of $5.6 million per borrower. This compares to funded portfolio investments of $204.1 million at fair value across 37 different borrowers at September 30, 2024. During the quarter ended December 31, 2024, SSLP invested $2.0 million in 4 portfolio companies and had $27.7 million of investments repaid.

    In Q4 2024, the Company earned income of $1.9 million from its investment in the SSLP, representing an annualized yield of 15.6% on the cost basis of the Company’s investment, similar to Q3 2024.

    SLR Investment Corp.’s Results of Operations Year Over Year

    Investment Income

    For the fiscal years ended December 31, 2024, and 2023, gross investment income totaled $232.4 million and $229.3 million, respectively. The increase in gross investment income for the year over year period was primarily due to an increase in dividend income from SSLP and our specialty finance company equity investments.

    Expenses

    SLRC’s net expenses totaled $136.1 million and $137.2 million, respectively, for the fiscal years ended December 31, 2024, and 2023. The decrease in expenses from 2024 to 2023 was primarily due to lower interest expense on a decrease in average borrowings as well as a reduction in general and administrative expenses, partially offset by higher fees stemming from higher net investment income.

    SLRC’s investment adviser agreed to waive incentive fees resulting from income earned due to the accretion of the purchase price discount allocated to investments acquired in the Company’s merger with SLR Senior Investment Corp., which closed on April 1, 2022. For the fiscal years ended December 31, 2024 and 2023, $153 thousand and $500 thousand, respectively, of such performance-based incentive fees were waived.

    Net Investment Income

    SLRC’s net investment income totaled $96.3 million and $92.1 million, or $1.77 and $1.69, per average share, respectively, for the fiscal years ended December 31, 2024, and 2023.

    Net Realized and Unrealized Loss

    Net realized and unrealized loss for the fiscal years ended December 31, 2024 and 2023 totaled $0.6 million and $15.7 million, respectively.

    Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Operations

    For the fiscal years ended December 31, 2024, and 2023, the Company had a net increase in net assets resulting from operations of $95.8 million and $76.4 million, respectively. For the same periods, earnings per average share were $1.76 and $1.40, respectively.

    Capital and Liquidity

    Credit Facilities

    As of December 31, 2024, the Company had $507 million drawn on $970 million of total commitments available on its revolving credit facilities and $140 million of term loans outstanding. In Q3 2024, the Company extended its SLRC revolver credit facility to a maturity of August 2029, increased the size, and lowered pricing. In Q4 2024, three new lenders were added to the SLRC revolving credit facility.

    Unsecured Debt

    On December 16, 2024, the Company closed a private offering of $49.0 million of the 2027 Series G Unsecured Notes with a fixed interest rate of 6.24% and a maturity date of December 16, 2027. As of December 31, 2024, the Company had $394 million of unsecured notes outstanding.

    On February 18, 2025, the Company closed an additional private offering of $50.0 million of unsecured notes due 2028 with a fixed rate of interest of 6.14% and a maturity date of February 18, 2028.

    Leverage

    As of December 31, 2024, the Company’s net debt-to-equity ratio was 1.03x and compared to 1.19x as of December 31, 2023 and the Company’s target range of 0.9x to 1.25x.

    Available Capital

    As of December 31, 2024, including anticipated available borrowing capacity at the SSLP and our specialty finance portfolio companies, subject to borrowing base limits, SLRC, SSLP and our specialty finance portfolio companies had over $900 million of available capital in the aggregate.

    Unfunded Commitments

    As of December 31, 2024, excluding commitments to SLR-CS, SLR-BC, SLR-HC ABL, SLR Equipment Finance, and SSLP, over which the Company has discretion to fund, the Company had unfunded commitments of approximately $167.2 million.

    Subsequent Events

    On February 25, 2025, the Board declared a quarterly distribution of $0.41 per share payable on March 28, 2025, to holders of record as of March 14, 2025.

    Conference Call and Webcast Information

    The Company will host an earnings conference call and audio webcast at 10:00 a.m. (Eastern Time) on Wednesday, February 26, 2025. All interested parties may participate in the conference call by dialing (800) 579-2543 approximately 5-10 minutes prior to the call, international callers should dial (785) 424-1789. Participants should reference SLR Investment Corp. and Conference ID: SLRC4Q24. A telephone replay will be available until March 12, 2025 and can be accessed by dialing (800) 839-4568. International callers should dial (402) 220-2681.

    This conference call will also be broadcast live over the Internet and can be accessed by all interested parties from the Event Calendar within the “Investors” tab of SLR Investment Corp.’s website, https://slrinvestmentcorp.com/Investors/Event-Calendar. Please register online prior to the start of the call. For those who are not able to listen to the broadcast live, a replay of the webcast will be available soon after the call.

    Supplemental Information of SLR Investment Corp.’s Results of Operations Quarter Over Quarter 

    Operating results: Quarter Ended
    December 31, 2024
    (unaudited)
      Quarter Ended
    September 30, 2024
    (unaudited)
    Interest income   $36,290       $45,373  
    Dividend income   16,502       12,578  
    Other income   2,791       1,820  
    Total investment income   55,583       59,771  
    Management fee   7,739       7,893  
    Net Performance-based Incentive fee   5,920       6,036  
    Interest and other credit facility expenses   16,184       18,913  
    Administrative services expense   1,376       1,392  
    Other general and administrative expenses   572       1,189  
    Net expenses   31,791       35,423  
    Net investment income   $23,792       $24,348  
    Net realized and unrealized gains (losses)   (1,183)       (2,299)  
    Net increase in net assets resulting from operations   22,609       22,049  
    Net investment income per common share   $0.44       $0.45  
    Net realized and unrealized gains (losses) per common share   ($0.02)       ($0.04)  
    Earnings per common share – basic and diluted   $0.41       $0.40  
    SLR INVESTMENT CORP.
    CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
    (in thousands, except share and per share amounts)
     
      December 31, 2024     December 31, 2023  
    Assets          
    Investments at fair value:          
    Companies less than 5% owned (cost: $1,019,357 and $1,260,205, respectively) $ 1,027,457     $ 1,271,442  
    Companies 5% to 25% owned (cost: $103,655 and $60,064, respectively)   89,945       44,250  
    Companies more than 25% owned (cost: $916,554 and $870,128, respectively)   888,232       839,074  
    Cash   16,761       11,864  
    Cash equivalents (cost: $397,510 and $332,290, respectively)   397,510       332,290  
    Dividends receivable   15,375       11,768  
    Interest receivable   11,993       11,034  
    Receivable for investments sold   1,573       1,538  
    Prepaid expenses and other assets   571       608  
    Total assets $ 2,449,417     $ 2,523,868  
    Liabilities          
    Debt ($1,041,093 and $1,183,250 face amounts, respectively, reported net of unamortized debt issuance costs of $9,399 and $5,473, respectively.) $ 1,031,694     $ 1,177,777  
    Payable for investments and cash equivalents purchased   397,510       332,290  
    Management fee payable   7,739       8,027  
    Performance-based incentive fee payable   5,920       5,864  
    Interest payable   7,836       7,535  
    Administrative services payable   3,332       1,969  
    Other liabilities and accrued expenses   2,460       3,767  
    Total liabilities $ 1,456,491     $ 1,537,229  
    Commitments and contingencies          
    Net Assets          
    Common stock, par value $0.01 per share, 200,000,000 and 200,000,000 common shares authorized, respectively, and 54,554,634 and 54,554,634 shares issued and outstanding, respectively $ 546     $ 546  
    Paid-in capital in excess of par   1,117,606       1,117,930  
    Accumulated distributable net loss   (125,226 )     (131,837 )
    Total net assets $ 992,926     $ 986,639  
    Net Asset Value Per Share $ 18.20     $ 18.09  
    SLR INVESTMENT CORP.
    CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
    (in thousands, except per share amounts)
       
      2024     2023  
    INVESTMENT INCOME:          
    Interest:          
    Companies less than 5% owned $ 154,077     $ 163,589  
    Companies 5% to 25% owned   3,881       2,058  
    Companies more than 25% owned   13,055       11,627  
    Dividends:          
    Companies 5% to less than 25% owned   845        
    Companies more than 25% owned   52,944       45,986  
    Other income:          
    Companies less than 5% owned   7,117       5,802  
    Companies 5% to 25% owned         26  
    Companies more than 25% owned   512       224  
    Total investment income   232,431       229,312  
    EXPENSES:          
    Management fees   31,389       31,661  
    Performance-based incentive fees   24,039       22,898  
    Interest and other credit facility expenses   71,464       72,507  
    Administrative services expense   5,520       5,899  
    Other general and administrative expenses   3,862       4,756  
    Total expenses   136,274       137,721  
    Performance-based incentive fees waived   (153 )     (500 )
    Net expenses   136,121       137,221  
    Net investment income $ 96,310     $ 92,091  
    REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN (LOSS) ON INVESTMENTS
    AND CASH EQUIVALENTS:
             
    Net realized loss on investments and cash equivalents:          
    Companies less than 5% owned $ (2,252 )   $ (27,602 )
    Companies more than 25% owned         (381 )
    Net realized loss on investments and cash equivalents   (2,252 )     (27,983 )
    Net change in unrealized gain (loss) on investments:          
    Companies less than 5% owned   (3,137 )     20,425  
    Companies 5% to 25% owned   2,105       (1,384 )
    Companies more than 25% owned   2,731       (6,761 )
    Net change in unrealized gain on investments   1,699       12,280  
    Net realized and unrealized loss on investments and cash
    equivalents
      (553 )     (15,703 )
    NET INCREASE IN NET ASSETS RESULTING FROM
    OPERATIONS
    $ 95,757     $ 76,388  
    EARNINGS PER SHARE $ 1.76     $ 1.40  

    About SLR Investment Corp.

    SLR Investment Corp. is a closed-end investment company that has elected to be regulated as a business development company under the Investment Company Act of 1940. A specialty finance company with expertise in several niche markets, the Company primarily invests in leveraged, U.S. upper middle market companies in the form of cash flow, asset-based, and life sciences senior secured loans.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    Some of the statements in this press release constitute forward-looking statements because they relate to future events, future performance or financial condition. The forward-looking statements may include statements as to: the Company’s access to deal flow and attractive investment opportunities; the market environment and its impact on the business prospects of SLRC and the prospects of SLRC’s portfolio companies; prospects for additional portfolio growth of SLRC; and the quality of, and the impact on the performance of SLRC from the investments that SLRC has made and expects to make. In addition, words such as “anticipate,” “believe,” “expect,” “seek,” “plan,” “should,” “estimate,” “project” and “intend” indicate forward-looking statements, although not all forward-looking statements include these words. The forward-looking statements contained in this press release involve risks and uncertainties. Certain factors could cause actual results and conditions to differ materially from those projected, including the uncertainties associated with: (i) changes in the economy, financial markets and political environment, including the impacts of inflation and changing interest rates; (ii) risks associated with possible disruption in the operations of SLRC or the economy generally due to terrorism, war or other geopolitical conflicts, natural disasters, or pandemics; (iii) future changes in laws or regulations (including the interpretation of these laws and regulations by regulatory authorities); (iv) conditions in SLRC’s operating areas, particularly with respect to business development companies or regulated investment companies; and (v) other considerations that may be disclosed from time to time in SLRC’s publicly disseminated documents and filings. SLRC has based the forward-looking statements included in this press release on information available to it on the date of this press release, and SLRC assumes no obligation to update any such forward-looking statements. Although SLRC undertakes no obligation to revise or update any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, you are advised to consult any additional disclosures that it may make directly to you or through reports that SLRC in the future may file with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including annual reports on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q and current reports on Form 8-K.

    Contact
    SLR Investment Corp.
    Investor Relations
    slrinvestorrelations@slrcp.com | (646) 308-8770

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Isabel Schnabel: No longer convenient? Safe asset abundance and r*

    Source: European Central Bank

    Keynote speech by Isabel Schnabel, Member of the Executive Board of the ECB, at the Bank of England’s 2025 BEAR Conference

    London, 25 February 2025

    Over the past few years, global bond investors have fundamentally reappraised the expected future course of monetary policy.

    Even as inflation has receded and policy restriction has been dialled back, current market prices suggest that maintaining price stability will require higher real interest rates in the future than before the pandemic.

    In my remarks today, I will argue that the shift in market expectations about the level of r* – the rate to which the economy is expected to converge in the long run once current shocks have run their course – is consistent with two sets of observations.

    The first is that the era during which risks to inflation have persistently been to the downside is likely to have come to an end.

    Growing geopolitical fragmentation, climate change and labour scarcity pose measurable upside risks to inflation over the medium to long term. This is especially true as the recent inflation surge may have permanently scarred consumers’ inflation expectations and may have lowered the bar for firms to pass through adverse cost-push shocks to consumer prices.

    The second observation is that we are transitioning from a global “savings glut” towards a global “bond glut”.

    Persistently large fiscal deficits and central bank balance sheet normalisation are gradually reducing the safety and liquidity premia that investors have long been willing to pay to hold scarce government bonds. The fall in the “convenience yield”, in turn, reverses a key factor that had contributed to the decline in real long-term interest rates, and hence r*, during the 2010s.

    The implications for monetary policy are threefold.

    First, a higher r* calls for careful monitoring of when monetary policy ceases to be restrictive. Second, central bank balance sheet policies may themselves affect the level of r* through the convenience yield, making them potentially less effective than previously thought. Third, because central bank reserves also offer convenience services to banks, it is optimal to provide reserves elastically on demand as quantitative tightening reduces excess liquidity.

    Upward shift in r* signals lasting change in the inflation regime

    Starting in 2021, long-term government bond yields rose measurably across advanced economies. Today, the ten-year yield of a German government bond is about two and a half percentage points higher than in late 2021 (Slide 2, left-hand side).

    What is remarkable about the rise in nominal bond yields in the euro area over this period is that it was not driven by a change in inflation compensation. Investors’ views about future inflation prospects are broadly the same today as they were three years ago (Slide 2, right-hand side).

    Rather, nominal interest rates rose because real interest rates increased. Euro area real long-term rates are now trading at a level that is substantially higher than the level prevailing during most of the post-2008 global financial crisis period (Slide 3, left-hand side).

    Part of the rise in real long-term interest rates is a mechanical response to the tightening of monetary policy.

    Long-term interest rates are an average of expected short-term interest rates over the lifetime of the bond, plus a term premium. So, when we raised our key policy rates in response to the surge in inflation, the average real rate expected to prevail over the next ten years increased.[1]

    What is more striking, however, is that investors also fundamentally revised the real short-term rate expected to prevail once inflation has sustainably returned to our target. This rate is typically taken as a proxy for the natural rate of interest, or r*.

    The real one-year rate expected in four years (1y4y), for example, is now at the highest level since the sovereign debt crisis (Slide 3, right-hand side). Even at very distant horizons, such as in nine years, the expected real short-term rate (1y9y) has increased measurably in recent years.

    To a significant extent, these developments reflect a genuine reappraisal of the real equilibrium interest rate that is consistent with our 2% inflation target. A rise in the term premium, which is the excess return investors demand for the uncertainty surrounding the future interest rate path, can explain less than half of the change in the real 1y4y rate.[2]

    These forward rates have also remained surprisingly stable since 2023, with a standard deviation of around just 15 basis points, despite the measurable decline in inflation, the protracted weakness in aggregate demand and the series of structural headwinds facing the euro area.

    We are seeing a similar upward shift in model-based estimates of r*. According to estimates by ECB economists, the natural rate of interest in the euro area has increased appreciably over the past two years, and even more so than what market-based real forward rates would suggest (Slide 4).[3]

    This result is robust across many models and even holds when accounting for the significant uncertainty surrounding these estimates. In other words, for drawing conclusions about the directional change of r* from the rise in market and model-based measures, the actual rate level is largely irrelevant.

    What matters is the direction of travel. And that is unambiguous: we are unlikely to return to the pre-pandemic macroeconomic environment in which central banks had to bring real rates into deeply negative territory to deliver on their price stability mandate. This suggests that the nature of the inflation process is likely to have changed lastingly.

    Real interest rates are only loosely tied to trend growth

    Why do markets expect such a trend reversal for real interest rates in the euro area?

    One answer is that some of the forces that weighed on inflation during the 2010s are now reversing.

    Globalisation is a case in point. The integration of China and other emerging market economies into the global production network and the broad-based decline in tariff and non-tariff barriers were important factors reducing price pressures in advanced economies over several decades.[4]

    Today, protectionist policies, the weaponisation of critical raw materials and geopolitical fragmentation are increasingly dismantling the foundations on which trade improved the welfare of consumers worldwide.

    These forces can be expected to have first-order effects on inflation.

    European gas prices, for example, are up by 65% compared with a year ago despite the significant decline over recent days. Oil prices, too, have increased since September of last year, in part reflecting the marked depreciation of the euro.

    While commodity prices are inherently volatile, and may reverse quickly, other deglobalisation factors, such as reshoring and the lengthening of supply chains, are likely to increase price pressures more lastingly.

    And yet, the persistent rise in real forward rates poses a conundrum in the euro area.

    The reason is that increases in long-term real interest rates are typically thought of as being associated with improvements on the supply side of the economy, such as productivity growth, the labour force and the capital stock.

    At present, however, these factors do not point towards an increase in r* in the euro area.

    Potential growth has generally been revised lower, not higher, as many of the factors currently holding back consumption and especially investment are likely to be structural in nature, such as a rapidly ageing population and deteriorating competitiveness.

    The weak link between the structural factors driving potential growth and r* is, however, not exceptional from a historical perspective.

    Indeed, over time there has been little evidence of a stable relationship between real interest rates and drivers of potential growth, such as demographics and productivity.[5] They have had the expected relationship in some subsamples but not in others.[6]

    Similarly, in the most popular framework for estimating r*, the seminal model by Laubach and Williams, potential growth has played an increasingly subordinated role in explaining why the natural rate of interest has remained at a depressed level in the United States following the global financial crisis (Slide 5, left-hand side).[7]

    Rather, the persistence in the decline in r* is explained to a large extent by a residual factor, which lacks economic interpretation.

    Moreover, if growth was the main driver of r*, then one would expect all real rates in the economy to adjust in a similar way. But while real rates on safe assets have declined since the early 1990s, the return on private capital has remained relatively constant.[8]

    Decline in the convenience yield is pushing r* up

    A growing body of research attempts to reconcile these puzzles. Many studies attribute a significant role to the money-like convenience services that safe and liquid assets, such as government bonds, provide to market participants.

    The yield that investors are willing to forgo in equilibrium for these services is what economists call the “convenience yield”.[9]

    This yield, in turn, critically depends on the net supply of safe assets: When these are scarce, investors are willing to pay a premium to hold them, depressing the real equilibrium rate of interest. And when they are abundant, the premium falls, putting upward pressure on r*.

    New research by economists at the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System shows how incorporating the convenience yield into the Laubach and Williams framework significantly improves the explanatory power of the model.[10]

    In fact, the convenience yield can explain most of the residual factor and is estimated to have caused a large part of the secular decline in the real natural rate in the United States (Slide 5, right-hand side).

    Liquidity requirements that regulators imposed on banks in the wake of the global financial crisis, the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet policies and the integration of many large emerging market economies into the global economy have led to an unprecedented increase in the demand for safe and liquid assets, driving up their convenience yield.[11]

    These findings are in line with earlier research showing that the convenience yield has played an equally important role in depressing the real equilibrium rate in many other advanced economies, including the euro area, during the 2010s.[12]

    This process is now reversing. According to the work by the Federal Reserve economists, r* has recently increased visibly, contrary to what the model without a convenience yield would suggest.

    Asset swap spreads are a good indicator of the convenience yield. Both interest rate swaps and government bonds are essentially risk-free assets, so they should in principle yield the same return.

    For a long time, this has been the case: before the start of quantitative easing (QE) in the euro area in 2015, the spread between a ten-year German Bund and a swap of equivalent maturity was close to zero on average (Slide 6, left-hand side).

    Over time, however, with the start of QE and the parallel fiscal consolidation by governments reducing the net supply of government bonds in the market, the premium that investors were willing to pay to secure their convenience services rose measurably. At the peak, ten-year Bunds were trading nearly 80 basis points below swap rates.

    But since about mid-2022 the asset swap spread has persistently narrowed. In October of last year it turned positive for the first time in ten years, and it now stands close to the pre-QE average again.

    Other measures of the convenience yield paint a similar picture. The spread between ten-year bonds issued by the Kreditanstalt für Wiederaufbau (KfW) and German Bunds has narrowed from about
    -80 basis points in October 2022 to just -30 basis points today (Slide 6, right-hand side).[13]

    Furthermore, in the repo market, we have observed a steady and measurable rise in overnight rates and a convergence across collateral classes (Slide 7, left-hand side).[14]

    Over the past few years, transactions secured by German government collateral, in particular, were trading at a significant premium over others. This premium has declined considerably, reflecting a reduction in collateral scarcity.

    Finally, in the United States, the spread between AAA corporate bonds and US Treasuries has declined from almost 100 basis points in 2022 to 40 basis points today (Slide 7, right-hand side). It currently stands close to its historical low.

    Global savings glut has turned into a global bond glut

    All this suggests that, today, market participants value the liquidity and safety services of government bonds less than they did in the past, as the net supply of government bonds has increased and continues to increase at a notable pace.

    In Germany and the United States, for example, the sovereign bond free float as a share of the outstanding volume has increased by more than ten percentage points over the past three years (Slide 8, left-hand side). It is projected to steadily increase further in the coming years.

    So, the global savings glut appears to have turned into a global bond glut, which reduces the marginal benefit of holding government bonds.

    There are several factors contributing to the rise in the bond free float.[15]

    First, and most importantly, net borrowing by governments remains substantial. The public deficit is estimated to have been around 5% of GDP across advanced economies last year, and it is expected to decline only marginally in the coming years (Slide 8, right-hand side).

    Second, rising geopolitical fragmentation is likely to be contributing to a drop in demand for government bonds in some parts of the world.

    In the United States, for example, there has been a marked decline in the share of foreign official holdings of US Treasury securities since the global financial crisis (Slide 9, left-hand side). It is now at its lowest level in more than 20 years.[16] The US Administration’s attempt to reduce the current account deficit is bound to further depress foreign holdings of US Treasuries.

    Third, central banks are in the process of normalising their balance sheets (Slide 9, right-hand side). Unlike when central banks announced large-scale asset purchases, the effects of quantitative tightening (QT) on yields are likely to materialise only over time, as many central banks take a gradual approach when reducing the size of their balance sheets.

    Higher r* calls for cautious approach to rate easing

    These developments have three important implications for monetary policy.

    One is that central banks are dialling back policy restriction in an environment in which structural factors are putting upward pressure on the real equilibrium rate. Recent analysis by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), for example, suggests that a fall in the convenience yield to pre-2000 average levels could raise natural rates by about 70 basis points.[17]

    While a significant part of these effects may have already materialised, other factors could push real rates up further over the medium term. The IMF projects that, in the coming years, overall global investment – public and private – will reach the highest share of GDP since the 1980s, also reflecting borrowing needs associated with the digital and green transitions as well as defence spending.

    Recent global initiatives aimed at boosting the development and use of artificial intelligence underscore these projections. Overall, these forces may well be larger than those that continue to weigh on the real equilibrium rate, such as an ageing population.

    Central banks, therefore, need to proceed cautiously. We do not fully understand how the pervasive changes to our economies are affecting the steady state, or what the path to the new steady state will look like.

    In this environment, the most appropriate way to conduct monetary policy is to look at the incoming data to assess how fast, and to what extent, changes to our key policy rates are being transmitted to the economy.

    For the euro area, this assessment suggests that, over the past year, the degree of policy restraint has declined appreciably – to a point where we can no longer say with confidence that our policy is restrictive.

    According to the most recent bank lending survey, for example, 90% of banks say that the general level of interest rates has no impact on the demand for corporate loans, with 8% saying that it contributes to boosting credit demand (Slide 10, left-hand side). This is a marked shift from a year ago when a third of all banks reported that interest rates were weighing on credit demand.

    For mortgages, the evidence is even more striking. Today almost half of the banks report that the level of interest rates supports loan demand, while a year ago more than 40% said the opposite. As a result, a net 42% of banks report an increase in the demand for mortgages, close to the historical high.

    Survey evidence is gradually showing up in actual lending data. Credit to firms expanded by 1.5% in December, the highest rate in a year and a half, and credit to households for house purchases grew by 1.1% (Slide 10, right-hand side).

    Strong bank balance sheets are contributing to the recovery and, given the lags in policy transmission, further easing is still in the pipeline.

    Lending conditions are also relatively favourable from the perspective of borrowers. The spread between the composite cost of borrowing for households and sovereign bond yields is well below the level seen over most of the 2010s and is now close to the historical average (Slide 11).[18]

    And while some maturing loans from the period of very low interest rates will still need to be refinanced at higher rates, over time this debt has declined in real terms and interest payments as a fraction of net income are buffered by rising nominal wages.

    Overall, therefore, it is becoming increasingly unlikely that current financing conditions are materially holding back consumption and investment. The fact that growth remains subdued cannot and should not be taken as evidence that policy is restrictive.

    As the ECB’s most recent corporate telephone survey suggests, the continued weakness in manufacturing is increasingly viewed by firms as structural, reflecting a combination of high energy and labour costs, an overly inhibitive and uncertain regulatory environment and increased import competition, especially from China.[19]

    Such structural headwinds reduce the economy’s sensitivity to changes in monetary policy.

    QE’s impact on r* is reducing its effectiveness

    The second implication from the impact of the convenience yield on r* is related to the use of balance sheet policies.

    If QE raises the convenience yield by reducing the net supply of government bonds, it may ultimately lower the real equilibrium interest rate. Importantly, this channel – the convenience yield channel – is distinct from the term premium channel.[20]

    So, doing QE could be like chasing a moving target.

    It reduces long-run rates by compressing the term premium.[21] But by making investors willing to pay a higher safety premium when the supply of safe assets shrinks, it may also reduce the interest rate level below which monetary policy stimulates growth and inflation.

    This can also be seen by looking at how QE changes the balance of savings and investments. Fiscal deficits absorb private savings and thereby increase r*. By doing QE, central banks absorb fiscal deficits and thereby lower r*.

    In other words, central bank balance sheet policies may be less effective than previously thought.[22] This could be an additional factor explaining why large-scale asset purchases did not succeed in bringing inflation back to 2% before the pandemic.

    Of course, the same logic holds true when central banks reduce their balance sheets.

    If QE contributed to depressing r*, QT will raise it. Any rise in real rates may then be less consequential for growth and inflation. It would then be misguided to compensate for higher long-term interest rates resulting from QT with lower short-term rates.

    This is indeed what recent research suggests: QT announcements tend to cause a significant decline in the convenience yield of safe assets.[23]

    There is one caveat, however.

    QE and QT are implemented by issuing and absorbing central bank reserves, which themselves are safe assets – in fact, reserves are the economy’s ultimate safe asset because they are free of liquidity and interest rate risk.[24]

    Banks therefore highly value the convenience services of central bank reserves. So, when evaluating the effects of central bank balance sheet policies on r*, it is necessary to consider both the asset and liability side.

    Research by economists from the Bank of England does exactly that.[25] They show that the effects of QT on the real equilibrium rate depend on the relative strength of two factors.

    One is the effect on the bond convenience yield, which causes r* to rise as the supply of government bonds increases.

    The other is the effect on the convenience yield of reserves. That effect is highly non-linear: when reserves are scarce, banks are willing to pay a high mark-up on wholesale interest rates, as was evident in the United States in 2019 when repo rates surged strongly.

    So, if QT leads to a scarcity of reserves, it may cause the overall convenience yield to rise, and hence equilibrium rates to fall.

    Convenience of reserves and the ECB’s operational framework

    At the ECB, we took this factor into account when we reviewed our operational framework last year.[26] This is the third implication for monetary policy.

    The new framework allows banks to demand as many reserves as they find optimal at a spread that is 15 basis points above the rate which the ECB pays to banks when they deposit their excess reserves with us. So, the opportunity cost of holding reserves is comparatively small, given the convenience services reserves provide to banks.

    In addition, our framework allows banks themselves to generate an increase in safe assets – by pledging non-high quality liquid assets (non-HQLA) in our lending operations. In doing so, banks on average generate € 0.92 of net HQLA for every euro that they borrow from the Eurosystem.[27]

    Our framework therefore recognises that years of crises, more stringent regulatory requirements and the advance of new technologies – some of which increase the risk of “digital” bank runs – imply that banks may wish to hold larger liquidity buffers than they historically have done.

    Supplying central bank reserves elastically will ensure that reserves will not become scarce as balance sheet normalisation proceeds. And if banks access our standard refinancing operations when they are in need of liquidity, they will also not have to adjust their lending activities in response to the decline in reserves, as is sometimes feared.[28]

    For now, the recourse to our lending operations has been limited, as there is still ample excess liquidity. But as we transition over the coming years to a world in which reserves are less abundant, banks will increasingly start borrowing reserves via our operations.

    Three ideas could be explored to make this transition as smooth as possible.

    First, regular testing requirements in the counterparty framework could help ensure operational readiness while also allowing counterparties to become more comfortable with participating in our operations. A lack of operational readiness was one of the factors contributing to the March 2023 turmoil in the United States.[29]

    Second, and related, obtaining central bank funding requires thorough collateral management, especially if the collateral framework is as broad as the Eurosystem’s. For non-HQLA collateral, in particular, the pricing and due diligence process can be operationally complex and time-consuming.

    For this reason, central banks sometimes require counterparties to pre-position collateral to ensure that funding can be readily obtained.[30] In the euro area, some banks already pre-position collateral voluntarily, in particular non-marketable collateral which cannot be used in private repo markets (Slide 12, left-hand side).

    Banks could be further encouraged to mobilise with the central bank the collateral that is eligible but currently stays idle on their balance sheets. This would increase operational readiness, mitigate financial stability risks and reduce precautionary reserve demand as banks would have higher certainty that they can access central bank liquidity at short notice.

    In the Eurosystem, given its broad collateral framework, such an approach may be more effective in helping banks adapt their liquidity management to the characteristics of a demand-driven operational framework compared with a blanket requirement to pre-position collateral.

    Finally, in some jurisdictions central bank operations are fully integrated into the platforms commonly used by banks to operate in private repo markets.

    This offers banks a number of advantages, including seamless access to transactions with the market and with the central bank, and – depending on the design of clearing arrangements and accounting rules – it could potentially allow banks to net out their positions, thereby freeing up valuable balance sheet space.

    Offering banks the possibility to access Eurosystem refinancing operations through a centrally cleared infrastructure could contribute to making our operations more economical in an environment in which dealer balance sheets are increasingly constrained (Slide 12, right-hand side).[31]

    The design of such arrangements should preserve equal treatment across our diverse range of counterparties, regardless of their size, jurisdiction and business model, maintain the possibility to mobilise a broad range of collateral and be compatible with our risk control framework.

    Further reflection is needed on these considerations, including a comprehensive assessment of the benefits and costs.

    Conclusion

    Let me conclude.

    The shocks experienced since the pandemic led to an abrupt end of the secular downward trend in real interest rates. Whether this will be merely an interlude, or the beginning of a new era, is inherently difficult to predict.

    But looking at the ongoing transformational shifts in the balance of global savings and investments, as well as at the fundamental challenges facing our societies today, higher real interest rates seem to be the most likely scenario for the future.

    This has implications for our monetary policy. Central banks will need to adjust to the new environment, both to secure price stability over the medium term and to implement monetary policy efficiently.

    Thank you.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Isabel Schnabel: No longer convenient? Safe asset abundance and r*

    Source: European Central Bank

    Keynote speech by Isabel Schnabel, Member of the Executive Board of the ECB, at the Bank of England’s 2025 BEAR Conference

    London, 25 February 2025

    Over the past few years, global bond investors have fundamentally reappraised the expected future course of monetary policy.

    Even as inflation has receded and policy restriction has been dialled back, current market prices suggest that maintaining price stability will require higher real interest rates in the future than before the pandemic.

    In my remarks today, I will argue that the shift in market expectations about the level of r* – the rate to which the economy is expected to converge in the long run once current shocks have run their course – is consistent with two sets of observations.

    The first is that the era during which risks to inflation have persistently been to the downside is likely to have come to an end.

    Growing geopolitical fragmentation, climate change and labour scarcity pose measurable upside risks to inflation over the medium to long term. This is especially true as the recent inflation surge may have permanently scarred consumers’ inflation expectations and may have lowered the bar for firms to pass through adverse cost-push shocks to consumer prices.

    The second observation is that we are transitioning from a global “savings glut” towards a global “bond glut”.

    Persistently large fiscal deficits and central bank balance sheet normalisation are gradually reducing the safety and liquidity premia that investors have long been willing to pay to hold scarce government bonds. The fall in the “convenience yield”, in turn, reverses a key factor that had contributed to the decline in real long-term interest rates, and hence r*, during the 2010s.

    The implications for monetary policy are threefold.

    First, a higher r* calls for careful monitoring of when monetary policy ceases to be restrictive. Second, central bank balance sheet policies may themselves affect the level of r* through the convenience yield, making them potentially less effective than previously thought. Third, because central bank reserves also offer convenience services to banks, it is optimal to provide reserves elastically on demand as quantitative tightening reduces excess liquidity.

    Upward shift in r* signals lasting change in the inflation regime

    Starting in 2021, long-term government bond yields rose measurably across advanced economies. Today, the ten-year yield of a German government bond is about two and a half percentage points higher than in late 2021 (Slide 2, left-hand side).

    What is remarkable about the rise in nominal bond yields in the euro area over this period is that it was not driven by a change in inflation compensation. Investors’ views about future inflation prospects are broadly the same today as they were three years ago (Slide 2, right-hand side).

    Rather, nominal interest rates rose because real interest rates increased. Euro area real long-term rates are now trading at a level that is substantially higher than the level prevailing during most of the post-2008 global financial crisis period (Slide 3, left-hand side).

    Part of the rise in real long-term interest rates is a mechanical response to the tightening of monetary policy.

    Long-term interest rates are an average of expected short-term interest rates over the lifetime of the bond, plus a term premium. So, when we raised our key policy rates in response to the surge in inflation, the average real rate expected to prevail over the next ten years increased.[1]

    What is more striking, however, is that investors also fundamentally revised the real short-term rate expected to prevail once inflation has sustainably returned to our target. This rate is typically taken as a proxy for the natural rate of interest, or r*.

    The real one-year rate expected in four years (1y4y), for example, is now at the highest level since the sovereign debt crisis (Slide 3, right-hand side). Even at very distant horizons, such as in nine years, the expected real short-term rate (1y9y) has increased measurably in recent years.

    To a significant extent, these developments reflect a genuine reappraisal of the real equilibrium interest rate that is consistent with our 2% inflation target. A rise in the term premium, which is the excess return investors demand for the uncertainty surrounding the future interest rate path, can explain less than half of the change in the real 1y4y rate.[2]

    These forward rates have also remained surprisingly stable since 2023, with a standard deviation of around just 15 basis points, despite the measurable decline in inflation, the protracted weakness in aggregate demand and the series of structural headwinds facing the euro area.

    We are seeing a similar upward shift in model-based estimates of r*. According to estimates by ECB economists, the natural rate of interest in the euro area has increased appreciably over the past two years, and even more so than what market-based real forward rates would suggest (Slide 4).[3]

    This result is robust across many models and even holds when accounting for the significant uncertainty surrounding these estimates. In other words, for drawing conclusions about the directional change of r* from the rise in market and model-based measures, the actual rate level is largely irrelevant.

    What matters is the direction of travel. And that is unambiguous: we are unlikely to return to the pre-pandemic macroeconomic environment in which central banks had to bring real rates into deeply negative territory to deliver on their price stability mandate. This suggests that the nature of the inflation process is likely to have changed lastingly.

    Real interest rates are only loosely tied to trend growth

    Why do markets expect such a trend reversal for real interest rates in the euro area?

    One answer is that some of the forces that weighed on inflation during the 2010s are now reversing.

    Globalisation is a case in point. The integration of China and other emerging market economies into the global production network and the broad-based decline in tariff and non-tariff barriers were important factors reducing price pressures in advanced economies over several decades.[4]

    Today, protectionist policies, the weaponisation of critical raw materials and geopolitical fragmentation are increasingly dismantling the foundations on which trade improved the welfare of consumers worldwide.

    These forces can be expected to have first-order effects on inflation.

    European gas prices, for example, are up by 65% compared with a year ago despite the significant decline over recent days. Oil prices, too, have increased since September of last year, in part reflecting the marked depreciation of the euro.

    While commodity prices are inherently volatile, and may reverse quickly, other deglobalisation factors, such as reshoring and the lengthening of supply chains, are likely to increase price pressures more lastingly.

    And yet, the persistent rise in real forward rates poses a conundrum in the euro area.

    The reason is that increases in long-term real interest rates are typically thought of as being associated with improvements on the supply side of the economy, such as productivity growth, the labour force and the capital stock.

    At present, however, these factors do not point towards an increase in r* in the euro area.

    Potential growth has generally been revised lower, not higher, as many of the factors currently holding back consumption and especially investment are likely to be structural in nature, such as a rapidly ageing population and deteriorating competitiveness.

    The weak link between the structural factors driving potential growth and r* is, however, not exceptional from a historical perspective.

    Indeed, over time there has been little evidence of a stable relationship between real interest rates and drivers of potential growth, such as demographics and productivity.[5] They have had the expected relationship in some subsamples but not in others.[6]

    Similarly, in the most popular framework for estimating r*, the seminal model by Laubach and Williams, potential growth has played an increasingly subordinated role in explaining why the natural rate of interest has remained at a depressed level in the United States following the global financial crisis (Slide 5, left-hand side).[7]

    Rather, the persistence in the decline in r* is explained to a large extent by a residual factor, which lacks economic interpretation.

    Moreover, if growth was the main driver of r*, then one would expect all real rates in the economy to adjust in a similar way. But while real rates on safe assets have declined since the early 1990s, the return on private capital has remained relatively constant.[8]

    Decline in the convenience yield is pushing r* up

    A growing body of research attempts to reconcile these puzzles. Many studies attribute a significant role to the money-like convenience services that safe and liquid assets, such as government bonds, provide to market participants.

    The yield that investors are willing to forgo in equilibrium for these services is what economists call the “convenience yield”.[9]

    This yield, in turn, critically depends on the net supply of safe assets: When these are scarce, investors are willing to pay a premium to hold them, depressing the real equilibrium rate of interest. And when they are abundant, the premium falls, putting upward pressure on r*.

    New research by economists at the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System shows how incorporating the convenience yield into the Laubach and Williams framework significantly improves the explanatory power of the model.[10]

    In fact, the convenience yield can explain most of the residual factor and is estimated to have caused a large part of the secular decline in the real natural rate in the United States (Slide 5, right-hand side).

    Liquidity requirements that regulators imposed on banks in the wake of the global financial crisis, the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet policies and the integration of many large emerging market economies into the global economy have led to an unprecedented increase in the demand for safe and liquid assets, driving up their convenience yield.[11]

    These findings are in line with earlier research showing that the convenience yield has played an equally important role in depressing the real equilibrium rate in many other advanced economies, including the euro area, during the 2010s.[12]

    This process is now reversing. According to the work by the Federal Reserve economists, r* has recently increased visibly, contrary to what the model without a convenience yield would suggest.

    Asset swap spreads are a good indicator of the convenience yield. Both interest rate swaps and government bonds are essentially risk-free assets, so they should in principle yield the same return.

    For a long time, this has been the case: before the start of quantitative easing (QE) in the euro area in 2015, the spread between a ten-year German Bund and a swap of equivalent maturity was close to zero on average (Slide 6, left-hand side).

    Over time, however, with the start of QE and the parallel fiscal consolidation by governments reducing the net supply of government bonds in the market, the premium that investors were willing to pay to secure their convenience services rose measurably. At the peak, ten-year Bunds were trading nearly 80 basis points below swap rates.

    But since about mid-2022 the asset swap spread has persistently narrowed. In October of last year it turned positive for the first time in ten years, and it now stands close to the pre-QE average again.

    Other measures of the convenience yield paint a similar picture. The spread between ten-year bonds issued by the Kreditanstalt für Wiederaufbau (KfW) and German Bunds has narrowed from about
    -80 basis points in October 2022 to just -30 basis points today (Slide 6, right-hand side).[13]

    Furthermore, in the repo market, we have observed a steady and measurable rise in overnight rates and a convergence across collateral classes (Slide 7, left-hand side).[14]

    Over the past few years, transactions secured by German government collateral, in particular, were trading at a significant premium over others. This premium has declined considerably, reflecting a reduction in collateral scarcity.

    Finally, in the United States, the spread between AAA corporate bonds and US Treasuries has declined from almost 100 basis points in 2022 to 40 basis points today (Slide 7, right-hand side). It currently stands close to its historical low.

    Global savings glut has turned into a global bond glut

    All this suggests that, today, market participants value the liquidity and safety services of government bonds less than they did in the past, as the net supply of government bonds has increased and continues to increase at a notable pace.

    In Germany and the United States, for example, the sovereign bond free float as a share of the outstanding volume has increased by more than ten percentage points over the past three years (Slide 8, left-hand side). It is projected to steadily increase further in the coming years.

    So, the global savings glut appears to have turned into a global bond glut, which reduces the marginal benefit of holding government bonds.

    There are several factors contributing to the rise in the bond free float.[15]

    First, and most importantly, net borrowing by governments remains substantial. The public deficit is estimated to have been around 5% of GDP across advanced economies last year, and it is expected to decline only marginally in the coming years (Slide 8, right-hand side).

    Second, rising geopolitical fragmentation is likely to be contributing to a drop in demand for government bonds in some parts of the world.

    In the United States, for example, there has been a marked decline in the share of foreign official holdings of US Treasury securities since the global financial crisis (Slide 9, left-hand side). It is now at its lowest level in more than 20 years.[16] The US Administration’s attempt to reduce the current account deficit is bound to further depress foreign holdings of US Treasuries.

    Third, central banks are in the process of normalising their balance sheets (Slide 9, right-hand side). Unlike when central banks announced large-scale asset purchases, the effects of quantitative tightening (QT) on yields are likely to materialise only over time, as many central banks take a gradual approach when reducing the size of their balance sheets.

    Higher r* calls for cautious approach to rate easing

    These developments have three important implications for monetary policy.

    One is that central banks are dialling back policy restriction in an environment in which structural factors are putting upward pressure on the real equilibrium rate. Recent analysis by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), for example, suggests that a fall in the convenience yield to pre-2000 average levels could raise natural rates by about 70 basis points.[17]

    While a significant part of these effects may have already materialised, other factors could push real rates up further over the medium term. The IMF projects that, in the coming years, overall global investment – public and private – will reach the highest share of GDP since the 1980s, also reflecting borrowing needs associated with the digital and green transitions as well as defence spending.

    Recent global initiatives aimed at boosting the development and use of artificial intelligence underscore these projections. Overall, these forces may well be larger than those that continue to weigh on the real equilibrium rate, such as an ageing population.

    Central banks, therefore, need to proceed cautiously. We do not fully understand how the pervasive changes to our economies are affecting the steady state, or what the path to the new steady state will look like.

    In this environment, the most appropriate way to conduct monetary policy is to look at the incoming data to assess how fast, and to what extent, changes to our key policy rates are being transmitted to the economy.

    For the euro area, this assessment suggests that, over the past year, the degree of policy restraint has declined appreciably – to a point where we can no longer say with confidence that our policy is restrictive.

    According to the most recent bank lending survey, for example, 90% of banks say that the general level of interest rates has no impact on the demand for corporate loans, with 8% saying that it contributes to boosting credit demand (Slide 10, left-hand side). This is a marked shift from a year ago when a third of all banks reported that interest rates were weighing on credit demand.

    For mortgages, the evidence is even more striking. Today almost half of the banks report that the level of interest rates supports loan demand, while a year ago more than 40% said the opposite. As a result, a net 42% of banks report an increase in the demand for mortgages, close to the historical high.

    Survey evidence is gradually showing up in actual lending data. Credit to firms expanded by 1.5% in December, the highest rate in a year and a half, and credit to households for house purchases grew by 1.1% (Slide 10, right-hand side).

    Strong bank balance sheets are contributing to the recovery and, given the lags in policy transmission, further easing is still in the pipeline.

    Lending conditions are also relatively favourable from the perspective of borrowers. The spread between the composite cost of borrowing for households and sovereign bond yields is well below the level seen over most of the 2010s and is now close to the historical average (Slide 11).[18]

    And while some maturing loans from the period of very low interest rates will still need to be refinanced at higher rates, over time this debt has declined in real terms and interest payments as a fraction of net income are buffered by rising nominal wages.

    Overall, therefore, it is becoming increasingly unlikely that current financing conditions are materially holding back consumption and investment. The fact that growth remains subdued cannot and should not be taken as evidence that policy is restrictive.

    As the ECB’s most recent corporate telephone survey suggests, the continued weakness in manufacturing is increasingly viewed by firms as structural, reflecting a combination of high energy and labour costs, an overly inhibitive and uncertain regulatory environment and increased import competition, especially from China.[19]

    Such structural headwinds reduce the economy’s sensitivity to changes in monetary policy.

    QE’s impact on r* is reducing its effectiveness

    The second implication from the impact of the convenience yield on r* is related to the use of balance sheet policies.

    If QE raises the convenience yield by reducing the net supply of government bonds, it may ultimately lower the real equilibrium interest rate. Importantly, this channel – the convenience yield channel – is distinct from the term premium channel.[20]

    So, doing QE could be like chasing a moving target.

    It reduces long-run rates by compressing the term premium.[21] But by making investors willing to pay a higher safety premium when the supply of safe assets shrinks, it may also reduce the interest rate level below which monetary policy stimulates growth and inflation.

    This can also be seen by looking at how QE changes the balance of savings and investments. Fiscal deficits absorb private savings and thereby increase r*. By doing QE, central banks absorb fiscal deficits and thereby lower r*.

    In other words, central bank balance sheet policies may be less effective than previously thought.[22] This could be an additional factor explaining why large-scale asset purchases did not succeed in bringing inflation back to 2% before the pandemic.

    Of course, the same logic holds true when central banks reduce their balance sheets.

    If QE contributed to depressing r*, QT will raise it. Any rise in real rates may then be less consequential for growth and inflation. It would then be misguided to compensate for higher long-term interest rates resulting from QT with lower short-term rates.

    This is indeed what recent research suggests: QT announcements tend to cause a significant decline in the convenience yield of safe assets.[23]

    There is one caveat, however.

    QE and QT are implemented by issuing and absorbing central bank reserves, which themselves are safe assets – in fact, reserves are the economy’s ultimate safe asset because they are free of liquidity and interest rate risk.[24]

    Banks therefore highly value the convenience services of central bank reserves. So, when evaluating the effects of central bank balance sheet policies on r*, it is necessary to consider both the asset and liability side.

    Research by economists from the Bank of England does exactly that.[25] They show that the effects of QT on the real equilibrium rate depend on the relative strength of two factors.

    One is the effect on the bond convenience yield, which causes r* to rise as the supply of government bonds increases.

    The other is the effect on the convenience yield of reserves. That effect is highly non-linear: when reserves are scarce, banks are willing to pay a high mark-up on wholesale interest rates, as was evident in the United States in 2019 when repo rates surged strongly.

    So, if QT leads to a scarcity of reserves, it may cause the overall convenience yield to rise, and hence equilibrium rates to fall.

    Convenience of reserves and the ECB’s operational framework

    At the ECB, we took this factor into account when we reviewed our operational framework last year.[26] This is the third implication for monetary policy.

    The new framework allows banks to demand as many reserves as they find optimal at a spread that is 15 basis points above the rate which the ECB pays to banks when they deposit their excess reserves with us. So, the opportunity cost of holding reserves is comparatively small, given the convenience services reserves provide to banks.

    In addition, our framework allows banks themselves to generate an increase in safe assets – by pledging non-high quality liquid assets (non-HQLA) in our lending operations. In doing so, banks on average generate € 0.92 of net HQLA for every euro that they borrow from the Eurosystem.[27]

    Our framework therefore recognises that years of crises, more stringent regulatory requirements and the advance of new technologies – some of which increase the risk of “digital” bank runs – imply that banks may wish to hold larger liquidity buffers than they historically have done.

    Supplying central bank reserves elastically will ensure that reserves will not become scarce as balance sheet normalisation proceeds. And if banks access our standard refinancing operations when they are in need of liquidity, they will also not have to adjust their lending activities in response to the decline in reserves, as is sometimes feared.[28]

    For now, the recourse to our lending operations has been limited, as there is still ample excess liquidity. But as we transition over the coming years to a world in which reserves are less abundant, banks will increasingly start borrowing reserves via our operations.

    Three ideas could be explored to make this transition as smooth as possible.

    First, regular testing requirements in the counterparty framework could help ensure operational readiness while also allowing counterparties to become more comfortable with participating in our operations. A lack of operational readiness was one of the factors contributing to the March 2023 turmoil in the United States.[29]

    Second, and related, obtaining central bank funding requires thorough collateral management, especially if the collateral framework is as broad as the Eurosystem’s. For non-HQLA collateral, in particular, the pricing and due diligence process can be operationally complex and time-consuming.

    For this reason, central banks sometimes require counterparties to pre-position collateral to ensure that funding can be readily obtained.[30] In the euro area, some banks already pre-position collateral voluntarily, in particular non-marketable collateral which cannot be used in private repo markets (Slide 12, left-hand side).

    Banks could be further encouraged to mobilise with the central bank the collateral that is eligible but currently stays idle on their balance sheets. This would increase operational readiness, mitigate financial stability risks and reduce precautionary reserve demand as banks would have higher certainty that they can access central bank liquidity at short notice.

    In the Eurosystem, given its broad collateral framework, such an approach may be more effective in helping banks adapt their liquidity management to the characteristics of a demand-driven operational framework compared with a blanket requirement to pre-position collateral.

    Finally, in some jurisdictions central bank operations are fully integrated into the platforms commonly used by banks to operate in private repo markets.

    This offers banks a number of advantages, including seamless access to transactions with the market and with the central bank, and – depending on the design of clearing arrangements and accounting rules – it could potentially allow banks to net out their positions, thereby freeing up valuable balance sheet space.

    Offering banks the possibility to access Eurosystem refinancing operations through a centrally cleared infrastructure could contribute to making our operations more economical in an environment in which dealer balance sheets are increasingly constrained (Slide 12, right-hand side).[31]

    The design of such arrangements should preserve equal treatment across our diverse range of counterparties, regardless of their size, jurisdiction and business model, maintain the possibility to mobilise a broad range of collateral and be compatible with our risk control framework.

    Further reflection is needed on these considerations, including a comprehensive assessment of the benefits and costs.

    Conclusion

    Let me conclude.

    The shocks experienced since the pandemic led to an abrupt end of the secular downward trend in real interest rates. Whether this will be merely an interlude, or the beginning of a new era, is inherently difficult to predict.

    But looking at the ongoing transformational shifts in the balance of global savings and investments, as well as at the fundamental challenges facing our societies today, higher real interest rates seem to be the most likely scenario for the future.

    This has implications for our monetary policy. Central banks will need to adjust to the new environment, both to secure price stability over the medium term and to implement monetary policy efficiently.

    Thank you.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – WHO international health regulations and pandemic treaty – E-002841/2024(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    The Commission sees the negotiations of the Pandemic Agreement (PA) and the amendments to the International Health Regulations (IHR) as important opportunities to address gaps exposed by COVID-19.

    In line with the negotiating directives (addendum to Council Decision (EU) 2022/451[1]), the Commission, negotiating on behalf of the Union, prioritises prevention, including the One Health approach.

    The aim is to strengthen prevention, preparedness and response (PPPR) to pandemics and other public health emergencies. No PA proposal or agreed amendments to the IHR affect the Member States’ responsibilities for the definition of their health policy and for the organisation and delivery of health services and medical care as enshrined in the Treaty on the Functioning of the EU[2]. Sovereignty stands as a guiding principle in the PA proposal and remains unchanged in the amended IHR.

    No new specific ‘PPPR mechanism’ is foreseen under either instrument. The amended IHR created the Coordinating Financial Mechanism which will support the identification of, and access to financing. Many Commission initiatives support and contribute[3] to PPPR, including participation in the Pandemic Fund.

    The Commission committed EUR 427 million to the Pandemic Fund[4], and the Fund aims at increasing health system resilience and adapting to local contexts, with a One Health approach.

    The Commission has three priorities in the 2022 Global Health Strategy[5]: deliver better health and well-being; strengthen health systems and advance universal health coverage; and prevent and combat health threats, including pandemics, applying a One Health approach.

    • [1] Council Decision (EU) 2022/451 of 3 March 2022 authorising the opening of negotiations on behalf of the European Union for an international agreement on pandemic prevention, preparedness and response, as well as complementary amendments to the International Health Regulations (2005).), OJ L 92, 21.3.2022, p. 1.
    • [2] Article 168(7) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the EU.
    • [3] Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, GPEI-Global Polio Eradication Initiative, the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, programmes for health with partner countries and regions.
    • [4] This represents 7.9% of EU commitments to global health development assistance (2021-2027).
    • [5] https://health.ec.europa.eu/internationalcooperation/global-health_en
    Last updated: 25 February 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Waterbury Company Pays More Than $2.2 Million to Resolve False Claims Act Allegations Related to PPP Loan

    Source: United States Department of Justice (National Center for Disaster Fraud)

    Marc H. Silverman, Acting United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut, today announced that MacDermid Incorporated, a Waterbury-based company that provides chemical products and technical services, has paid $2,226,623.62 to settle False Claims Act allegations that Coventya Inc., a company MacDermid Incorporated acquired in 2021, falsely certified its eligibility to receive a Paycheck Protection Program loan.

    Congress created the Paycheck Protection Program (“PPP”) in March 2020 under the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act.  The PPP was administered by the Small Business Administration (SBA), and was intended to support small businesses struggling to pay employees and other expenses during the COVID-19 pandemic.  When applying for PPP loans, borrowers were required to certify that they were eligible for the requested loans and that the information they provided was true and accurate.  In December 2020, Congress approved funding for a second round of forgivable PPP loans, which became available to borrowers beginning in January 2021.  This “second-draw” loan program included additional eligibility requirements. 

    One of the eligibility requirements for receiving a second-draw PPP loan was that the entity could employ no more than 300 individuals.  The applicant was required to include in its employee count the employees of any foreign and domestic affiliate entities.

    The settlement resolves allegations that Coventya Inc., a company involved in the manufacture and international distribution of chemicals, falsely certified it was eligible to apply for and receive forgiveness of a second-draw PPP loan in 2021.  In April 2021, Coventya applied for a second-draw PPP loan for $1,075,000, representing that it had fewer than 300 employees.  The government contends that, together with its foreign affiliate, Coventya had more than 300 employees and was therefore ineligible for that loan.  Based on its false certification, Coventya received the loan.  After receiving this PPP loan, Coventya sought and received forgiveness of the total loan amount of $1,081,061.81, including $1,075,000 in principal and $6,061.81 in interest, which the SBA paid to the lender.

    Coventya was acquired by MacDermid Incorporated in September 2021, and is now known as MacDermid, Incorporated.

    “PPP loans were intended to help small businesses and their employees suffering the economic effects caused by the pandemic,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Silverman. “This office is committed to pursuing those who violated the requirements of pandemic assistance programs and holding them accountable.”  

    The False Claims Act allegations resolved by the settlement were originally brought in a lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court in Connecticut by a relator, or whistleblower, under the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act.  These provisions allow private parties to bring suit on behalf of the government and to share in any recovery.  The relator, GNGH2 Inc., will receive $222,662.36 as its share of the recovery.

    The case resolved by this settlement is U.S. ex rel GNGH2 Inc. v. MacDermid Incorporated, as successor in interest to Coventya, Inc. (Docket No. 3:24-cv-1480).

    This case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Sara Kaczmarek, with assistance from SBA’s Office of General Counsel.

    Individuals with information about allegations of fraud involving COVID-19 are encouraged to report it by calling the Department of Justice’s National Center for Disaster Fraud Hotline at 866-720-5721, or via the NCDF Web Complaint Form at: https://www.justice.gov/disaster-fraud/ncdf-disaster-complaint-form.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Global: Trump’s claim that US debt calculation may be fraudulent could put the economy in danger

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Gabriella Legrenzi, Senior Lecturer in Economics and Finance, Keele University

    Deacons docs/Shutterstock

    The US president, Donald Trump, is challenging official figures around the country’s federal debt, suggesting possible fraud in its calculation. The president’s remarks have added a controversial twist to an issue that is both complex and consequential for the United States. And it has implications for the global economy and financial markets too.

    US federal debt is the total amount of money the US government owes from years of borrowing to cover budget deficits (spending beyond its revenues). Over time, this amount has grown significantly, becoming a focal point for political debates and economic forecasts.

    The US debt clock indicates an amount of debt of above US$36 trillion (£28.5 trillion), corresponding to US$107,227 (£84,795) per US citizen.

    This figure is based on the US total public debt series. It is undeniable that the US debt has grown remarkably since the 2008 recession, with a further acceleration during the COVID pandemic. This brings the US federal debt in at around 121% of the size of the entire economy (GDP). For comparison, the UK’s Office for Budget Responsibility puts British national debt at 99.4% of GDP in 2024.

    This pattern is common across advanced economies, given the necessity to spend to support their economies during recessions.

    Trump has also claimed that, as the result of this alleged fraud, the US might have less debt than was thought. Potential fraud aside, it is common knowledge that the headline debt figure overstates the amount of federal debt. This is because it includes debt that one part of the US government owes to another part, as well as debt held by the Federal Reserve Banks.

    Subtracting these debts from the US federal debt data gives us the debt held by the public. This is much lower but it still shows a similar growing pattern over time.

    How US national debt has grown as a share of GDP:

    The conventional wisdom (courtesy of Mr Micawber, a character in Charles Dickens’ novel David Copperfield) is that an income greater than expenditure equals happiness, while the opposite results in misery. But this does not necessarily apply to public debt.

    This is ultimately a debt we have with ourselves (and our future generations). What really matters is its long-term sustainability, meaning that the debt-to-GDP ratio is not following an explosive pattern. This kind of pattern could increase the risk premium (effectively the interest) demanded by investors, with a negative impact on private investments and growth prospects. Also, it potentially raises the risk of default.

    Our research has shown that there is no universally accepted threshold where debt becomes unsustainable. Instead, each case requires context-specific analysis looking at macroeconomic fundamentals such as inflation and unemployment, financial crises as well as the (potentially self-fulfilling) market expectations.

    Trump’s take

    Recently, Trump has questioned not only the size of federal debt but also the integrity of the methods used to calculate it, without presenting any evidence. He claims that the Elon Musk-led Department of Government Efficiency (Doge) has uncovered potential fraud. If confirmed, these findings could significantly alter perceptions of the country’s financial position.

    Reports have also highlighted his controversial allegation that the US is “not that rich right now. We owe US$36 trillion … because we let all these nations take advantage of us.” These claims are puzzling, as the large size of US debt reflects decades of fiscal policy decisions in the wake of numerous shocks to the economy. Debt itself is not a cause of alarm for analysts.

    While the amount of US federal debt held by foreign stakeholders has risen over time, it is currently less than 30% of GDP. This is down from an all-time high of 35% during Trump’s first term back in 2020 during the pandemic.

    Of the US federal debt held by foreign countries, the largest amounts are owned by Japan, China, and the UK. Yet, when other countries hold US federal debt, it has nothing to do with “taking advantage” of the US.

    In fact, the US dollar is the world’s dominant vehicle currency. It is on one side of 88% of all trades in the foreign exchange market, which has a global daily turnover of US$7.5 trillion.

    As such, the US benefits from a so-called “exorbitant privilege”. This advantage comes from the international demand for the “safe haven” status of US Treasury securities and the US dollar, and has allowed the US to issue debt at a relatively low interest rate.

    Research suggests that this “safe haven” status of the US dollar has increased the maximum sustainable debt for the US by around 22%. What’s more, it’s estimated to have saved the US government 0.7% of GDP in annual interest payments.

    These advantages rely on the fact that US Treasury bonds are traditionally viewed as risk-free assets. This is particularly the case during times of global financial stress, as they are backed by the full faith and credit of the US government. The US has a longstanding record of meeting its debt obligations.

    But Trump’s comments risk shaking the confidence of financial markets, leading traders to reassess the reliability of official data and the potential risks associated with US Treasury bonds. Whether truth or tale, such remarks touch on sensitive issues regarding fiscal responsibility and transparency in government.

    Any suggestion that the US government’s debt figures are unreliable could be destabilising. This is because they could call into question the reliability of the US fiscal system among the international investors and foreign governments that hold these securities.

    Much like Trump’s tariff threats, alleging other countries who hold a substantial portion of US federal debt have been opportunistic could be risky.

    The president could end up straining diplomatic bilateral relations with key creditors, which may cause broader uncertainties in global financial markets.

    With Trump in the White House, distinguishing between politically charged rhetoric and fiscal sustainability of the US federal debt will be essential for maintaining trust in the US economy and the health of the global financial system.

    The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. Trump’s claim that US debt calculation may be fraudulent could put the economy in danger – https://theconversation.com/trumps-claim-that-us-debt-calculation-may-be-fraudulent-could-put-the-economy-in-danger-250538

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-Evening Report: 5 years on, COVID remains NZ’s most important infectious disease – it still demands a strong response

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michael Baker, Professor of Public Health, University of Otago

    Getty Images

    This Friday, February 28, marks five years since COVID-19 was first reported in Aotearoa New Zealand. At a population level, it remains our most harmful infectious disease, with thousands of hospitalisations and 664 deaths last year.

    Understandably perhaps, many people want to move on from the early pandemic years, and there is a temptation to minimise COVID’s threat now the emergency response has passed.

    But it deserves a proportionate response that draws on the rich evidence we now have of how to minimise the harms of respiratory infections and the health and economic benefits that come from managing them well.

    The epidemiology of the SARS-CoV-2 virus continues to change. Hospitalisations provide the most consistent measure of incidence trends. Wastewater testing shows similar successive waves of infection.

    The past five years divide into a successful elimination response from March 2020 to late 2021 and a mitigation period from February 2022 onwards.



    The mitigation phase, which has now lasted three years, has been driven by Omicron variants of SARS-CoV-2, with seven waves of generally decreasing size (see graph above).

    Total hospitalisations have dropped from a peak of more than 22,000 in 2022 to about 9,000 in 2024 (a 60% decline). Deaths attributed to COVID have also decreased from 2,757 in 2022 to 664 in 2024 (a 76% decline). These drops are likely to reflect changes in both the virus and population immunity arising from vaccination and infection.

    The timing and size of COVID waves remain unpredictable. They are not following a seasonal pattern like influenza. Only two of the seven Omicron waves peaked in the flu season (see graph above).

    Although further declines are likely, it is possible a large-scale change in the virus could emerge – as we’ve seen with Delta and Omicron variants – and reverse this pattern. We still need to plan for the possibility of severe future variants as well as for other types of pandemics that might be becoming more likely.

    Health and economic impacts of Long COVID

    Despite a favourable downward trend, deaths and hospitalisations from COVID are still higher than those estimated for influenza, which is probably our next most burdensome infectious disease.

    It is also a major cause of health inequities with significantly worse infection outcomes for Māori and Pacific peoples.

    Continuing high rates of repeat infections are also driving Long COVID, with the risk estimated at 4-14% per infection. Long COVID occurs with infections of all intensities, with both initial infection and reinfections.

    Consequently, the prevalence of Long COVID is likely to increase over time, with substantial health and economic consequences.

    How to respond to the ongoing pandemic

    We know what works to reduce the harms from COVID. Above all, we need an evidence-informed national plan, clear communication, engagement with key partners (including the health sector, public and Māori), resources and implementation. Key elements include:

    1. Continuing and enhancing highly effective COVID surveillance

    Surveillance systems include use of wastewater testing and whole-genome sequencing which guide our response. We need to add a focus on hospital-acquired COVID which is an important source of infections and deaths, estimated to have caused about 14% of COVID deaths in New South Wales in 2023, which would represent about 150 deaths that year in New Zealand.

    2. Promoting regular repeat vaccinations

    The currently available Pfizer JN.1 vaccine provides a reasonable match with the circulating strain of the virus. This vaccine is very safe and effective at reducing many adverse effects of infection, including Long COVID, but requires regular additional doses for all age groups to maintain effectiveness.

    3. Using public health and social measures to reduce infections

    These measures include improving indoor air quality and promoting testing and self-isolation for those with respiratory symptoms. Reintroducing free RAT tests and sick-leave support would help.

    Wearing respirator masks (for example, N95) is highly effective, particularly in confined indoor environments such as public transport. Given the severe effects of hospital-acquired COVID, health settings need particular attention. Evidence supports the effectiveness and value of admission testing of patients and staff wearing N95 masks.

    4. Taking specific measures to reduce and manage Long Covid

    This means active steps to reduce both the incidence of infection (with public health and social measures) and the severity and duration of illness (with vaccination and antivirals). New Zealand needs to offer more than a single additional dose for younger age groups to improve their protection from Long COVID.

    5. Updating and implementing our pandemic preparedness and response plan

    The Royal Commission of Inquiry into COVID delivered a set of recommendations based on the pandemic experience. Now is the time to implement them.

    Our capacity could be supported through a New Zealand Centre for Disease Control and a pandemic cooperation agreement with Australia. Developing these pandemic capabilities would help to minimise COVID and other respiratory infections, including influenza.

    All of these measures would be supported by a strong, systematic response to the corrosive effects of misinformation and disinformation.

    The past five years have taught us a great deal about pandemic diseases and how to manage them. A key lesson from New Zealand’s highly successful early elimination response was the importance of good evidence-informed leadership and a cohesive plan.

    Such leadership is still needed now to mitigate the harm from COVID which remains an ongoing threat to individual and societal wellbeing.

    Michael Baker’s employer, the University of Otago, has received funding from the Health Research Council of New Zealand and the New Zealand Ministry of Health for research he has carried out on COVID-19 epidemiology, prevention and control.

    Matire Harwood is a member of the Hauora Māori Advisory Committee to the Minister of Health.

    Amanda Kvalsvig, John Donne Potter, and Nick Wilson do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. 5 years on, COVID remains NZ’s most important infectious disease – it still demands a strong response – https://theconversation.com/5-years-on-covid-remains-nzs-most-important-infectious-disease-it-still-demands-a-strong-response-246873

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI USA: Press Release: FDIC-Insured Institutions Reported Return on Assets of 1.11 Percent and Net Income of $66.8 Billion in the Fourth Quarter

    Source: US Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation FDIC

    Full-Year ROA and Net Income Improved From 2023: The banking industry reported full-year 2024 net income of $268.2 billion, up $14.1 billion (5.6 percent) from the prior year, a level still well above the pre-pandemic average.[1]  The aggregate ROA ratio increased by three basis point to 1.12 percent.  The increases in net income and ROA occurred primarily because one-time events in 2023 and 2024 led to lower noninterest expense, higher noninterest income, and lower realized securities losses in 2024.

    Community banks reported full-year 2024 net income of $25.9 billion, down $624 million (2.4 percent) from the prior year.  The decline was caused by higher noninterest expense, up $3.9 billion (6.1 percent), and higher provision expense, up $671 million (20 percent), which offset the increases in net interest income, up $2.2 billion (2.7 percent), and noninterest income, up $1.1 billion (5.9 percent). Community banks reported full-year pre-tax ROA of 1.14 percent, down eight basis points from the prior year.

    Quarterly ROA and Net Income Increased From the Prior Quarter, Driven By Higher Net Interest Income:  Fourth quarter net income for the 4,487 FDIC-insured commercial banks and savings institutions increased $1.5 billion (2.3 percent) from the prior quarter to $66.8 billion.  The quarterly increase in net income was largely driven by an increase in net interest income, as declining short-term interest rates reduced interest expense more than interest income.

    The banking industry reported an aggregate ROA of 1.11 percent in fourth quarter 2024, up 2 basis points from one quarter earlier and up 50 basis points from one year earlier.

    Community Bank Net Income Decreased Quarter Over Quarter:  Quarterly net income for the 4,046 community banks insured by the FDIC was $6.4 billion in the fourth quarter, a decrease of $441 million (6.5 percent) from third quarter 2024.  Higher noninterest expense (up $931 million, or 5.4 percent) and realized securities losses of $565.9 million more than offset higher net interest income (up $774 million, or 3.6 percent) and higher noninterest income (up $187 million, or 3.7 percent).  The community bank pretax ROA decreased 12 basis points from last quarter to 1.09 percent.

    The Net Interest Margin Rose Across All Asset-Size Groups in the Quarterly Banking Profile:  The industry reported a quarter-over-quarter increase in net interest income of $3.8 billion as the net interest margin (NIM) increased five basis points to 3.28 percent.  All asset-size groups in the Quarterly Banking Profile reported a higher NIM in the fourth quarter.  The industry’s fourth-quarter NIM was three basis points above the pre-pandemic average NIM.  The community bank NIM of 3.44 percent increased nine basis points quarter over quarter, increasing for the third consecutive quarter, but is still below the pre-pandemic average of 3.63 percent.

    Asset Quality Metrics Remained Generally Favorable, Though Weakness in Certain Portfolios Persisted:  Past-due and nonaccrual (PDNA) loans, or loans that are 30 or more days past due or in nonaccrual status, increased six basis points from the prior quarter to 1.60 percent of total loans.  The industry’s PDNA ratio is still below the pre-pandemic average of 1.94 percent.  The PDNA ratio for non-owner occupied commercial real estate (CRE) loans declined five basis points to 2.02 percent, but the ratio remains 175 basis points above the pre-pandemic average.  Despite declining slightly in the fourth quarter, the PDNA rate for non-owner occupied CRE loans remains elevated, largely driven by office loans at banks with more than $250 billion in assets.  However, these banks tend to have lower concentrations of such loans in relation to total assets and capital than smaller institutions, mitigating the overall risk.

    The industry’s net charge-off ratio increased three basis points to 0.70 percent from the prior quarter and is five basis points higher than the year-ago quarter.  This ratio is 22 basis points above the pre-pandemic average. The credit card net charge-off ratio was 4.57 percent in the fourth quarter, up nine basis points quarter over quarter and 109 basis points above the pre-pandemic average.

    Loan Balances Increased Modestly From the Prior Quarter and a Year Ago: Total loan and lease balances increased $105.0 billion (0.8 percent) from the previous quarter.  The largest portfolio increases were reported in “all other” loans and loans to non-depository financial institutions, largely due to reclassifications following the finalization of changes to how certain loan products should be reported.  Reclassifications also likely caused declines in other loan categories, particularly commercial and industrial (C&I) and consumer loans.  In addition to these reclassifications, credit card loans and growth in loans to non-depository financial institutions contributed to the industry’s quarterly loan growth.  The industry’s annual rate of loan growth remained steady in the fourth quarter at 2.2 percent.

    Community bank loan growth was more robust and widespread than the industry. Total loans at community banks increased 1.3 percent from the prior quarter and 5.1 percent from the prior year, led by increases in nonfarm nonresidential CRE and residential mortgage portfolios.

    Domestic Deposits Increased From Last Quarter, Primarily Due to Higher Uninsured Deposits:  Domestic deposits increased $214.0 billion (1.2 percent) from third quarter 2024.  Both savings and transaction deposits increased from the prior quarter, with declines in time deposits partially offsetting the increases. Brokered deposits decreased for the fourth straight quarter, down $46.0 billion (3.6 percent) from the prior quarter.

    Estimated insured deposits increased slightly this quarter (up $39.1 billion, or 0.4 percent) while estimated uninsured domestic deposits increased $218.5 billion (3.0 percent). Growth in estimated uninsured deposits was widespread; most banks (60.1 percent) reported an increase in such deposits from the prior quarter.

    The Deposit Insurance Fund Reserve Ratio Increased Three Basis Points to 1.28 Percent:  In the fourth quarter, the Deposit Insurance Fund balance increased $4.0 billion to $137.1 billion.  The reserve ratio increased three basis points during the quarter to 1.28 percent.

    The Total Number of Insured Institutions Declined:  The total number of FDIC-insured institutions declined by 30 during the quarter to 4,487.  During the quarter, four banks opened, one bank failed, one bank failed after quarter end and did not file a Call Report, three banks did not file a Call Report after selling a majority of their assets to credit unions, one bank otherwise closed, and 28 institutions merged with other banks.

    ATTACHMENTS:

    Full Statement on Fourth Quarter and Full-Year Results with Charts
    Webpage with Charts and Data for Fourth Quarter and Full-Year Results 
    Statement by Acting Chairman Travis Hill on Problem Bank Assets

    # # #

    MEDIA CONTACT: 
    Julianne Breitbeil
    202-340-2043
    JBreitbeil@FDIC.gov


    [1] The “pre-pandemic average” refers to the period of first quarter 2015 through fourth quarter 2019 and is used consistently throughout this press release.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: ASM announces fourth quarter 2024 results

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Almere, The Netherlands
    February 25, 2025, 6 p.m. CET

    Eighth consecutive year of double-digit full-year growth, outperforming WFE in 2024

    ASM International N.V. (Euronext Amsterdam: ASM) today reports its Q4 2024 results (unaudited).

    Financial highlights

    € million Q4 2023 Q3 2024 Q4 2024
    New orders 677.5 815.3 731.4
    yoy change % at constant currencies (14%) 30% 8%
           
    Revenue 632.9 778.6 809.0
    yoy change % at constant currencies (7%) 26% 27%
           
    Gross profit margin % 47.2  % 49.4 % 50.3  %
    Adjusted gross profit margin 1 47.9  % 49.4 % 50.3  %
           
    Operating result 131.5 215.2 222.3
    Operating result margin % 20.8  % 27.6  % 27.5  %
           
    Adjusted operating result 1 141.0 219.9 227.0
    Adjusted operating result margin 1 22.3  % 28.2  % 28.1  %
           
    Net earnings 90.9 127.9 225.8
    Adjusted net earnings 1 100.3 133.6 231.5

    1 Adjusted figures are non-IFRS performance measures. Refer to Annex 3 for a reconciliation of non-IFRS performance measures. 

    • New orders of €731 million in Q4 2024 increased YoY by 8% at constant currencies (also 8% as reported), with the increase again mainly driven by solid demand for gate-all-around (GAA) and high-bandwidth memory (HBM) DRAM.
    • Revenue of €809 million increased by 27% at constant currencies (increased by 28% as reported) from Q4 of last year and at the upper end of the guidance (€770-810 million).
    • YoY improvement in adjusted gross profit margin is due to strong mix.
    • Adjusted operating result margin increased to 28.1%, compared to 22.3% in Q4 2023 mainly due to higher gross margin and a moderation in SG&A, partially offset by higher investments in R&D.
    • Revenue for Q1 2025 is expected to be in the range of €810-850 million.

    Comment

    “ASM continued to deliver a solid performance in 2024. Sales increased by 12% at constant currencies, outperforming the wafer fab equipment (WFE) market which increased by a mid-single digit percentage in 2024. This marks our company’s eighth consecutive year of double-digit growth.” said Hichem M’Saad, CEO of ASM. “Revenue in Q4 2024 increased to €809 million, up 27% year-on-year at constant currencies and at the top end of our guidance of €770-810 million. The revenue increase in Q4 was driven by higher sales in leading-edge logic/foundry. Q4 bookings of €731 million increased, at constant currencies, by 8% from Q4 2023. Bookings were down from the level in Q3 2024, which was in part explained by order pull-ins from Q4 2024 to Q3 2024, as communicated last quarter. GAA-related orders increased strongly from Q3 to Q4, but this was offset by a drop in China demand. The gross margin came in at 50.3% in Q4 2024. Operating margin of 28.1% increased by nearly 6% points compared to Q4 2023.

    Growth in the WFE market was uneven in 2024: AI-related segments continued to increase strongly, but other parts of the market showed a mixed performance. For ASM, this meant strong momentum in our GAA-related applications. With the mix shifting from pilot-line to high-volume manufacturing, both quarterly GAA-related sales and orders increased strongly in the course of 2024.  We also saw a surge in demand for HBM-related, high-performance DRAM applications in 2024. This fueled a rebound in our total memory sales from a relatively low level of 11% in 2023 to a very strong level of 25% in 2024. Sales from the Chinese market remained strong in 2024, but dropped from the first half to the second half and also from Q3 to Q4, as expected. Sales in the power/analog/wafer market dropped by a significant double-digit percentage in 2024, reflecting the cyclical slowdown in the automotive and industrial end markets. Our SiC Epi increased by a mid-single digit percentage in 2024. While this was below our prior expectation of double-digit growth, we believe it was still a robust performance in view of significant weakening of the SiC market in 2024. 

    Financial results were again strong in 2024. Adjusted gross margin increased to 50.5% in 2024, supported by mix, a continued substantial contribution from the Chinese market, and improvements in our operations to reduce costs. In 2024, adjusted operating profit increased by 17%. We further stepped up adjusted net R&D spending (+20%) in view of our growing pipeline of opportunities, while the increase in adjusted SG&A expenses moderated (+3%), reflecting ongoing cost control. Free cash flow increased by 23% in 2024 to a record-high level of €548 million. 

    We remain on track towards our strategic targets and continue to invest in our people, in innovation and expansion, including in our planned new facilities in Hwaseong, Korea, and Scottsdale, Arizona.  We also made further strides in accelerating sustainability. We published our Climate Transition Plan last year, and, as a first milestone, we achieved our target of 100% renewable electricity in 2024, which contributed to a 52% drop in our combined Scope 1 and 2 GHG emissions.”

    Outlook

    Market conditions continue to be mixed looking into 2025, with WFE spending expected to increase slightly. Leading-edge logic/foundry is expected to show the highest growth in 2025. There have been some further shifts in capex forecasts among customers in this segment, but overall our forecast for a substantial increase in GAA-related sales in 2025 is unchanged. In memory, we expect healthy sales in 2025, supported by continued solid demand for HBM-related DRAM, although it is too early to tell if memory sales will be at the same very strong level as in 2024. The power/analog/wafer segments are still in a cyclical correction with no signs of a recovery in the near term. In SiC Epi, the outlook further weakened. Taking into account the recently announced new U.S. export controls and as communicated in our press release of December 4, 2024, our China revenue is expected to decrease in 2025, with equipment sales from this market falling in a range of low-to-high 20s percentage of total ASM revenue.

    We confirm our target for revenue in a range of €3.2-3.6 billion in 2025, but it is too early to provide a more specific forecast due to market uncertainty and as visibility for the second half of the year is still limited.
    At constant currencies, we expect revenue for Q1 2025 to be in a range of €810-850 million, with a projected further increase in Q2 compared to Q1.

    Share buyback program

    ASM announces today that its Management Board authorized a new repurchase program of up to €150 million of the company’s common shares within the 2025/2026 time frame. This repurchase program is part of ASM’s commitment to use excess cash for the benefit of its shareholders.

    Dividend proposal

    ASM will propose to the forthcoming 2025 Annual General Meeting on May 12, 2025, to declare a regular dividend of €3.00 per common share over 2024, up from €2.75 per common share over 2023.

    Modification in spares & service revenue reporting definition

    Effective 2025, ASM will include installation and qualification revenue as part of spares & services revenue aligning with our business organization structure at ASM. Further details of the quarterly and full-year impact on 2024 revenue can be found in annex 4.

    About ASM

    ASM International N.V., headquartered in Almere, the Netherlands, and its subsidiaries design and manufacture equipment and process solutions to produce semiconductor devices for wafer processing, and have facilities in the United States, Europe, and Asia. ASM International’s common stock trades on the Euronext Amsterdam Stock Exchange (symbol: ASM). For more information, visit ASM’s website at www.asm.com.

    Cautionary note regarding forward-looking statements: All matters discussed in this press release, except for any historical data, are forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements. These include, but are not limited to, economic conditions and trends in the semiconductor industry generally and the timing of the industry cycles specifically, currency fluctuations, corporate transactions, financing and liquidity matters, the success of restructurings, the timing of significant orders, market acceptance of new products, competitive factors, litigation involving intellectual property, shareholders or other issues, commercial and economic disruption due to natural disasters, terrorist activity, armed conflict or political instability, changes in import/export regulations, epidemics, pandemics and other risks indicated in the company’s reports and financial statements. The company assumes no obligation nor intends to update or revise any forward-looking statements to reflect future developments or circumstances.

    This press release contains inside information within the meaning of Article 7(1) of the EU Market Abuse Regulation.

    Quarterly earnings conference call details

    ASM will host the quarterly earnings conference call and webcast on Wednesday, February 26, 2025, at 3:00 p.m. CET.

    Conference-call participants should pre-register using this link to receive the dial-in numbers, passcode and a personal PIN, which are required to access the conference call.

    A simultaneous audio webcast and replay will be accessible at this link.

    Contacts  
    Investor and media relations Investor relations
    Victor Bareño Valentina Fantigrossi
    T: +31 88 100 8500 T: +31 88 100 8502
    E: investor.relations@asm.com E: investor.relations@asm.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI USA: Barr, Managing Financial Crises

    Source: US State of New York Federal Reserve

    Thank you for the opportunity to speak to you today.1 I note that the objectives of the Program on Financial Stability include “supporting the world’s financial authorities in refining proven crises management tools and strategies.”2 Speaking as a representative of one of those authorities, I thought I would further the program’s goals by focusing these remarks on the principles and practice of crisis management. I am favored in that task with what one might call the luck of having been regularly confronted with crises in each of my three stints as a public servant, over a career divided between government and academia. In noting how often my arrival in government was accompanied by crisis, it might be reasonable to wonder if this is correlation or causation.
    Kidding aside, crisis management is central to all management because it demands the very best from managers when it is most needed. Anyone who spends time in government can expect that some of the most memorable and challenging experiences will be managing through tough situations, when the answers to problems are unclear but the mission of the organization comes into acute focus. The financial system is in a perpetual state balancing risk and reward. Sometimes the system falls out of balance, and vulnerabilities turn into stress or even crisis. This moment is when it is crucial to mitigate spillovers from the financial system that can hurt businesses and households and wreak havoc on the economy at large.
    Some of the most important features of modern economies were developed to prevent and mitigate financial crises. The first central banks, and eventually the Federal Reserve, were created to provide stable currencies and banking systems in support of the long-term stability of the provision of credit necessary to foster growth and rising living standards. Regulation of financial markets, regulation and supervision of banks, federal deposit insurance, and laws to protect investors, consumers, and businesses were developed over time to promote both financial stability and durable economic growth. I have spoken previously about how monetary policy and financial stability are inextricably linked and how the tools we use to conduct monetary policy and support financial stability work together.3
    In the spring of 2023, the United States faced the prospect of a spiraling stress event, when poor management and excessive risk-taking by Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) led to a run that quickly spread to other banks and threatened the wider banking system. Shortcomings in supervision and gaps in the regulatory framework also contributed to SVB’s failure, and I’ve spoken about the steps the Federal Reserve has taken to improve supervision and other steps to close regulatory gaps.4 Today, I’d like to talk about how effective management of the banking stress in the spring of 2023 helped prevent that event from spiraling into a financial crisis.
    Given our student audience, I will begin with a little background on how I got into the crisis management business. After Yale Law School and two court clerkships, I worked at the State Department and then went to work for Treasury Secretary Bob Rubin in 1995. When I arrived, the Treasury Department had helped Mexico deal with a financial crisis that threatened to spread to the United States, and additional crises were to come in 1997 in Asia and in 1998 in Russia. Together, these events credibly threatened a worldwide financial crisis, which was averted by a response across the U.S. government and coordinated with governments and lending institutions around the world. I left government for academia in 2001 and then returned to Treasury in 2009 under Secretary Tim Geithner, in the midst of the Global Financial Crisis (GFC). I worked to develop what became known as the Dodd-Frank Act. This law was a pivotal component of our response to the GFC by addressing gaps in financial market oversight, including through strengthened regulation and supervision of banks that increased the safeguards against the excessive risk-taking that caused the crisis. I went back to academia again in 2011 and then returned to public service as the Federal Reserve Board’s Vice Chair for Supervision in July 2022. In this position, I oversaw the response to the bank failures in March 2023 and have helped develop ways to reduce these and other risks going forward.
    The March 2023 Banking StressLet me review some facts about what happened, so you can understand the context for how we put crisis management principles and practices to work.
    SVB failed because of a textbook case of mismanagement of interest rate and liquidity risk.5 This mismanagement made uninsured depositors lose confidence in the bank’s solvency, so they ran. While this was a textbook case, the speed and severity of the run were unprecedented. The largest previous bank failure before SVB was of Washington Mutual in 2008.6 The accumulation of stresses that resulted in Washington Mutual’s failure occurred over several weeks. By contrast, SVB’s deposit outflows were much greater in both relative and absolute terms, and they occurred in less than 24 hours. On top of that, the bank had major gaps in its liquidity risk management, including its preparedness to tap contingency liquidity.7
    Because this discussion is for future first responders, I will share with you some detail about what it’s like to be on the front lines working to address a bank run. On the morning of Thursday, March 9, 2023, SVB had only a little over $5 billion in collateral pledged to the discount window, as compared to over $150 billion in uninsured deposits.8 Around midday, the firm contacted the Federal Reserve, indicating that it wanted to take out a discount window loan against this collateral, and the loan was granted. But in the next several hours, its account was drained as its deposit outflows spiraled. In the late afternoon, the firm indicated that it would need additional liquidity to meet expected outflows. The Federal Reserve worked with the firm to help it identify additional assets it could pledge to the discount window, but SVB was unsuccessful in identifying and moving sufficient collateral. Fed staff worked with the firm through the night to establish ad hoc collateral arrangements, so that the firm could tap the discount window further to meet its liquidity needs in the morning.
    While this process was happening overnight, however, the volume of online deposit withdrawal requests was growing, such that SVB management expected outflows of over $100 billion the next day, an unprecedented sum.9 Even if the bank were able to pledge all collateral available that morning to the discount window, the firm would not have been able to meet its obligations. It was not viable. The state of California closed the bank and turned it over to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) for resolution.
    SVB’s failure contributed to the strains at FDIC-supervised Signature Bank, and that bank failed in short order. As the situation intensified, the effects on businesses and households became increasingly apparent. Critically, these failures caused a reassessment of the viability of uninsured deposits as a funding source across the banking system. But strains at other banks materialized despite material differences between these firms. The rapidity of equity market price declines for several banks triggered repeated trading halts for their shares. Online deposits began to migrate out of smaller banks to larger banks, putting pressure on these smaller institutions.10 Commercial customers that had remaining deposits at SVB after it failed realized that they would not have access to their deposits and thus wouldn’t be able to make payroll or even stay in business.11
    The severity and rapidity of the spread of stress warranted a decisive response. We developed a two-part strategy that weekend.
    On March 12, the Treasury Secretary, the FDIC, and the Federal Reserve announced that the FDIC would protect uninsured deposits at SVB and Signature Bank under the systemic risk exception to least-cost resolution.12 This action essentially implied that all depositors, insured and uninsured, would have access to their deposits Monday morning. And the step helped calm uninsured depositors around the country.
    Also on March 12, the Federal Reserve established the Bank Term Funding Program (BTFP) under its emergency lending authority with the approval of and a backstop from the Treasury.13 The BTFP’s terms and conditions addressed the fundamental source of banking-sector jitters: questions about the ability of a range of banks to hold onto their high-quality securities that had lost value because of interest rate increases. Unrealized losses on securities portfolios were a problem for many banks, particularly when the stability of their deposit bases came into question. The BTFP provided stable funding for these high-quality assets, addressing these concerns. Specifically, the BTFP provided one-year loans to banks in sound financial condition against Treasury securities and agency securities, valued at par.
    By doing so, the BTFP addressed banks’ immediate concerns about the stability of their funding and mitigated the risk that banks would be forced to liquidate assets in a fire sale, locking in losses. BTFP advances provided confidence that banks would have sufficient funding to retain the securities on balance sheet. The program supported confidence among depositors that their banks would have ready access to sufficient cash to meet their needs, thus helping reduce concern that a self-fulfilling panic could cause additional bank runs.
    Usage of the BTFP was widespread across the banking sector, both in terms of actual usage and from a contingency standpoint. For example, at its peak, BTFP borrowing exceeded $160 billion, and collateral posted to the BTFP reached nearly $540 billion, suggesting that banks saw value in being prepared and having capacity to tap the facility if necessary. Over 1,800 institutions borrowed from the program, and the bulk of the borrowing was among institutions with less than $10 billion in assets. These smaller institutions took out 50 percent of loans by value and nearly 95 percent of loans by volume. Fed staff analysis showed the usage was more likely among institutions that had experienced deposit outflows, but usage was also widespread at firms that did not experience outflows. The broad-based actual and contingency use was consistent with Federal Reserve communications that the program was part of prudent liquidity management and that we encouraged all depository institutions to use the program. Now, about two weeks before all remaining outstanding BTFP loans are set to mature, the program is down to less than $200 million, and the program has experienced no losses.14
    Our response to the stress worked. After the announcement of the systemic risk exception and the BTFP in early March, signs of broad-based contagion subsided, and the system stabilized. While in the first two weeks of March midsize and regional banks experienced significant outflows of deposits, the acute phase of outflows had eased by the end of the month. Stability among banks that had earlier come under pressure didn’t mean that every bank found its footing, but the process of dealing with balance sheet gaps was much smoother and spillovers remained contained. By the fall of that year, deposit flows had fully stabilized and midsize and regional banks saw deposit inflows on net.
    Managing Additional Stress beyond Silicon Valley and Signature BanksWhile the announcement of the systemic risk exception and the BTFP on March 13, 2023, helped stabilize banks in the United States, we were also continuing to manage stress in the global financial system in cooperation with relevant authorities.
    Credit Suisse, a Swiss global systemically important banking organization, had been experiencing stress over several years before March 2023, with doubts about its future viability after the Archegos Capital Management and Greensill Capital scandals had tarnished its reputation and raised doubts about its business model. Stress and outflows at Credit Suisse picked up in the fall of 2022, and we spent many months working with Swiss, European, and U.K. regulators on how to manage the growing issues, including war-gaming potential resolution scenarios. Concerns about the firm’s viability accelerated on March 9, 2023, when it was forced to announce that its internal controls over financial reporting were ineffective and had been for several years. Though Credit Suisse continued to operate, it became apparent that the firm was in trouble in the week following the failures of SVB and Signature Bank.
    Just one week after SVB failed, Swiss authorities arranged for Credit Suisse to be acquired by UBS in a weekend deal that involved triggering Credit Suisse’s contingent convertible capital instruments, a severe dilution of shareholders, and the removal of senior bank management, as well as emergency liquidity support and extraordinary loss sharing from the Swiss government.15 In a sense, Credit Suisse had failed very slowly over many months—even years—and then all at once.
    The combination of these events involved coordination across U.S. and foreign jurisdictions, with careful monitoring and cooperation to identify risks to financial stability and to monitor spillovers to the U.S. and European banking systems.
    Back in the United States, we worked with our domestic counterparts as a handful of additional banks remained under pressure in the months that followed. Notably FDIC-supervised First Republic Bank was closed on May 1, 2023. First Republic had also experienced tremendous stress in March, as it suffered deposit outflows of nearly 20 percent in a single day.16 First Republic withstood these outflows in part because of significant discount window lending, as well as the extraordinary coordination among several other banks that placed significant deposits at the bank—worth $30 billion. But over time, it became clear that First Republic’s rapid and large deposit outflows and unrealized losses on loans and securities would lead to its failure as well.17
    While these were the events that got the headlines, the Federal Reserve continuously monitored other banks with potential balance sheet vulnerabilities, including those with gaps in interest rate and liquidity risk management, as well as significant exposures to office commercial real estate. We worked with these firms to ensure they addressed their vulnerabilities, while they bolstered their liquidity positions to manage potential stress. For example, overall, from March 2023 to March 2024, banks of all sizes and condition, including many not under direct stress, pledged more than $1 trillion in additional collateral to the discount window. Banks and supervisors took a wide variety of steps to shore up resilience throughout the system.
    Principles and Practices for Managing Financial-Sector StressWhen a crisis hits, the stakes are high. In the GFC, millions of Americans lost their homes, their jobs, and their dreams for their futures, when savings for education and retirement disappeared with the collapse of asset prices.18 The contraction in credit hurt small businesses and families all across the country. When banks can’t carry out their role in supplying credit to those who need it, the effects are severe and widespread.
    With those stakes in mind, here are five key principles that I learned in my experiences managing financial crises.
    First, crisis response needs to be forceful. The factor that transforms a series of unfortunate events into a self-sustaining crisis is the belief that there is no end in sight and no prospect of a sufficient response. While we could debate whether every aspect of the GFC response was necessary, one clear lesson from this experience, and from other crises I have been involved in, is how important it is that the response be forceful enough to convince market participants and the broader public that there is a capability and the will to overcome the crisis.
    A second principle is that the response should be proportionate. While a forceful response is important to bolster confidence in the prospects for gaining control over the crisis, the response also must avoid shaking confidence by suggesting that conditions are worse than they seem. In a crisis, information is spread unevenly. A response that is out of proportion—for example, by touching aspects of the financial system not considered endangered—can be misinterpreted as providing vital information about the extent of vulnerabilities.
    Another key component of crisis management is the need to engage in decisionmaking amid significant uncertainty. I explained how the response needs to be both forceful and proportionate. Finding this balance requires making tough judgments amid rapidly evolving conditions. Crisis managers need to make consequential decisions quickly with the recognition that their understanding of the facts is incomplete. Even the best of efforts to understand what is happening and what is needed will be unsatisfactory in the moment. Decisionmaking under these conditions takes some courage. It also takes humility: the ability to listen to others around you, gather different perspectives, and weigh the imperfect information in real time.
    A fourth principle is the need for clear communication—internally to the teams working on the response and externally to the public. And these communications need to be consistent with each other and with the values of the institution, even if tailored to the particular audience. Clear internal communication provides direction to the crisis response teams and facilitates coordination across relevant public-sector actors. Clear external communication, when grounded in a realistic assessment of the situation, can calm markets and reassure the public about the strategy. And clear communication is a two-way street: It involves listening to internal and external perspectives, as well as speaking in a way that can be heard.
    And that brings me to the fifth principle I would cite, which is accountability. Financial crises come about because of a lack of confidence in counterparties and among other participants in the financial system. It is crucial for crisis responders to be credible and accountable not only for assessing the root causes of the crisis, but also for addressing these causes and the aftermath. That requires staying focused on the long-term goals for reform even as crisis management remains critically important and urgent.19
    Practices for Effective Management under Periods of StressThese are important principles, and I will talk a little bit about some of the practices we used as we were guided by these principles. One crucial component of successful management of a stress event is to gather the most relevant information as quickly as possible. In a large and complex organization, it is necessary to overcome barriers to information flow across functions. In the case of the March 2023 banking stress, we drew from across the functions of the central bank to gather real-time information necessary to assess the severity of the conditions facing troubled institutions and also to identify potential levers of response.
    Supervisors generally have real-time information from a bank as it undergoes stress, but this information needs to be put into context with foundational knowledge about the firm, such as the current structure of its balance sheet and typical payment flows. While we managed an influx of reports about deposit flows at banks, it was important to be able to immediately put the size of the outflows in context and corroborate anecdotal reports against multiple sources, including from our own systems. Our next step is to assess a firm’s capacity to weather additional stress. First responders can assess if the firm has maximized the liquidity potential of its assets, including through its relationships with liquidity providers. And one needs to assess these firms’ connections to the rest of the financial sector and identify interlinkages and spillovers. Leaning on experts who engage in broader monitoring of financial markets and engage in outreach with well-established contacts can be important. A team of staff who have the capacity to think broadly across the institution and draw on the partnerships they have built with a range of business lines is necessary to support the kind of information gathering and strategizing that are crucial for consequential decisions. This is why an institutional culture that supports curiosity and openness to ideas and inquiry from the most junior to the most senior staff is foundational.
    Earlier I mentioned the principle of needing to be accountable to the public about the sources of the crisis and to address the underlying vulnerabilities that led to it. On March 13, 2023, in consultation with Chair Powell, I requested a review of the failure of SVB. Self-evaluation is the first step in any sound risk-management framework. Experienced career staff from across the Federal Reserve System who were not involved in SVB’s supervision reviewed the reasons for the bank’s failure.20 The review helped identify where the supervisory and regulatory functions of the Federal Reserve could be improved. Additional reviews by external independent parties, which we welcomed, reached similar conclusions.21 More broadly, carefully considering the underlying vulnerabilities that contributed to the stress helped the Fed develop proposals for how the supervisory and regulatory framework could be improved.22
    ConclusionNo leader looks forward to managing through a crisis, but those who hope to be good leaders need to be good crisis managers. These are skills that are most effectively developed through hard experience, but we can also learn from those who have gone through the experiences. In my case, the lessons of dealing with financial crises as a government official have revealed to me some basic principles that I believe can be useful to crisis managers. I have also learned that the best crisis management occurs beforehand, by strengthening rules and norms and other structures meant to reduce the risk of a crisis in the first place and by fostering organizational values and culture that will help manage a crisis when it comes.
    Thank you.

    1. The views expressed here are my own and are not necessarily those of my colleagues on the Federal Reserve Board or the Federal Open Market Committee. Return to text
    2. See Yale School of Management, Program on Financial Stability (2025), “About the Yale Program on Financial Stability,” webpage, paragraph 1. Return to text
    3. See, for example, Michael S. Barr (2023), “Monetary Policy and Financial Stability,” speech delivered at the Forecasters Club of New York, New York, October 2; and Michael S. Barr (2024), “The Intersection of Monetary Policy, Market Functioning, and Liquidity Risk Management,” speech delivered at the 40th Annual National Association for Business Economics (NABE) Economic Policy Conference, Washington, February 14. Return to text
    4. See Michael S. Barr (2023), “Supervision and Regulation” testimony before the Financial Services Committee, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, May 16. Also please see Michael S. Barr (2024), “Supervision with Speed, Force, and Agility,” speech delivered at the Annual Columbia Law School Banking Conference, New York, February 16. For more on bank supervision, see “Understanding Federal Reserve Supervision,” available on the Federal Reserve Board’s website at https://www.federalreserve.gov/supervisionreg/understanding-federal-reserve-supervision.htm. Return to text
    5. See Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Office of Inspector General (2023), Material Loss Review of Silicon Valley Bank (PDF) (Washington: September 25). Immediately following SVB’s failure, Chair Powell and I agreed that I should oversee a review of the circumstances leading up to SVB’s failure. We published the results of this review on April 28, 2023; see Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Review of the Federal Reserve’s Supervision and Regulation of Silicon Valley Bank (PDF) (Washington: Board of Governors, April). Return to text
    6. See National Commission on the Causes of the Financial and Economic Crisis in the United States (2011), The Financial Crisis Inquiry Report (PDF) (Washington: Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, January); and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (2017), Crisis and Response: An FDIC History, 2008–2013 (Washington: FDIC). Return to text
    7. For instance, the bank failed its own internal liquidity stress tests and did not have workable plans to access liquidity in times of stress. The bank changed its own risk-management assumptions to reduce how these risks were measured rather than fully addressing the underlying risks. See Review of the Federal Reserve’s Supervision and Regulation of Silicon Valley Bank (note 5). Return to text
    8. See Review of the Federal Reserve’s Supervision and Regulation of Silicon Valley Bank (note 5). Return to text
    9. See Review of the Federal Reserve’s Supervision and Regulation of Silicon Valley Bank, p. 7 (note 5). Return to text
    10. See Stephan Luck, Matthew Plosser, and Josh Younger (2023), “Bank Funding during the Current Monetary Policy Tightening Cycle,” Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Liberty Street Economics (blog), May 11. Return to text
    11. See Berber Jin, Katherine Bindley, and Rolfe Winkler (2023), “After Silicon Valley Bank Fails, Tech Startups Race to Meet Payroll,” Wall Street Journal, March 11, https://www.wsj.com/articles/after-silicon-valley-bank-fails-tech-startups-race-to-meet-payroll-4ebd9c5c?mod=article_inline. Return to text
    12. See Department of the Treasury, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (2023), “Joint Statement by Treasury, Federal Reserve, and FDIC,” joint press release, March 12. Return to text
    13. See Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (2023), “Federal Reserve Board Announces It Will Make Available Additional Funding to Eligible Depository Institutions to Help Assure Banks Have the Ability to Meet the Needs of All Their Depositors,” press release, March 12; and Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (2025), “Bank Term Funding Program,” webpage. Return to text
    14. See Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (2025), Statistical Release H.4.1, “Factors Affecting Reserve Balances of Depository Institutions and Condition Statement of Federal Reserve Banks” (February 20). Return to text
    15. See Michael S. Barr (2023), “The Importance of Effective Liquidity Risk Management,” speech delivered at the ECB Forum on Banking Supervision, Frankfurt, Germany, December 1. Return to text
    16. See Michael S. Barr (2024), “On Building a Resilient Regulatory Framework,” speech delivered at Central Banking in the Post-Pandemic Financial System 28th Annual Financial Markets Conference, Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, Fernandina Beach, Florida, May 20. Return to text
    17. See Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (2023), FDIC’s Supervision of First Republic Bank (PDF), (Washington: FDIC, September 8). Return to text
    18. See National Commission on the Causes of the Financial and Economic Crisis, The Financial Crisis Inquiry Report (note 6). Return to text
    19. I have discussed some thoughts on leadership attributes in previous speeches, including here: Michael S. Barr (2024), “Commencement Remarks,” delivered at the American University School of Public Affairs Graduation Ceremony, Washington, May 10. Return to text
    20. See Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (2023), Vice Chair Barr for Supervision’s “Review of the Federal Reserve’s Supervision and Regulation of Silicon Valley Bank – April 2023: Key Takeaways,” webpage. Return to text
    21. See Government Accountability Office (2023), “Bank Regulation: Preliminary Review of Agency Actions Related to March 2023 Bank Failures” (Washington: GAO, May 11); and Board of Governors, Office of Inspector General, Material Loss Review (note 5). Return to text
    22. See Barr, “On Building a Resilient Regulatory Framework” (note 16). Return to text

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: IMF Executive Board Concludes 2024 Article IV Consultation with Solomon Islands

    Source: IMF – News in Russian

    February 25, 2025

    Washington, DC: On February 19, 2025, the Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) concluded the Article IV consultation[1] with Solomon Islands.

    Solomon Islands has weathered important shocks including civil unrest and the pandemic, successfully hosted the Pacific Games, and conducted peaceful general elections. These achievements have raised the country’s profile and strengthened national unity, but with costs—public debt has nearly tripled since before the pandemic, and the government’s cash reserves have been significantly depleted.

    Modest growth is expected at 2.8 percent in 2025, slightly above the 2.4 percent growth estimated for 2024, while inflation, estimated to have returned to 3.4 percent at end-2024, is envisaged to reach 3.9 percent at end-2025. The fiscal deficit is expected to widen slightly from 3.1 percent of GDP in 2024 to 3.3 percent of GDP in 2025, underpinned by continued spending pressures and externally financed infrastructure projects. The current account deficit is estimated to have narrowed to 4.2 percent of GDP in 2024, but projected to widen to 7.7 percent of GDP in 2025 as economic activity gains momentum. Foreign exchange reserves remain adequate, covering 9 months of imports.

    Risks to the outlook are tilted to the downside. They include under execution of the budget, extreme climate events, political instability, and commodity price volatility. Declining logging activity and the undiversified economic base, compounded by weak governance, constrain growth potential. Both the current account and fiscal deficits are expected to persist over the medium term.

    Executive Board Assessment[2]

    Executive Directors agreed with the thrust of the staff appraisal. They concurred that while the Solomon Islands’ economy has weathered multiple shocks well and recently benefited from successfully hosting the Pacific Games and peaceful general elections, public debt is increasing, medium-term growth prospects appear moderate, and per capita income growth remains stagnant. Against this backdrop, Directors emphasized the importance of rebuilding cash buffers and ensuring fiscal sustainability, while boosting growth prospects through economic diversification and governance reforms.

    Directors stressed the need to improve the effectiveness of fiscal policy by addressing weaknesses in fiscal data and public financial management, including by ending the practice of unfunded spending. They also called for tightening the 2025 Budget to start a gradual recovery of cash balances. Directors underscored the importance of creating fiscal space to accelerate investment in development priorities. To this end, they recommended advancing domestic revenue mobilization, such as introducing a value added tax. Enhancing the quality, transparency, and accountability of public expenditure, including by undertaking the Public Expenditure and Financial Accountability assessment, would also be important. Directors saw merit in introducing a simple, ex-ante guideline for annual budget formulation as an interim step toward a fiscal rule.

    Directors agreed that the current monetary policy stance and exchange rate regime are appropriate. They stressed the importance of preserving the central bank’s autonomy, including by limiting purchases of government bonds and implementing the remaining Safeguards Assessment recommendations. Directors also underscored the need to keep the exchange rate fully aligned with the value of the updated currency basket and to enhance transparency and communication with market participants. While the financial sector remains stable, Directors encouraged further reforms to strengthen regulatory and supervisory frameworks and boost financial intermediation and inclusion. They stressed the need to strengthen the AML/CFT framework, including due to the planned introduction of the Citizenship by Investment program.

    Directors encouraged the acceleration of structural reforms to support economic diversification and private sector development, with capacity development support from the IMF and other development partners. They agreed that addressing governance weaknesses remains a priority, including by improving the capacity and independence of the anti-corruption institution.

    Table 1. Solomon Islands: Selected Economic Indicators, 2019–2029

    Per capita GDP (2023): US$2200

           

    Population (2023): 768,690

           

    Quota: SDR 20.8 million

           
     

    2019

    2020

    2021

    2022

    2023

    2024

    2025

    2026

    2027

    2028

    2029

             

    Est.

    Proj.

    GROWTH AND PRICES

    (In percent change, unless otherwise indicated)

    Real GDP

    1.7

    -3.4

    2.6

    2.4

    2.7

    2.5

    2.8

    2.9

    2.9

    3.0

    3.0

    CPI (period average)

    2.2

    2.9

    0.2

    5.4

    5.1

    3.7

    3.8

    3.7

    3.4

    3.3

    3.3

    CPI (end of period)

    2.6

    -2.6

    4.6

    8.7

    4.3

    3.4

    3.9

    3.5

    3.3

    3.3

    3.3

    GDP deflator

    1.2

    -1.3

    -5.5

    2.0

    3.9

    1.3

    1.3

    1.3

    1.4

    1.4

    1.4

    Nominal GDP (in SI$ millions)

    13,234

    12,617

    12,228

    12,775

    13,911

    14,685

    15,492

    16,370

    17,311

    18,235

    19,217

    Nominal GDP (in US$ millions)

    1,619

    1,536

    1,523

    1,566

    1,661

    1,753

    1,850

    1,954

    2,067

    2,177

    2,294

    CENTRAL GOVERNMENT OPERATIONS

    (In percent of GDP)

    Total revenue and grants

    34.1

    37.9

    35.9

    38.3

    36.3

    32.7

    32.5

    32.6

    32.7

    32.8

    32.8

    Revenue

    25.8

    24.6

    24.8

    23.1

    22.9

    23.2

    23.0

    23.1

    23.2

    23.3

    23.3

    Grants

    8.2

    13.4

    11.1

    15.2

    13.4

    9.5

    9.5

    9.5

    9.5

    9.5

    9.5

    Total expenditure

    35.6

    40.4

    37.8

    40.8

    40.1

    35.8

    35.7

    35.8

    35.8

    35.8

    35.9

    Expense

    29.0

    31.9

    28.3

    31.4

    29.8

    27.9

    27.2

    27.3

    27.4

    27.4

    27.5

    Net acquisition of nonfinancial assets

    6.6

    8.5

    9.5

    9.3

    10.3

    7.9

    8.5

    8.5

    8.4

    8.4

    8.4

    Net lending (+) / Net borrowing (-)

    -1.5

    -2.4

    -1.9

    -2.5

    -3.8

    -3.1

    -3.3

    -3.2

    -3.1

    -3.1

    -3.1

    External

    0.0

    -1.4

    -1.1

    -0.1

    -2.9

    -2.3

    -1.8

    -1.9

    -1.9

    -1.8

    -1.8

    Domestic

    -1.5

    -1.0

    -0.7

    -2.4

    -0.9

    -0.8

    -1.5

    -1.3

    -1.2

    -1.2

    -1.3

    Central government debt 1/

    7.8

    12.8

    15.9

    15.5

    20.3

    22.3

    24.4

    26.2

    27.9

    29.5

    31.0

    Public domestic debt

    1.7

    2.8

    6.1

    5.9

    8.6

    8.9

    9.8

    10.6

    11.1

    11.7

    12.4

    Public external debt

    6.1

    10.0

    9.8

    9.6

    11.7

    13.4

    14.5

    15.6

    16.7

    17.7

    18.6

    MACROFINANCIAL

    (In percent change)

    Credit to private sector

    6.2

    0.3

    -0.4

    0.8

    4.7

    3.0

    3.0

    3.0

    3.0

    3.0

    3.0

    Broad money

    -3.1

    6.6

    1.9

    5.3

    6.1

    6.8

    5.5

    5.7

    5.8

    5.3

    5.4

    Reserve money

    -7.1

    23.0

    10.6

    4.0

    9.9

    6.0

    5.5

    5.7

    5.8

    5.3

    5.4

    BALANCE OF PAYMENTS

    (In percent of GDP, unless otherwise indicated)

    Current account balance

    -9.5

    -1.6

    -5.1

    -13.7

    -10.4

    -4.2

    -7.7

    -7.5

    -7.4

    -7.5

    -7.4

    Trade balance (goods and services)

    -10.0

    -8.5

    -13.4

    -22.3

    -19.8

    -11.6

    -15.3

    -15.3

    -15.6

    -16.1

    -16.5

    Exports

    36.4

    28.5

    26.9

    25.8

    32.6

    34.6

    33.2

    32.8

    32.1

    31.4

    30.7

    Imports

    46.4

    37.0

    40.4

    48.1

    52.3

    46.2

    48.6

    48.1

    47.7

    47.5

    47.2

    Gross Remittances

    1.1

    1.5

    2.1

    3.3

    3.7

    3.5

    3.6

    3.8

    3.9

    4.1

    4.3

    Capital and Financial Account

    7.3

    3.0

    6.7

    13.2

    13.6

    4.0

    6.9

    7.3

    7.5

    7.5

    7.5

    Foreign direct investment (+ = decrease)

    -1.8

    -0.4

    -1.5

    -2.6

    -4.3

    -0.9

    -2.3

    -2.6

    -2.7

    -2.8

    -2.9

    Overall balance (+ = increase)

    -2.1

    4.8

    2.5

    -2.0

    3.3

    -0.2

    -0.8

    -0.2

    0.1

    0.0

    0.1

    Gross official reserves (in US$ millions, end of period) 2/

    574.1

    660.6

    694.5

    655.2

    682.0

    679.1

    664.3

    661.0

    662.8

    663.2

    664.6

    (in months of next year’s imports of GNFS)

    12.1

    12.9

    11.1

    9.0

    10.1

    9.1

    8.5

    8.0

    7.7

    7.4

    7.0

                           

    EXCHANGE RATE (SI$/US$, end of period)

    8.2

    8.0

    8.1

    8.3

    8.5

    Real effective exchange rate (end of period, 2010 = 100)

    127.5

    129.9

    124.8

    132.3

    136.0

    Sources: Data provided by the authorities; and IMF staff estimates and projections.

    1/ Includes disbursements under the Rapid Credit Facility (RCF).

    2/ Includes SDR allocations made by the IMF to Solomon Islands in 2009 and in 2021.

    [1] Under Article IV of the IMF’s Articles of Agreement, the IMF holds bilateral discussions with members, usually every year. A staff team visits the country, collects economic and financial information, and discusses with officials the country’s economic developments and policies. On return to headquarters, the staff prepares a report, which forms the basis for discussion by the Executive Board.

    [2] At the conclusion of the discussion, the Managing Director, as Chairman of the Board, summarizes the views of Executive Directors, and this summary is transmitted to the country’s authorities. An explanation of any qualifiers used in summings up can be found here: http://www.IMF.org/external/np/sec/misc/qualifiers.htm.

    IMF Communications Department
    MEDIA RELATIONS

    PRESS OFFICER: Pemba Sherpa

    Phone: +1 202 623-7100Email: MEDIA@IMF.org

    https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2025/02/25/pr25042-solomon-islands-imf-executive-board-concludes-2024-article-iv-consultation

    MIL OSI

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Solomon Islands: 2024 Article IV Consultation-Press Release; Staff Report; and Statement by the Executive Director for Solomon Islands

    Source: International Monetary Fund

    Summary

    Solomon Islands has weathered the shocks of civil unrest, pandemic, and commodity price hikes, and achieved the milestones of hosting the Pacific Games in late 2023 and conducting peaceful general elections in April 2024. These achievements have raised the country’s profile and strengthened national unity, but with costs—public debt has nearly tripled since before the pandemic, and the government’s cash reserves have been significantly depleted. While staff expects continued modest growth in 2024 and 2025, medium-term growth prospects appear moderate and fiscal and current account deficits are expected to persist. Now is the time for the authorities to advance reforms to tackle the perennial challenge of stagnant per-capita income growth, while ensuring fiscal sustainability and resilience.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: IMF Executive Board Concludes 2024 Article IV Consultation with Solomon Islands

    Source: International Monetary Fund

    February 25, 2025

    Washington, DC: On February 19, 2025, the Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) concluded the Article IV consultation[1] with Solomon Islands.

    Solomon Islands has weathered important shocks including civil unrest and the pandemic, successfully hosted the Pacific Games, and conducted peaceful general elections. These achievements have raised the country’s profile and strengthened national unity, but with costs—public debt has nearly tripled since before the pandemic, and the government’s cash reserves have been significantly depleted.

    Modest growth is expected at 2.8 percent in 2025, slightly above the 2.4 percent growth estimated for 2024, while inflation, estimated to have returned to 3.4 percent at end-2024, is envisaged to reach 3.9 percent at end-2025. The fiscal deficit is expected to widen slightly from 3.1 percent of GDP in 2024 to 3.3 percent of GDP in 2025, underpinned by continued spending pressures and externally financed infrastructure projects. The current account deficit is estimated to have narrowed to 4.2 percent of GDP in 2024, but projected to widen to 7.7 percent of GDP in 2025 as economic activity gains momentum. Foreign exchange reserves remain adequate, covering 9 months of imports.

    Risks to the outlook are tilted to the downside. They include under execution of the budget, extreme climate events, political instability, and commodity price volatility. Declining logging activity and the undiversified economic base, compounded by weak governance, constrain growth potential. Both the current account and fiscal deficits are expected to persist over the medium term.

    Executive Board Assessment[2]

    Executive Directors agreed with the thrust of the staff appraisal. They concurred that while the Solomon Islands’ economy has weathered multiple shocks well and recently benefited from successfully hosting the Pacific Games and peaceful general elections, public debt is increasing, medium-term growth prospects appear moderate, and per capita income growth remains stagnant. Against this backdrop, Directors emphasized the importance of rebuilding cash buffers and ensuring fiscal sustainability, while boosting growth prospects through economic diversification and governance reforms.

    Directors stressed the need to improve the effectiveness of fiscal policy by addressing weaknesses in fiscal data and public financial management, including by ending the practice of unfunded spending. They also called for tightening the 2025 Budget to start a gradual recovery of cash balances. Directors underscored the importance of creating fiscal space to accelerate investment in development priorities. To this end, they recommended advancing domestic revenue mobilization, such as introducing a value added tax. Enhancing the quality, transparency, and accountability of public expenditure, including by undertaking the Public Expenditure and Financial Accountability assessment, would also be important. Directors saw merit in introducing a simple, ex-ante guideline for annual budget formulation as an interim step toward a fiscal rule.

    Directors agreed that the current monetary policy stance and exchange rate regime are appropriate. They stressed the importance of preserving the central bank’s autonomy, including by limiting purchases of government bonds and implementing the remaining Safeguards Assessment recommendations. Directors also underscored the need to keep the exchange rate fully aligned with the value of the updated currency basket and to enhance transparency and communication with market participants. While the financial sector remains stable, Directors encouraged further reforms to strengthen regulatory and supervisory frameworks and boost financial intermediation and inclusion. They stressed the need to strengthen the AML/CFT framework, including due to the planned introduction of the Citizenship by Investment program.

    Directors encouraged the acceleration of structural reforms to support economic diversification and private sector development, with capacity development support from the IMF and other development partners. They agreed that addressing governance weaknesses remains a priority, including by improving the capacity and independence of the anti-corruption institution.

    Table 1. Solomon Islands: Selected Economic Indicators, 2019–2029

    Per capita GDP (2023): US$2200

           

    Population (2023): 768,690

           

    Quota: SDR 20.8 million

           
     

    2019

    2020

    2021

    2022

    2023

    2024

    2025

    2026

    2027

    2028

    2029

             

    Est.

    Proj.

    GROWTH AND PRICES

    (In percent change, unless otherwise indicated)

    Real GDP

    1.7

    -3.4

    2.6

    2.4

    2.7

    2.5

    2.8

    2.9

    2.9

    3.0

    3.0

    CPI (period average)

    2.2

    2.9

    0.2

    5.4

    5.1

    3.7

    3.8

    3.7

    3.4

    3.3

    3.3

    CPI (end of period)

    2.6

    -2.6

    4.6

    8.7

    4.3

    3.4

    3.9

    3.5

    3.3

    3.3

    3.3

    GDP deflator

    1.2

    -1.3

    -5.5

    2.0

    3.9

    1.3

    1.3

    1.3

    1.4

    1.4

    1.4

    Nominal GDP (in SI$ millions)

    13,234

    12,617

    12,228

    12,775

    13,911

    14,685

    15,492

    16,370

    17,311

    18,235

    19,217

    Nominal GDP (in US$ millions)

    1,619

    1,536

    1,523

    1,566

    1,661

    1,753

    1,850

    1,954

    2,067

    2,177

    2,294

    CENTRAL GOVERNMENT OPERATIONS

    (In percent of GDP)

    Total revenue and grants

    34.1

    37.9

    35.9

    38.3

    36.3

    32.7

    32.5

    32.6

    32.7

    32.8

    32.8

    Revenue

    25.8

    24.6

    24.8

    23.1

    22.9

    23.2

    23.0

    23.1

    23.2

    23.3

    23.3

    Grants

    8.2

    13.4

    11.1

    15.2

    13.4

    9.5

    9.5

    9.5

    9.5

    9.5

    9.5

    Total expenditure

    35.6

    40.4

    37.8

    40.8

    40.1

    35.8

    35.7

    35.8

    35.8

    35.8

    35.9

    Expense

    29.0

    31.9

    28.3

    31.4

    29.8

    27.9

    27.2

    27.3

    27.4

    27.4

    27.5

    Net acquisition of nonfinancial assets

    6.6

    8.5

    9.5

    9.3

    10.3

    7.9

    8.5

    8.5

    8.4

    8.4

    8.4

    Net lending (+) / Net borrowing (-)

    -1.5

    -2.4

    -1.9

    -2.5

    -3.8

    -3.1

    -3.3

    -3.2

    -3.1

    -3.1

    -3.1

    External

    0.0

    -1.4

    -1.1

    -0.1

    -2.9

    -2.3

    -1.8

    -1.9

    -1.9

    -1.8

    -1.8

    Domestic

    -1.5

    -1.0

    -0.7

    -2.4

    -0.9

    -0.8

    -1.5

    -1.3

    -1.2

    -1.2

    -1.3

    Central government debt 1/

    7.8

    12.8

    15.9

    15.5

    20.3

    22.3

    24.4

    26.2

    27.9

    29.5

    31.0

    Public domestic debt

    1.7

    2.8

    6.1

    5.9

    8.6

    8.9

    9.8

    10.6

    11.1

    11.7

    12.4

    Public external debt

    6.1

    10.0

    9.8

    9.6

    11.7

    13.4

    14.5

    15.6

    16.7

    17.7

    18.6

    MACROFINANCIAL

    (In percent change)

    Credit to private sector

    6.2

    0.3

    -0.4

    0.8

    4.7

    3.0

    3.0

    3.0

    3.0

    3.0

    3.0

    Broad money

    -3.1

    6.6

    1.9

    5.3

    6.1

    6.8

    5.5

    5.7

    5.8

    5.3

    5.4

    Reserve money

    -7.1

    23.0

    10.6

    4.0

    9.9

    6.0

    5.5

    5.7

    5.8

    5.3

    5.4

    BALANCE OF PAYMENTS

    (In percent of GDP, unless otherwise indicated)

    Current account balance

    -9.5

    -1.6

    -5.1

    -13.7

    -10.4

    -4.2

    -7.7

    -7.5

    -7.4

    -7.5

    -7.4

    Trade balance (goods and services)

    -10.0

    -8.5

    -13.4

    -22.3

    -19.8

    -11.6

    -15.3

    -15.3

    -15.6

    -16.1

    -16.5

    Exports

    36.4

    28.5

    26.9

    25.8

    32.6

    34.6

    33.2

    32.8

    32.1

    31.4

    30.7

    Imports

    46.4

    37.0

    40.4

    48.1

    52.3

    46.2

    48.6

    48.1

    47.7

    47.5

    47.2

    Gross Remittances

    1.1

    1.5

    2.1

    3.3

    3.7

    3.5

    3.6

    3.8

    3.9

    4.1

    4.3

    Capital and Financial Account

    7.3

    3.0

    6.7

    13.2

    13.6

    4.0

    6.9

    7.3

    7.5

    7.5

    7.5

    Foreign direct investment (+ = decrease)

    -1.8

    -0.4

    -1.5

    -2.6

    -4.3

    -0.9

    -2.3

    -2.6

    -2.7

    -2.8

    -2.9

    Overall balance (+ = increase)

    -2.1

    4.8

    2.5

    -2.0

    3.3

    -0.2

    -0.8

    -0.2

    0.1

    0.0

    0.1

    Gross official reserves (in US$ millions, end of period) 2/

    574.1

    660.6

    694.5

    655.2

    682.0

    679.1

    664.3

    661.0

    662.8

    663.2

    664.6

    (in months of next year’s imports of GNFS)

    12.1

    12.9

    11.1

    9.0

    10.1

    9.1

    8.5

    8.0

    7.7

    7.4

    7.0

                           

    EXCHANGE RATE (SI$/US$, end of period)

    8.2

    8.0

    8.1

    8.3

    8.5

    Real effective exchange rate (end of period, 2010 = 100)

    127.5

    129.9

    124.8

    132.3

    136.0

    Sources: Data provided by the authorities; and IMF staff estimates and projections.

    1/ Includes disbursements under the Rapid Credit Facility (RCF).

    2/ Includes SDR allocations made by the IMF to Solomon Islands in 2009 and in 2021.

    [1] Under Article IV of the IMF’s Articles of Agreement, the IMF holds bilateral discussions with members, usually every year. A staff team visits the country, collects economic and financial information, and discusses with officials the country’s economic developments and policies. On return to headquarters, the staff prepares a report, which forms the basis for discussion by the Executive Board.

    [2] At the conclusion of the discussion, the Managing Director, as Chairman of the Board, summarizes the views of Executive Directors, and this summary is transmitted to the country’s authorities. An explanation of any qualifiers used in summings up can be found here: http://www.IMF.org/external/np/sec/misc/qualifiers.htm.

    IMF Communications Department
    MEDIA RELATIONS

    PRESS OFFICER: Pemba Sherpa

    Phone: +1 202 623-7100Email: MEDIA@IMF.org

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Security: Minneapolis Woman Pleads Guilty in $250 Million Feeding Our Future Fraud Scheme

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    MINNEAPOLIS – A Minneapolis woman has pleaded guilty for her role in the $250 million fraud scheme that exploited a federally funded child nutrition program during the COVID-19 pandemic, announced Acting U.S. Attorney Lisa D. Kirkpatrick.

    According to court documents, Najmo M. Ahmed, 35, helped her husband Said Ereg run a small storefront grocery store in Minneapolis called Evergreen Grocery and Deli. In April 2020, Ereg enrolled Evergreen Grocery and Deli in the Federal Child Nutrition Program as a food distribution site under the sponsorship of Feeding Our Future. Under the direction of her husband, Ahmed signed falsified meal count sheets, including one dated December 31, 2020, claiming Evergreen Grocery and Deli served 3,250 children – twice a day – during the week of January 24, 2021. Between April 2020 and April 2021, Evergreen Grocery and Deli claimed to have served over 1.4 million meals to children.

    According to court documents, Evergreen Grocery and Deli received over $4.2 million in payments from Feeding Our Future based on fraudulent claims. Ereg transferred funds from Evergreen’s business accounts into personal accounts in his name and Ahmed’s name, and Ahmed knew that the large sums of money her husband deposited into her account were proceeds from illegal activity. Ahmed transferred at least $1,147,348 in funding from her personal bank accounts to foreign textile and trading companies such as Shaoxing Aifan Textile Co. She also used the money to fund her lavish lifestyle and made purchases from Burberry, Louis Vuitton, and Canada Goose. Ltd. In total, Ahmed laundered $1,381,048 in Federal Child Nutrition Program funds through her personal bank accounts.

    Ahmed pleaded guilty yesterday in U.S. District Court before Judge Nancy E. Brasel. A sentencing hearing will be scheduled at a later date.

    The case is the result of an investigation by the FBI, IRS – Criminal Investigations, and the U.S. Postal Inspection Service.

    Assistant U.S. Attorneys Harry M. Jacobs, Joseph H. Thompson, Matthew S. Ebert, and Daniel W. Bobier are prosecuting the case. Assistant U.S. Attorney Craig Baune is handling the seizure and forfeiture of assets.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Yannis Stournaras: Euro area challenges in an uncertain geopolitical landscape

    Source: Bank for International Settlements

    Your Excellencies, distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen,

    It is a pleasure and an honour to be here with you today at this esteemed gathering to discuss some of the most pressing challenges confronting the euro area. I would like to extend my deepest gratitude to His Excellency the Ambassador of Poland and to the Embassy of Poland in Athens for hosting this important event, and for your continued commitment to fostering dialogue on issues that affect all of us in Europe. As we navigate through the complexities of our interconnected economies, the euro area finds itself at a critical juncture. In many ways, we are at a crossroads, where the decisions we make today will significantly shape the economic future of Europe for generations to come.

    Europe has emerged from the pandemic susceptible and weakened. Growth in the euro area has been disappointing in 2023 and 2024, at about 0.5% and 0.7% respectively, low on the basis of whatever criteria one would apply. A key factor underlying the tepid economic activity in the euro area in the last two years was weak business investment, which has been basically flat, if we exclude volatile business investment in Ireland. This starkly contrasts with the situation in the US, where business investment has grown almost three times faster than in the euro area in the post-pandemic period since the end of 2021.

    And, if anything, our projections for growth in 2025, at around 1%, clearly do not point to a strong pick-up in activity. In fact, more recent data, like the stagnation of GDP in the last quarter of 2024, already raise questions about the growth dynamics this year. Surveys indicate that manufacturing is still contracting and growth in services is slowing. Firms are holding back on investments, and exports remain weak, with some European industries struggling to remain competitive.

    This picture of subpar growth seems to reflect a series of long-standing structural impediments in the euro area, combined with unusually adverse global geopolitical factors as well as by political issues in some euro area countries, including the largest economies. War is waging on European soil, political gridlock hinders the ability to press ahead with reforms, while extremist political views are gaining ground across the continent.

    Of course, our restrictive but necessary monetary policy stance in the recent past, aimed at counteracting inflationary pressures, has also contributed to the weak growth developments of the euro area. In this sense, the easing interest rate path on which we have embarked should support activity. The good news is that the disinflation process remains well on track. Inflation has fallen rapidly from a peak of about 10.5% in October 2022 to 2.5% in January 2025 and is still trending downwards, despite some upward base effects in recent months, driven by oil and natural gas prices. What I find particularly encouraging is the fact that core inflation is at the moment a bit lower than we had expected in our latest projections. Core inflation is that part of inflation that excludes the most volatile components for which monetary policy has little, if any, impact. And this means that the past monetary policy tightening has done its job in taming inflation. It is also encouraging that, despite a very tight labour market and unemployment rates at historical lows, compensation per employee growth is easing. This is safeguarding a downward inflation path, also for services that are typically more labour-intensive compared to goods and, thus, their inflation is more persistent.

    Our December 2024 Eurosystem staff projections expect inflation to average 2.1% in 2025 and to return sustainably to our target in late 2025. Unless unexpected contingencies materialise, the ECB’s key interest rate through which we steer the monetary policy stance, the deposit facility rate, could fall to around 2% in the course of 2025 from its current level of 2.75%. Obviously, the sequence, pace and magnitude of interest rate cuts remain data-driven and will continue to be decided meeting by meeting.

    Overall, the balance of macroeconomic risks in the euro area has shifted from concerns about high inflation to concerns about low growth. In my view, the euro area is in danger of losing its economic footing, if it has not already done so. We have failed to rival US tech giants, while our economies are stagnating, facing strained public finances. Our region has grown at an average quarterly pace of 0.3% in the last 12 quarters. To put it into context, the US economy has expanded by a far more over the same period. And, to add to our own problems, the new US President seems to implement his election campaign declarations regarding import tariffs.

    Time is running out. We are facing, as ECB President Lagarde put it in Davos a few weeks ago, an existential crisis. There is an urgency for immediate action and collaborative efforts to effectively address Europe’s challenges at home and abroad. In the remainder of my speech, I would like to emphasise several major areas of concern that need to be addressed in priority.

    The first area is competitiveness. Productivity growth in the euro area has nearly stalled, constrained by unfavourable demographics, labour market rigidities in many countries, and weak capital growth. This also stems from Europe’s lagging business and investment dynamism. Europe has yet to match its global peers in channelling sufficient resources into innovation and productive economic activity, while energy remains expensive. European manufacturers pay about twice as much for electricity as their counterparts in the US. Meanwhile, the needs for electricity of an expanding digital economy will be enormous. Supercomputing infrastructure for artificial intelligence is becoming a geopolitical battleground, and the EU sovereigns must build capacity to reduce strategic dependence on foreign big tech companies.

    According to the 2024 European Investment Bank Investment Survey, capacity expansion has been a greater driver of investment in the US than in the euro area, where the primary focus in the latter remained on replacement. Euro area R&D investment was focused on mature industries, such as cars and equipment, while it has been increasingly concentrated in Information and Communication Technology (ICT)-based activities in the US, such as data centres and AI-related facilities. Intangible investment is key for productivity and value added growth, likely contributing to the widening productivity gap between the two jurisdictions, and impacting also potential output growth differentials.

    The road to a robust recovery for the European economy demands mobilising the substantial private investment necessary to reignite growth and foster resilience. To keep pace with global competitors, Europe needs to prioritise a substantial boost in investment in the next few years and structural reforms aimed at enhancing long-term potential growth. Notably, increased spending in green and digital transitions, innovation and energy are paramount for making Europe more productive, competitive and resilient.

    What is in my view needed?

    First, a more harmonised, yet less burdensome, regulation in the EU – for example, regarding corporate law, insolvencies, taxation and labour law – would improve competitiveness without having to invest a single euro.

    Second, the promotion of a single market for capital is essential. The creation of a European Savings and Investments Union is a move in the right direction, as it can ensure a smooth flow of investment throughout our Union. Establishing common supervision of EU capital markets, integrating the highly segmented infrastructure of European financial markets, and standardising products for retail investment can mobilise both EU’s large savings and foreign capital. In addition, deepening the securitisation market and simplifying the relevant regulation can also contribute to attracting investors.

    Third, the completion of Banking Union, with the establishment of EDIS (European Deposit Insurance Scheme) and a Crisis Management Mechanism – CMDI, since a segmented banking sector can never achieve the efficiency and economies of scale gains of US banks.

    There is no doubt that enhanced financial integration can empower innovative firms at all stages of their development with the funding they need to scale up and thrive in a competitive global landscape, reducing their reliance on financing outside Europe. To this end, it is critical to provide investors with incentives for more risk capital, for example by overcoming the institutional and operational hurdles that make European venture capital firms underperform their US counterparts.

    Finally, a permanent fiscal capacity in Europe can successfully step up investments and growth-enhancing projects directed towards areas that bolster economic potential and resilience across Europe. In fact, the accomplishments of the EU Recovery and Resilience Facility offer a valuable blueprint for what can be achieved through coordinated and targeted fiscal initiatives. A clear illustration of this is the finding in the Draghi report that, despite public spending in research and innovation being similar in the EU and the US, it yields much lower dividends in the EU because it is fragmented and uncoordinated across countries.

    Related to that, we need to take a careful look at the factors that have inhibited private investment and, therefore, productivity. In this regard, two factors come to mind.

    First, it appears that some countries are simply not competitive because of structural impediments, such as over-regulation in some markets. I find it interesting that our fastest growing economies at present are those that have had to implement structural reforms during the past decade – countries such as Spain, Portugal, Cyprus and my own.

    Second, we should take a close look at the relationship between investment and our taxation policies. There may well be a need to better harmonise our tax policies in a way that provides an incentive to invest. 

    While these advances require addressing long-standing barriers and fragmentation across jurisdictions and sectors, they would also significantly improve the access of businesses to financing. By fostering business efficiency and resource reallocation to the most productive and competitive sectors, sustainable growth can be supported.

    To this end, we welcome the Commission’s roadmap on improving competitiveness that was released at the end of January 2025, the so-called Competitiveness Compass, which was based on recommendations by the Draghi report. An increase of productivity by closing the innovation gap is of paramount importance for the economic welfare of European citizens. So is investment in human capital through upskilling and reskilling, talent attraction and retainment, and effective integration of underutilised workers and immigrants into the labour force.

    Under President Lagarde’s leadership, the ECB’s Governing Council stands ready to play its part in this quest for higher productivity and competitiveness. First, by maintaining a low and predictable inflation environment, the ECB promotes confidence among businesses and investors and contributes to fostering investment and long-term capital allocation required for sustainable economic growth. Second, by removing in a timely manner layers of monetary policy restriction no longer necessary. With inflation sustainably settling around our target, easier financing conditions will be key in stimulating investment by making capital more accessible and affordable.

    The second area of concern for the euro area is the declared trade policy by the new President of the United States. Although the details of a potential imposition of US tariffs have yet to be disclosed, the prospect of an aggressive US trade policy, coupled with possible retaliatory measures, are likely to have far-reaching implications, adding to the euro area’s headwinds. With trade volumes between the EU and the US at 1.5 trillion euros, it is clear that US tariffs on Europe will be negative for growth. Market estimates suggest that a 10% US tariff on all imports from the euro area, coupled with higher uncertainty about future US-EU trade relations, could depress euro area GDP growth by up to 0.5 percentage points within a year. The magnitude of these adverse growth effects will depend, among other things, on the range of products subject to higher tariffs, how long these tariffs will persist, which retaliatory and counter-retaliatory measures will be put in place, and the feedback effects from global economic and financial conditions. Incidentally, both theory and practice suggest that tariffs is usually a loose-loose instrument, hence not only the US trade partners are bound to loose, but the US too.

    The impact of tariffs on euro area inflation is less straightforward, operating through various channels. On the one hand, a USD appreciation or a tariff retaliation on US goods from our side will make euro area imports from the US – as well as the bulk of total energy imports that is dollar-invoiced – more expensive, pushing up inflation. On the other hand, a possible re-direction of cheaper Chinese exports from the US to the EU market, due to a US-China trade war, would ceteris paribus accentuate the disinflation process in the euro area.

    In any case, uncertainty about geopolitical, trade and financial developments could significantly weigh on economic sentiment and confidence, further hindering consumption and investment from recovering. At the same time, trade constraints are likely to impact activity in the manufacturing sector, the sick man in Europe, prolonging the ongoing economic stagnation in our region. Completing the Single Market will help meet these challenges.

    Strengthening and extending Europe’s trade alliances is also essential to balance trade risks. Expanding bilateral and regional preferential trade agreements would foster cooperation with other countries and contribute to a functional, rule-based multilateral trade system. These steps are essential to boosting investment and fostering sustainable growth, while enhancing the resilience of our economies against external shocks.

    Turning to the pressing issue of climate adaptation and mitigation, it is clear that we are faced with “peak pessimism”. The US withdrawal from the global climate change negotiations and initiatives has been complemented with major banks and asset funds in the US and Europe distancing themselves from climate policies. We can all see the risks. But we also need to see the opportunities. Momentum for the energy transition needs to remain strong in our continent, and across the rest of the world. We have an even stronger case to double down on our own initiatives to bolster decarbonisation, while avoiding Europe’s deindustrialisation. Clean energy at competitive prices should be seen as a great opportunity to industrialise rather than the opposite. The European Commission’s plans for a Clean Industrial Deal and its intentions to streamline the sustainability reporting rules, without discounting on transparency, are good examples of how to balance the goal of greening the economy with that of preserving the EU’s industrial base and firms’ competitiveness.

    As supervisors, central banks can also make sure that the commercial banking sector is better positioned in managing climate risks. We can strengthen the credibility of our monetary policy in achieving our mandate, taking into consideration the implications of climate change for inflation and output. And last but not least, Europe ought to become again the key driver for green tech and finance, which takes me back to the imperative of the European Savings and Investment Union.

    Let me conclude by saying that a key prerequisite for economic prosperity is a safer and more secure Europe. We cannot thrive in an environment where security is fragile or compromised. The Polish EU Presidency in the first half of 2025 has rightly spotlighted the security challenge as central to Europe’s future. Reinforcing the EU’s civilian and military preparedness must be a priority, as it ensures the Union is resilient to a variety of threats, both internal and external. From preparing for natural disasters to building robust defence capacity and shielding our economies from modern threats, such as cyberattacks and critical infrastructure disruptions, are all vital to uphold economic stability and progress.

    In a world fraught with uncertainty about geopolitical, trade and financial developments, full of unknown unknowns, I cannot emphasise enough the urgency for immediate and coordinated steps to navigate these challenges effectively. The challenges we face may be complex but are not insurmountable. With a shared commitment to economic stability, growth and innovation, we can continue to build a more inclusive and sustainable European economy and strengthen our continent’s role in international diplomacy. I am confident that the ambitious programme of the Polish EU Presidency will yield positive outcomes and give Europeans a sense of security and optimism about the future of our economies.

    Thank you very much for your attention.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Zeljko Jović: Overview of recent monetary and macroeconomic trends in Serbia

    Source: Bank for International Settlements

    Ladies and gentlemen, esteemed members of the press, dear colleagues,

    Welcome to the presentation of the February Inflation Report.

    Allow me, first, to briefly summarise the year behind us. Just as the previous post-pandemic years, last year was marked by global uncertainty, heightened geopolitical tensions and rising protectionism. And yet it was the year in which global inflation, which remains elevated, was reined in. On top of this, inflation was contained without triggering global recession, though growth remains below-average in a number of countries, including in the euro area – a region particularly important for us. Even in such highly complex conditions, our country continued to demonstrate a high degree of resilience, and we successfully achieved all our objectives.

    • Most importantly, when it comes to monetary policy, in May 2024, we brought inflation back to the target tolerance band of 3±1.5%, consistent with expectations, while ensuring that it stays there in the remainder of the year.
    • This helped us support economic growth more directly by cautious monetary easing, more favourable borrowing conditions and accelerated lending.
    • A favourable growth outlook for our economy was an important feature of macroeconomic trends in 2024 – the growth measured 3.9% and was one of the highest in Europe. As we diversified growth sources and responded to challenges in an adequate and timely manner, GDP exceeded the prepandemic level by over 18%.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI: ChampionX Announces Definitive Agreement to Sell US Synthetic Corporation

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    THE WOODLANDS, Texas, Feb. 25, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — ChampionX Corporation (“ChampionX” or the “Company”) (NASDAQ: CHX), a global leader in oilfield technology, announced today that it has entered into a definitive agreement to sell all of its equity interests in US Synthetic Corporation (“US Synthetic”) to LongRange Capital, L.P. (“LongRange Capital”).

    US Synthetic, located in Orem, Utah, offers innovative, best-in-class polycrystalline diamond cutter inserts, bearings, valves, and mining tools to help customers drill the world’s most demanding oil exploration and development projects. US Synthetic comprises the Drilling Technologies segment of ChampionX.

    “I have been pleased to see the growth of US Synthetic over the years, which is a testament to their innovation ethos, impactful technologies, and strong culture of customer service and continuous improvement,” said Sivasankaran “Soma” Somasundaram, President and CEO of ChampionX. “I want to thank the dedicated and talented employees of US Synthetic for their many contributions to ChampionX over the years. We believe that LongRange Capital will be the right home for US Synthetic to further foster their growth.”

    “We are excited about the future of US Synthetic, and this transition represents a significant milestone in our journey. We are very optimistic about the opportunities it will bring,” commented Rob Galloway, President, Drilling Technologies of ChampionX. “With LongRange Capital as our new partner, we look forward to accelerating our growth strategy while continuing our commitment to delivering exceptional value to our customers and stakeholders.”

    The transaction, which is subject to customary closing conditions, as well as the closing of the previously announced transaction between ChampionX and SLB, is expected to close shortly after the closing of the ChampionX and SLB transaction.

    About ChampionX

    ChampionX is a global leader in chemistry solutions and highly engineered equipment and technologies that help companies drill for and produce oil and gas safely and efficiently around the world. ChampionX’s products provide efficient functioning throughout the lifecycle of a well with a focus on the production phase of wells. To learn more about ChampionX, visit www.championX.com.

    About LongRange Capital

    Founded in 2019, LongRange Capital is a private equity firm formed to apply a longer-term perspective to investments and employ a company-focused, customer-first philosophy to building better businesses. LongRange Capital seeks to create value by partnering with its portfolio companies and their management teams to ensure that the strategy, resources, capital, execution, and incentives are aligned to achieve their collective goals. The LongRange Capital team has a successful track record of investing in and growing businesses across a range of industries, including industrial products, chemicals, industrial technology, and consumer goods and services, among other segments. LongRange Capital is currently investing a highly flexible, committed capital pool backed by long-term institutional holders. For more information, please visit www.longrangecapital.com.

    Contacts

    Investor Contact: Byron Pope, byron.pope@championx.com, 281-602-0094

    Media Contact: John Breed, john.breed@championx.com, 281-403-5751

    Forward-Looking Statements

    This communication contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, Section 27A of the Securities Act, and Section 21E of the Exchange Act.

    Such forward-looking statements include statements relating to the proposed transaction between SLB and ChampionX and the related sale of USS to LongRange Capital, including statements regarding the benefits of the transaction and the anticipated timing of the transaction, and information regarding the businesses of SLB and ChampionX, including expectations regarding outlook and all underlying assumptions, SLB’s and ChampionX’s objectives, plans and strategies, information relating to operating trends in markets where SLB and ChampionX operate, statements that contain projections of results of operations or of financial condition and all other statements other than statements of historical fact that address activities, events or developments that SLB or ChampionX intends, expects, projects, believes or anticipates will or may occur in the future. Such statements are based on management’s beliefs and assumptions made based on information currently available to management. All statements in this communication, other than statements of historical fact, are forward-looking statements that may be identified by the use of the words “outlook,” “guidance,” “expects,” “believes,” “anticipates,” “should,” “estimates,” “intends,” “plans,” “seeks,” “targets,” “may,” “can,” “believe,” “predict,” “potential,” “projected,” “projections,” “precursor,” “forecast,” “ambition,” “goal,” “scheduled,” “think,” “could,” “would,” “will,” “see,” “likely,” and other similar expressions or variations, but not all forward-looking statements include such words. These forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties, and which may cause SLB’s or ChampionX’s actual results and performance to be materially different from those expressed or implied in the forward-looking statements. Factors and risks that may impact future results and performance include, but are not limited to those factors and risks described in Part I, “Item 1. Business”, “Item 1A. Risk Factors”, and “Item 7. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations” in SLB’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) on January 22, 2025 and Part 1, Item 1A, “Risk Factors” in ChampionX’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024 filed with the SEC on February 5, 2025, and each of their respective, subsequent Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q and Current Reports on Form 8-K. These include, but are not limited to, and in each case as a possible result of the proposed transaction on each of SLB and ChampionX: the ultimate outcome of the proposed transaction between SLB and ChampionX, including the effect of the announcement of the proposed transaction; the ability to operate the SLB and ChampionX respective businesses, including business disruptions; difficulties in retaining and hiring key personnel and employees; the ability to maintain favorable business relationships with customers, suppliers and other business partners; the terms and timing of the proposed transaction; the occurrence of any event, change or other circumstance that could give rise to the termination of the proposed transaction; the anticipated or actual tax treatment of the proposed transaction; the ability to satisfy closing conditions to the completion of the proposed transaction; other risks related to the completion of the proposed transaction and actions related thereto; the ability of SLB and ChampionX to integrate the business successfully and to achieve anticipated synergies and value creation from the proposed transaction; changes in demand for SLB’s or ChampionX’s products and services; global market, political and economic conditions, including in the countries in which SLB and ChampionX operate; the ability to secure government regulatory approvals on the terms expected, at all or in a timely manner; the extent of growth of the oilfield services market generally, including for chemical solutions in production and midstream operations; the global macro-economic environment, including headwinds caused by inflation, rising interest rates, unfavorable currency exchange rates, and potential recessionary or depressionary conditions; cyber-attacks, information security and data privacy; the impact of public health crises, such as pandemics (including COVID-19) and epidemics and any related company or government policies and actions to protect the health and safety of individuals or government policies or actions to maintain the functioning of national or global economies and markets; trends in crude oil and natural gas prices, including trends in chemical solutions across the oil and natural gas industries, that may affect the drilling and production activity, profitability and financial stability of SLB’s and ChampionX’s customers and therefore the demand for, and profitability of, their products and services; litigation and regulatory proceedings, including any proceedings that may be instituted against SLB or ChampionX related to the proposed transaction; failure to effectively and timely address energy transitions that could adversely affect the businesses of SLB or ChampionX, results of operations, and cash flows of SLB or ChampionX; and disruptions of SLB’s or ChampionX’s information technology systems.

    These risks, as well as other risks related to the proposed transaction, are included in the Form S-4 and proxy statement/prospectus that was filed with the SEC in connection with the proposed transaction between SLB and ChampionX. While the list of factors presented here is, and the list of factors presented in the registration statement on Form S-4 are, considered representative, no such list should be considered to be a complete statement of all potential risks and uncertainties. For additional information about other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those described in the forward-looking statements, please refer to SLB’s and ChampionX’s respective periodic reports and other filings with the SEC, including the risk factors identified in SLB’s and ChampionX’s Annual Reports on Form 10-K, respectively, and SLB’s and ChampionX’s subsequent Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q. The forward-looking statements included in this communication are made only as of the date hereof. Neither SLB nor ChampionX undertakes any obligation to update any forward-looking statements to reflect subsequent events or circumstances, except as required by law.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Global: The ‘lab-leak origin’ of Covid-19. Fact or fiction?

    Source: The Conversation – France – By Florence Débarre, Directrice de recherche CNRS, chercheuse en biologie évolutive, Sorbonne Université

    In a January 24 interview with the far-right-wing outlet Breitbart News, newly appointed CIA director John Ratcliffe stated that assessing intelligence on a potential Wuhan lab leak was a top priority. The following day, The New York Times reported that the agency had shifted from an undecided stance to favoring a possible Chinese lab leak, albeit with a “low confidence” rating–the lowest on a three-tier scale (low, medium, high)–indicating the evidence remains inconclusive.

    The CIA has thus joined the ranks of the FBI and the Department of Energy (DOE), which has scientific jurisdiction, in supporting the possibility of a laboratory-related incident.

    Findings from a 2023 reportshow that, among the U.S. agencies that have investigated the pandemic’s origins, one remains undecided, while four others, along with the National Intelligence Council, support the natural origin hypothesis.

    What does ‘laboratory origin’ really mean?

    According to The New York Times, the CIA’s revised assessment is based not on new evidence, but on a reinterpretation of existing data. However, the reasoning behind its reassessment, along with the supporting data, has not been made public, making it impossible to evaluate the accuracy and reliability of the agency’s conclusions.

    Adding to the complexity, “laboratory origin” is an umbrella term encompassing multiple, sometimes contradictory, scenarios. Confirming CNN’s 2023 report on the Department of Energy’s revised stance, The New York Times notes that while the DOE identifies the Wuhan Center for Disease Control (WCDC) as the outbreak’s likely source, the FBI attributes it to a lab leak at the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV). As of now, the CIA has not disclosed which scenario it deems most plausible.

    Though WCDC is not an actual research laboratory, some of its employees were participating in wildlife sampling campaigns at the time of the outbreak. In late 2019, WCDC moved to a location close to the Huanan Market. A theory implicating the WCDC confirms evidence that the earliest detected cases are epidemiologically and geographically linked to the market, suggesting the virus emerged naturally.

    In contrast, the WIV is a research institute operating across two campuses–one located 12 kilometers from the market and the other, which houses the P4 laboratory, 27 kilometers away. Scenarios implicating the WIV generally posit that “gain-of-function” coronavirus experiments–intended to enhance a virus’s transmissibility or virulence–were conducted under unsafe biosecurity conditions. The WIV is a biosafety level 2 facility, two levels below the high-security P4 standard.

    The interactive map above highlights Wuhan laboratories–the two WIV campuses in purple and the WCDC in yellow–and the Wuhan Huanan market in red. Click the symbol in the top left corner to view the legend. Since the WCDC is located near the market, please zoom in to see it.

    The Covid-19 virus originated from a single source. If it did escape from a Chinese laboratory, it could not have simultaneously leaked from two separate labs conducting different types of research.

    The lab leak scenario, supported by mutually incompatible hypotheses, doesn’t hold up–even before considering theories that the virus was engineered in a U.S. lab and then sent to Wuhan.

    Beyond determining the virus’s origin, it is equally important to identify the exact nature of the virus–further complicating the lab-accident hypothesis. Was it a natural occurring virus contracted during a sampling campaign? A laboratory-cultivated virus transferred to cells or animals? Or even a directly genetically modified virus?

    Again, SARS-CoV-2 cannot be both a natural virus and the result of lab experiments. Arguments built on conflicting premises do little to strengthen the case for a research-related incident.

    No evidence of a laboratory-related incident

    The lab-incident hypothesis would carry much more weight if definitive proof emerged that, by late December 2019, a Wuhan laboratory possessed a progenitor of SARS-CoV-2–meaning a virus identical or nearly identical to SARS-CoV-2.

    In the case of the 2007 foot-and-mouth disease outbreak in southern England, for example, virus sequencing quickly led investigators to nearby high-security laboratories conducting research on a similar virus. The inquiry ultimately traced the outbreak to faulty effluent pipes at the facilities.

    To date, no virus has been identified that could be used in a laboratory as a direct progenitor of SARS-CoV-2. If the virus did emerge from a research-related incident, two possibilities remain: it was either an uncharacterized natural virus, unknown even to researchers, or it was a previously characterized virus that had not been disclosed–either because it was recently identified or part of a classified program–and is still being kept under wraps by scientists in Wuhan.

    Especially if SARS-CoV-2 were the result of genetic engineering. A lab-modified virus would mean its genetic sequence was known before the pandemic and accessible to researchers. However, by 2021, the U.S. intelligence community had determined that researchers at the WIV had no prior knowledge of SARS-CoV-2 before the outbreak. While absence of evidence is not evidence of absence, concrete data has yet to emerge supporting the hypothesis of laboratory modification.

    Theories about a potential lab outbreak have also fueled speculation about external involvement, both within China and abroad. A U.S. Senate committee report put forward an all-Chinese scenario, citing the suspicious 2020 death of a Beijing-based researcher working on a new vaccine.

    Other theories center on the NGO EcoHealth Alliance, which collaborated with WIV to collect and study natural coronavirus strains before its funding was abruptly cut off at Donald Trump’s request in Spring 2020. The organization’s president has since been banned from federal funding for five years, facing criticism over oversight issues, including delayed reporting of an experiment on a chimeric coronavirus and failure to provide WIV’s laboratory notebooks.

    Among the most high-profile figures implicated in U.S.-based complicity theories is Anthony Fauci, the former White House Covid advisor and head of the agency that funded the EcoHealth Alliance/WIV collaboration. But allegations against Fauci go far beyond simply approving research grants. One narrative claims he deliberately suppressed discussions about the pandemic’s point of origin, pressuring researchers to alter their conclusions in exchange for funding. No evidence has surfaced to support this claim.

    Anticipating potential retribution from his successor and the Republican Party, Former President Joe Biden preemptively granted Fauci a presidential pardon. However, newly elected President Donald Trump has since revoked Fauci’s personal security detail, and Republican Senator Rand Paul has vowed to continue efforts to prosecute him.

    The natural-origin theory faces hurdles as well

    Since these competing lab leak theories have emerged from a lack of conclusive evidence anything is possible. However, available data suggest the virus may have originated naturally from animals sold at the Huanan Market.

    Multiple sources, including research from Chinese institutions, support this hypothesis: two early SARS-CoV-2 strains were detected at the market, with the earliest cases reported in homes within the vicinity, even for patients without direct epidemiological links to it, and findings from the Chinese Center for Disease Control (CCDC) indicate that raccoon dogs and masked palm civets–species implicated in earlier SARS outbreaks–were present in the market’s southwest corner, where traces of SARS-CoV-2 were frequently detected.

    However, by the time the China CDC team arrived at the Huanan Market–just hours after its closure for sample collection–raccoon dogs and civets were no longer present. As a result, no direct traces of infection were detected, and the definitive evidence some are hoping for may never be uncovered.

    But even if such proof were to emerge, it’s unlikely to settle the debate. Additional confirmation would be needed to show that the contamination originated in the animals rather than being a secondary infection transmitted by humans. Moreover, skeptics could argue that the animals themselves came from a laboratory. In other words, the controversy is far from over.

    For now, with the new Trump administration focused on finding a culprit, the origins of the Covid-19 pandemic will remain in the spotlight. Senator Rand Paul, now chair of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee (HSGAC), has made the issue his favorite hobbyhorse.

    While declassifying additional information from the U.S. intelligence community could help clarify competing conclusions, there are concerns that the administration’s efforts may unfairly target researchers, potentially resulting in more innocent victims.

    Florence Débarre received funding in 2022 from the MODCOV19 platform of the National Institute for Mathematical Sciences and their Interactions (Insmi, CNRS) to model the initial dynamics of an epidemic.

    ref. The ‘lab-leak origin’ of Covid-19. Fact or fiction? – https://theconversation.com/the-lab-leak-origin-of-covid-19-fact-or-fiction-250462

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI: Stable versus Struggling: Canada’s Financial Divide Widens

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    – Mortgage Delinquencies Rising in Ontario Amidst Rising Consumer Debt –

    Equifax Canada Market Pulse Quarterly Consumer Credit Trends Report

    TORONTO, Feb. 25, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — A growing financial divide is emerging across Canada, with some borrowers benefiting from lower interest rates while others struggle under mounting debt. According to Equifax Canada’s Q4 2024 Market Pulse Consumer Credit Trends Report, some Ontario mortgage holders are experiencing severe financial distress, with delinquencies more than 50 per cent higher than pre-pandemic levels.

    Total consumer debt in Canada reached $2.56 trillion at the end of 2024, a 4.6 per cent increase over 2023. Non-bank auto loans drove much of this increase, rising 11.7 per cent year-over-year, while the average non-mortgage debt per consumer reached $21,931, exceeding pre-pandemic levels.

    “While some consumers are doing better and seeing financial improvements from lower interest rates, financial pressures have intensified for some Canadians, as well as mortgage holders in certain regions, in particular in Ontario and British Columbia,” said Rebecca Oakes, Vice President of Advanced Analytics at Equifax Canada. “At first glance, the numbers are not concerning, but when we look deeper at a more granular level, many are feeling the strain of high living costs and mortgage renewals with higher payments, while other consumers are doing better and seeing financial improvements from lower interest rates and income growth.”

    For some homeowners, rate cuts have provided some relief. Some borrowers with home equity lines of credit have seen delinquency rates stabilize. Many of these consumers have improved their credit card repayment habits, with more people paying off balances in full.

    Ontario Mortgage Holders Under Pressure and Missing Payments
    More than 11,000 mortgages in Ontario recorded a missed payment in Q4 2024 — nearly three times the number seen in 2022. Mortgage holders who are falling behind in their payments are also carrying substantially higher mortgage balances, reflecting the continued financial strain of higher than pre-pandemic interest rates. The 90+ day mortgage balance delinquency rate in Ontario surged 90.2 per cent year-over-year to 0.22%, far outpacing the change in delinquency rates in other provinces, with BC at 37.7 per cent, Alberta at -3.6 per cent, Quebec at 41.2 per cent, the Prairies (MB and SK) at 0.6 per cent, and the Atlantic provinces (NL, PE, NB, NS) at 15.7 per cent.

    Ontarian mortgage holders are struggling with other forms of debt as well. The 90+ day non-mortgage balance delinquency rate jumped 46.1 per cent from Q4 2023, while other provinces saw smaller rate jumps, with BC at 21.6 per cent, Quebec at 23.3 per cent, Alberta at 6.1 per cent, the Prairies (MB and SK) at 4.1 per cent, and the Atlantic provinces (NL, PE, NB, NS) at 1.5 per cent. In addition, Ontario’s overall rise in non-mortgage delinquency rate was 23.9 per cent, above the national average of 18 per cent.

    “Mortgage holders will typically do everything they can to keep up with payments,” Oakes explained. “The fact that we’re seeing missed payments rise so sharply suggests deeper financial strain. Depending on the type of credit, missed payments have increased from 10 to 80 per cent, compared to pre-pandemic levels.”

    In Toronto, 90+ day non mortgage delinquency rates hit 2.06 per cent, higher than most major cities, reflecting the region’s unique financial challenges.

    Canadian Housing Market: Rebound Tempered by Renewal Challenges

    The overall Canadian mortgage market showed signs of recovery, with new mortgage originations rising 39 per cent year-over-year. First-time homebuyers returned, with a 28.2 per cent increase from the extreme lows of purchases in Q4 2023. Although the average loan amount for first-time buyers remains 6.6 per cent higher than Q4 2023, monthly payments have decreased 7.9 per cent, or $200 lower, to an average loan amount of $2,330.

    Mortgage renewals and refinancing accounted for over 50 per cent of new mortgage originations in Q4 2024, increasing 10.6 per cent from 2023. The average loan amount and balance on mortgage renewals in 2024 surpassed those in 2023 and 2022, with the average balance increasing by 2.9 per cent in 2024 compared to 2023.

    Many consumers renewing their mortgage continue to have higher monthly payments due to elevated interest rates compared to pre-pandemic and pandemic levels, when they last locked in their low rates. This reality is expected to affect around a million mortgages due for renewal in 2025, originating from the low-interest-rate environment of 2020. These borrowers may face significantly higher payments despite recent rate reductions. A quarter of mortgage-holders saw their monthly mortgage payment increase by over $150 at renewal in Q4 2024.

    Consumer Spending and Credit Behaviour

    Credit card debt climbed 7.8 per cent in Q4 2024, though at the slowest rate since 2022. Seasonal spending in December hit a two-year high, with average credit card purchases adjusted for inflation reaching $2,228 per cardholder, a 2.2 per cent increase from 2023.

    Younger and lower income Canadians are experiencing missed payments on credit cards, auto loans, and lines of credit, signaling financial strain among these groups.

    “Despite recent rate cuts and GST tax relief, challenges persist for certain consumers, particularly in consumer debt and housing. The added uncertainty of U.S. tariffs underscores the need for a balanced approach to debt, affordability, and trade. The coming year will be critical for Canada’s economic stability,” said Oakes.

    Age Group Analysis – Debt & Delinquency Rates (excluding mortgages)

      Average
    Debt
    (Q4 2024)
    Average Debt Change
    Year-over-Year
    (Q4 2024 vs. Q4 2023)
    Delinquency Rate ($)
    (Q4 2024)
    Delinquency Rate ($) Change
    Year-over-Year
    (Q4 2024 vs. Q4 2023)
    18-25 $8,483 3.84% 1.92% 15.17%
    26-35 $17,467 0.87% 2.24% 21.24%
    36-45 $27,042 1.96% 1.85% 23.20%
    46-55 $34,564 3.71% 1.33% 19.04%
    56-65 $28,714 5.53% 1.11% 14.26%
    65+ $14,635 3.82% 1.11% 5.55%
    Canada $21,931 2.98% 1.53% 17.98%


    Major City Analysis
    – Debt & Delinquency Rates (excluding mortgages)

    City Average
    Debt
    (Q4 2024)
    Average Debt Change
    Year-over-Year
    (Q4 2024 vs. Q4 2023)
    Delinquency Rate ($)
    (Q4 2024)
    Delinquency Rate ($) Change
    Year-over-Year
    (Q4 2024 vs. Q4 2023)
    Calgary $24,078 0.81% 1.67% 16.23%
    Edmonton $23,665 -0.22% 2.17% 19.00%
    Halifax $21,278 1.46% 1.53% 21.37%
    Montreal $17,057 3.16% 1.43% 20.48%
    Ottawa $19,634 1.75% 1.47% 24.45%
    Toronto $21,054 3.34% 2.06% 23.75%
    Vancouver $23,251 4.12% 1.24% 15.81%
    St. John’s $23,968 1.02% 1.47% 3.62%
    Fort McMurray $37,861 0.26% 2.41% 11.72%


    Province Analysis
    – Debt & Delinquency Rates (excluding mortgages)

    Province Average
    Debt
    (Q4 2024)
    Average Debt Change
    Year-over-Year
    (Q4 2024 vs. Q4 2023)
    Delinquency Rate ($)
    (Q4 2024)
    Delinquency Rate ($) Change
    Year-over-Year
    (Q4 2024 vs. Q4 2023)
    Ontario $22,597 3.51% 1.64% 23.91%
    Quebec $19,156 2.83% 1.08% 16.88%
    Nova Scotia $21,349 2.45% 1.66% 9.28%
    New Brunswick $21,548 2.71% 1.68% 5.80%
    PEI $23,664 3.44% 1.23% 14.34%
    Newfoundland $24,843 3.82% 1.49% 0.05%
    Eastern Region $22,272 2.88% 1.59% 6.32%
    Alberta $24,537 0.74% 1.91% 17.11%
    Manitoba $18,150 2.64% 1.69% 3.14%
    Saskatchewan $23,265 2.29% 1.77% 11.09%
    British Columbia $22,583 3.61% 1.36% 14.16%
    Western Region $22,911 2.34% 1.64% 14.09%
    Canada $21,931 2.98% 1.53% 17.98%

    * Based on Equifax data for Q4 2024

    About Equifax
    At Equifax (NYSE: EFX), we believe knowledge drives progress. As a global data, analytics, and technology company, we play an essential role in the global economy by helping financial institutions, companies, employers, and government agencies make critical decisions with greater confidence. Our unique blend of differentiated data, analytics, and cloud technology drives insights to power decisions to move people forward. Headquartered in Atlanta and supported by nearly 15,000 employees worldwide, Equifax operates or has investments in 24 countries in North America, Central and South America, Europe, and the Asia Pacific region. For more information, visit Equifax.ca.

    Contact:

    Andrew Findlater
    SELECT Public Relations
    afindlater@selectpr.ca
    (647) 444-1197

    Angie Andich
    Equifax Canada Media Relations
    MediaRelationsCanada@equifax.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Annual accounts for 2024 | Statement at the press conference presenting the Deutsche Bundesbank’s Annual Report for 2024

    Source: Deutsche Bundesbank in English

    Check against delivery.
    1 Introduction
    Ladies and gentlemen,
    A warm welcome to you from me as well. 
    Before we start looking at the 2024 annual accounts together in a few minutes, allow me to make a few introductory remarks.
    The President has already said it: the monetary policy measures of the past few years are still having an effect. They are also reflected on central banks’ balance sheets. 
    As you know, the Bundesbank started making provision for the increased financial risks early on, in the annual accounts for 2016. These risks materialised yet again in 2024. 
    On balance, the Bundesbank posted losses of around €19.8 billion in 2024, after a loss of €21.6 billion in the previous year. In 2023, however, we recorded a net distributable profit of zero because we used all of our provision for general risk and some of our reserves to offset losses. For 2024, remaining reserves totalling €0.7 billion were still available to offset some of the loss. The Bank is thus reporting an accumulated loss of €19.2 billion for 2024.
    Let me share three important messages:
    We have reached the peak of the losses.
    Net equity has climbed to more than €250 billion.
    There is a revaluation reserve of over €260 billion for the gold.
    So the Bundesbank’s balance sheet is sound.
    The positive message is that the Bundesbank is fully able to perform its tasks even in the face of losses. 
    This slide shows that the Bundesbank’s net equity increased significantly, rising by €50 billion or roughly 25%. We will look at the development of net equity in detail in just a moment. 
    Now let’s take a closer look at developments in the annual accounts for 2024.
    2 Balance sheet
    First, let’s look at the assets side of our balance sheet:
    Total assets once again declined as a result of monetary and foreign exchange policy activities: they were down by around €149 billion, or 5.9%. Viewed over multiple years, though, total assets are still up on the end of 2019 – that is to say, their level before the pandemic and before the start of the highly accommodative monetary policy. 
    As in the previous year, the decline in total assets has three main drivers on the assets side:
    First, securities holdings from the monetary policy purchase programmes decreased by €98 billion: this was largely concentrated on the APP portfolio, for which reinvestments of principal payments were discontinued as of July 2023. For the PEPP, meanwhile, reinvestments were gradually reduced to zero only as of the second half of 2024. We will see the effects of this more clearly in the 2025 annual accounts.
    Second, lending related to monetary policy operations contracted by €67 billion, above all due to the phase-out of the TLTROs conducted at particularly favourable interest rates during the pandemic.
    Third, liquidity outflows meant that the TARGET claim on the ECB fell by €47 billion in 2024.
    On the liabilities side of the balance sheet, there was a corresponding significant decline in deposits: liabilities related to monetary policy operations fell on the year to €960 billion. In addition, other euro balances dropped on the year to €134 billion, mainly owing to smaller balances of non-euro area central banks. 
    Another key item on the liabilities side is banknotes in circulation: when the negative interest rate policy period ended in 2022, growth in the volume of banknotes in circulation within the Eurosystem had effectively come to a halt due to the higher opportunity cost of holding cash. Only in recent months has growth picked up again at individual national central banks. The Bundesbank’s share of the Eurosystem’s banknotes in circulation reported on the balance sheet under liabilities item 1 “Banknotes in circulation” rose to €389 billion. The volume of banknotes issued by the Bundesbank actually increased more than in the rest of the euro area. This can be seen in liabilities sub-item 9.2 “Net liabilities related to the allocation of euro banknotes within the Eurosystem”, which has risen to €567 billion.
    The third aspect I would like to discuss is the revaluation accounts item: this item increased on the year, climbing by €70 billion to €267 billion.
    You will see a breakdown of the revaluation accounts item on the next slide.
    The revaluation reserve for gold contained within that item has risen by €69 billion to €263 billion based on the market value of gold as at the reporting date. The revaluation reserve for gold has grown strongly when viewed over the long term, in particular. This revaluation reserve is currently almost thirteen times as high as its level when monetary union was launched at the start of 1999. 
    The revaluation reserve for foreign currency has increased by €1 billion, driven by the weaker euro. This growth is mainly attributable to assets denominated in US dollars.
    The revaluation reserves also have an impact on net equity, as shown on the next slide.
    Net equity comprises: 
    capital and reserves; 
    the provision for general risk; 
    the revaluation accounts item; and 
    as of the 2024 annual accounts, the accumulated loss. 
    Looking at developments over multiple years, we can see that net equity developed positively in 2020 and 2021 over and above the increase in the provision for general risk (rising from €186 billion to €197 billion). In 2022, net equity went up to €207 billion, even though the Bank released some of the provision for general risk. In 2023, the provision for general risk in the amount of €19.2 billion was fully released to offset losses; however, the decline in net equity was much smaller, at €7 billion. This was mainly because of further growth in the revaluation reserve for gold owing to movements in the price of gold. Given that the revaluation reserves are now at their highest ever level of €267 billion, net equity rose overall to €251 billion in the reporting year, despite the accumulated loss of €19.2 billion, and is now at an all-time high.
    Having net equity of €251 billion shows that the Bank can absorb the existing and prospective losses. It is fully able to fulfil its mandate. Our balance sheet is sound.
    3 Profit and loss account
    Let’s now turn our attention to the profit and loss account.
    Joachim Nagel has already pointed it out: the Bundesbank’s earnings situation has improved only slightly on the year. The turnaround in interest rates and the associated key interest rate hikes in 2022 and 2023 have set many things in motion. Much like in 2023, the combination of long-term monetary policy securities – generating low levels of remuneration – on the assets side and short-term deposits remunerated at higher rates on the liabilities side was a source of considerable strain in 2024. 
    The burdens arising from interest rate risk are affecting us via two channels this year:
    via our own securities holdings; and 
    via securities carried on the balance sheets of the other national central banks in cases where these securities are subject to income and risk sharing and are thus included in the pooling of monetary income among national central banks. 
    Now to the main items of our current profit and loss account: 
    The largest component of the profit and loss account isnet interest income. In bar 1, you can see that this has improved slightly, rising by €0.8 billion on the year. But at -€13.1 billion, it is clearly in negative territory, as it was in the previous year. 
    Why is that so? As already touched upon, the monetary policy asset purchases have given rise to longer-term fixed interest positions (generating a low level of remuneration). The counterparts of these on the liabilities side of the balance sheet – after deducting banknotes in circulation – are short-term interest-bearing deposits of commercial banks. The mismatch in maturities has left an open euro interest rate position on the balance sheet. The significant increase in the deposit facility rate in 2022 and 2023 is continuing to cause interest rate risk from this open interest rate position to materialise – putting net interest income under strain.
    Specifically, this means that while the remuneration of monetary policy securities increased only marginally (to 0.54% on average), credit institutions’ monetary policy deposits resulted in a significant interest charge (of 3.81% on average for the year) owing to the higher deposit facility rate. This gives us a negative interest margin of -3.28% for 2024. On average for the year, this negative interest margin is actually up slightly on 2023 (-2.90%). However, maturing monetary policy securities, in particular, resulted in the open euro interest rate position being 22% lower on average for 2024, thus placing a lower burden on net interest income overall. 
    Realised gains arising from financial operations and write-downs related to foreign exchange and securities (bar 2) were, at €860 million, up by €467 million on the year on balance. Realised gains (mainly US dollars in the case of foreign exchange and US Treasury notes in the case of securities) – which were still coming under pressure from the stronger US dollar in the previous year – rose by €638 million to €1.2 billion in 2024.
    At the same time, there were larger write-downs in the amount of €324 million. This is €171 million more than in the year before. While the need for write-downs on foreign exchange holdings was lower than in the previous year, there was a greater need for write-downs on securities holdings denominated in foreign currency, primarily as a result of higher capital market yields on US Treasury notes. 
    That brings me to monetary income. This comprises interest income from monetary policy assets, less interest paid on their counterpart liability items. In the Eurosystem, the resulting net interest income is shared according to the capital key. 
    At -€5.4 billion, the net result of pooling monetary income (bar 3) in 2024 was roughly the same as in the previous year. The lion’s share is still attributable to redistribution effects relating to monetary policy supranational securities. These are securities issued by supranational institutions, such as the European Union. These securities were purchased by other national central banks as part of PSPP and PEPP purchases. The Bundesbank itself has no holdings. The Eurosystem’s holdings came to an annual average of €398 billion. Income and risks are shared within the Eurosystem. 
    The supranational securities holdings generate only a low level of remuneration. Compared with the main refinancing rate, theinterest margin is thus negative at around -3.6% on an annual average for 2024. The lower income resulting from this for the affected national central banks is balanced out among the national central banks via the common pool of monetary income. Based on its capital share of 26.6%, the charge for the Bundesbank came to around €3.8 billion.
    Staff costs (bar 4) in 2024 were down by €623 million to €1.5 billion. The decrease was caused by one-off effects in the previous year, in which additional transfers to staff provisions were necessary. 
    For 2024, this initially results in a loss for the year of €19.8 billion, which is €1.8 billion lower than the loss in 2023 before releasing the provision for general risk. 
    In the previous year, however, it was possible to offset the loss by fully releasing the provision for general risk of €19.2 billion (bar 6) and making withdrawals from reserves to the tune of around €2.4 billion (bar 7). By contrast, there are only reserves of just under €0.7 billion left available to offset the loss in the reporting year. 
    The profit and loss account for financial year 2024 thus closed with an accumulated loss of €19.2 billion, which will be carried forward to 2025.
    4 Conclusion
    I shall now conclude my remarks by summarising the main takeaways.
    The financial burdens remained considerable in 2024. We expect the burdens to subside significantly as early as 2025. Nevertheless, they will remain considerable. 
    The open euro interest rate position will shrink further in size now that reinvestments under the PEPP have now also been phased out. Monetary policy securities holdings will become smaller as they mature. In addition, the negative interest margin will decrease because the lower deposit facility rate will reduce the interest expense for credit institutions’ monetary policy deposits. 
    Overall, we expect to report losses and carry them forward for some time and that we will therefore be unable to distribute any profit for an extended period of time. 
    That brings me to the most important message of my speech today.
    The Bundesbank has considerable assets. These are significantly in excess of its obligations. Our revaluation reserves, for instance, amount to €267 billion. Net equity comes to more than €250 billion.
    In short, the Bundesbank can bear both the current and the foreseeable financial burdens. What this shows is that the Bundesbank remains able to fully discharge its tasks even with an accumulated loss. 
    The Bundesbank’s balance sheet is sound.
    Thank you.

    MIL OSI

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Rough sleeping hub on the move

    Source: City of Portsmouth

    A progress report to be discussed by Portsmouth City Council’s cabinet has set out the current funding situation for rough sleepers in the city and unveiled the new plans. [Rough Sleeping funding update.pdf]

    The rough sleeping hub has operated out of a temporary space in Elm Grove for the last four years and the council is grateful for the support from businesses and residents in the area. Now the hub is set to move to 6 Queen Street, Portsea and is due to open on 1 April this year. The premise move will provide rough sleepers and the staff that work with them with a newly-renovated venue, whilst also creating the opportunity to provide help more quickly and in a more joined-up way.

    The rough sleeping hub is a free service that anyone who is sleeping rough can access. It provides people with breakfast, hot drinks, shower and laundry facilities, access to the internet, locker facilities for people to store their belongings, and help with clothing. Around 15 to 20 people access the service on a typical day.

    Staff help people to address their immediate needs, including help with benefits, registering with a GP, help with substance misuse problems, and help to find accommodation.

    People using the hub can also access activities including educational sessions to help people improve their literacy and numeracy skills, and life-skills workshops.

    The current hub was opened as a temporary solution during the Covid-19 pandemic and is based in a repurposed flat within a residential block and has limitations.

    The new hub will provide more facilities, laid out in a better way, and will include more showers and lockers, better meeting spaces, and an enclosed, off-street, smoking area. The council carried out a full feasibility study on available buildings within the budget for the project, carefully considering factors including ease of access for people who are rough sleeping, proximity to other support services, and potential community impact.

    Cllr Darren Sanders, Cabinet Member for Housing and Tackling Homelessness, said: “Not everyone who is homeless sleeps rough, but those who do are often experiencing a very difficult time in their lives. The council and our partners work very hard to make sure time spent sleeping rough is prevented, and where that is not possible, is for as short a period as possible. The new hub will help with this, providing people with much-needed privacy and dignity, as well as access to further help.

    “We work to provide the best possible service for people experiencing homelessness with the funds that we are given from government, but we are never given enough to help as much as we need to. That’s why we allocated £203,000 in the council’s budget last year to fund the setting up of this new hub.”

    The hub runs alongside the council’s rough sleeping pathway which provides over 100 beds across the city to prevent and shorten the incidences of rough sleeping. In the twelve-month period between July 2023 and June 2024, 301 people were provided with accommodation in the pathway as an alternative to rough sleeping. In the same twelve-month period, 155 people moved successfully from the pathway to suitable alternative housing. There were only 11 evictions from the pathway during those 12 months.

    It is anticipated that the relocation of the rough sleeping hub will reduce the number of people accessing support in Elm Grove, which is a busy area with a high concentration of shops, pubs, restaurants, and other local businesses. The council also provides accommodation in Elm Grove that will remain.

    The rough sleeping team has learnt a lot over the previous four years and the new premises have been designed to reduce issues and minimise disruption to the local area. The council will be working with local residents and businesses to ensure a smooth transition.

    The average number of people sleeping rough each month in Portsmouth has fallen slightly for 2024/25 to 53, whilst across the country numbers continue to rise. Government policies such as early prison release have put increased pressure on rough sleeping services.

    In December 2024 the government announced that one further year’s funding would be provided to local authorities for rough sleeping interventions. After March 2026 rough sleeping will be funded differently, and the government has said the council will be expected to “reduce demand for rough sleeping services, focus on those with most complex needs and least likely to access services, and establish a sustainable approach to community integration that prevents returns to rough sleeping and homelessness”. The council is working hard to understand how to further evolve and improve its services for rough sleepers, and has developed an action plan as part of its five year homelessness strategy. [Homelessness Strategy 2024]

    Find out more about the rough sleeping hub Sleeping rough – Portsmouth City Council]

    If you’re concerned about someone you think is sleeping rough, go to the StreetLink website and log the details. Local agencies can then try to connect the person with help available.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Transcript – media conference – Eastern Creek Truck Stop

    Source: Australian Ministers for Regional Development

    CHRIS BOWEN [FEDERAL MEMBER FOR MCMAHON]: Well, thanks for coming, everyone. Australia lives on trucking, and western Sydney relies on trucking more than anywhere else because western Sydney is the industrial heartland of Sydney, the home to the biggest industrial estate in the southern hemisphere, the Smithfield Wetherill Park, Erskine Park Industrial Estate. Even more so with the development of the M7, of course, which has made our area a distribution centre for New South Wales. And the M7, M4 is the first freeway to freeway intersection in Australia. And of course, just as we rely on our truckers, our truckers deserve nothing but the best. We rely on them and they rely on us to provide world class facilities.

    So I’m very, very excited for this announcement today here in my community, but one which has implications beyond this community for truckers to ensure they’re getting the very best support so that they can stay on the road safely and can keep our economy moving. So I’m delighted to welcome my friend Catherine King to my community, together with John Graham, for a very significant announcement. Catherine.

    CATHERINE KING [MINISTER]: Thanks, Chris, and it’s terrific to be here in your part of the world, but also here alongside my state colleague John Graham, who’s been doing terrific work. Can I also acknowledge the state MPs who are here with us as well, as well as Senator Glenn Sterle and Senator Tony Sheldon, who know very well how important this is. Well, this is a terrific announcement, not just for western Sydney. You can see just how busy the M4 is. With the amount of freight that is moving on, it is one of the busiest freight networks in the country. But this is actually important for the whole country. We know how important it is for truck drivers to be able to rest. We know that there is no dedicated rest area for truck drivers along this incredibly busy stretch of this freight route. And what we also know is that when truck drivers have access to decent rest areas, decent areas to shower and to toilet and to eat, that they are much safer driving on our roads. So this is very much a win for road safety as well. Our roads, our trucks, are truck drivers’ workplaces and they deserve to have safe, proper places that they can actually rest and safe workplaces in the same way every single other working Australian does.

    This announcement today that an Albanese Labor Government will be partnering with the New South Wales Government, 40 million from us, 40 million from the New South Wales Government here at Eastern Creek, at the intersection of the M4 and M7, building the first dedicated truck rest stop area. Hard stand shade areas, showers, toileting facilities for a substantial number of trucks into this region making sure that we actually provide the safety that truck drivers need. This is very much part of our over $18 billion of investment that is coming from the Albanese Labor Government into infrastructure in western Sydney. We know that our freight task is only going to be increasing and actually investing here, investing in this truck rest stop area is incredibly important.

    I want to particularly acknowledge Senator Glenn Sterle and Senator Tony Sheldon, but also all of the truck drivers in our country. When we came to government, we set up a fund to look at how can we better get rest stops on our great freight networks. And Glenn has been sharing that alongside. He called together truck drivers and trucking companies because they are the people who will use these areas and they know where they need to stop and where the rest areas are best located. This is very much part of the advocacy that we’ve had, trying to bring truck drivers in to make sure that we actually build these where people will stop, and that we make sure that our freight routes are as safe as possible.

    I’m going to hand over to John, and then I think we’re going to hear from TWU, from Glenn and also the representative of the freight truck industry here in New South Wales as well. And then we’ll be happy to take some questions. Thank you.

    JOHN GRAHAM [NSW ROADS MINISTER]: Thanks so much, Catherine. I’m here with Kylie Wilkinson, with Karen McKeown and Stephen Bali from the state parliament. You can see how important this announcement is from the support it’s got today. People turning up backing in this plan for a rest stop here in the heart of Sydney. I want to thank firstly, the Federal Government, Minister Catherine King and the team, Glenn Sterle, Tony Sheldon and Chris Bowen. As soon as we raised this with the federal government, they were instinctively on board. They could see how important this was to Sydney. And there is a big problem. Sydney’s got a reputation as the least friendly city for truckies in the country, and that’s something that we want to change. You can understand why. It’s not just the tolls and the traffic. You expect those, but you also expect to be able to find a toilet. And the truth is, you can’t do that between Wyong and Pheasants Nest. That’s a couple hours’ drive. That’s 180 kilometres between dedicated rest stops for truck drivers moving through Sydney. That’s not safe. It’s not dignified. It needs to change. You can see why Sydney’s got that reputation. It’s the least friendly city for trucks in the country.

    We’re going to change that. This will be a crucial part of that plan to change that. Having this large site with dedicated stopping areas. We’ve talked about 800 members of the freight community to be able to work out what’s required here. And it really is a place to stop and sleep, toilets, a hot shower, maybe a little bit of shade. These are reasonable things to ask for, but they’re things that simply don’t exist in a place that can be used in the Sydney Basin. And that has to change. That’s why I’m so excited to be here with the federal government working hand in hand to really change that.

    I particularly want to give a shout out to Tony Sheldon and to Glenn Sterle. Glenn in particular, during COVID, led the fight to make sure that drivers were able to pull over and get access to restrooms up and down New South Wales, also around the country. It was a real moment to realise just how the basics matter, and we’ll deliver on the basics here. It’ll make a real difference not just to these drivers but also to the community around these areas. This will mean trucks off suburban streets in western Sydney. That’s great news for the residents and the community as well.

    So thanks to the Federal Government, thanks to Richard Olsen and the TWU team who’ve argued the case for this strongly, passionately over a long period. Simon O’Hara from Road Freight New South Wales. This has been a call for a long time. Finally, we’re delivering on it.

    SENATOR GLENN STERLE: Thank you very much, John. Thank you. Catherine, can I just come to- have the opportunity to share this with you as a semi-retired, long distance interstate truck driver, I cannot stress the importance of this announcement. I want to sincerely thank Minister Graham. John, when you were in opposition alongside Premier- now Premier Chris Minns, you had made it very clear in the lead up to the election, not just in the last couple of days, how important it was to progress proper facilities for long distance truckies to get the rest they need. So John, thank you so much and thank you for carrying the can.

    To Minister King, Catherine, my very dear friend and close colleague. I can’t thank you, Catherine, enough. Not only the work that you’ve done, bringing the voice of the Australian truck driver and the voice of the Australian truck operator to the halls of that great place down in Canberra, where you’ve created the opportunity for truckies and trucking operators to share with you, Minister, where we need these rest areas. I do applaud you. Thank you so much.

    I tell you what, I’m so jealous. I’m from Western Australia, but I know in 2025 we still expect men and women in the trucking industry to carry around a roll of toilet paper and to try and just find a bush somewhere here in Sydney or Melbourne in our capital cities. This facility will provide up to 100 truck drivers a safe haven to pull over and manage their fatigue.

    So once again to the New South Wales Government, once again to the Federal Government, and special call out: Simon O’Hara. Simon, the work that you and I did together in the pandemic, mate, yes, it seemed like it was- where are you, Simon? It was you and I against the world where we actually realised just how important our truckies are and our transport operators and our supply chains and our logistics operators to the betterment of this nation. We were shut out of toilets. We were not allowed to even use them to have a shower. And didn’t that highlight in 2022 at the time, Simon, just how disrespected we were as an industry. Well, thank goodness we’ve got the grown-ups in charge. Thank goodness we’ve got magnificent state and federal governments now putting an end to that. I applaud you. And please can we roll you out to Western Australia, South Australia, Queensland, Victoria, the Northern Territory, and heck even Tasmania? Thank you John. Thank you Catherine.

    RICHARD OLSEN [NSW FREIGHT TRANSPORT ADVISORY COUNCIL]:  Thank you so much. And I’ll just answer that question, Glenn, no. We’re here in New South Wales and we are delighted to be a part of this announcement. We’ve been advocating, as has been previously said, and we’ve been working hard behind the scenes for many years and decades to get where we’re at today and today is a remarkable day for the transport industry as a whole. We have been subject to- having to drive as has been previously stated from Pheasants Nest up to Wyong in a truck that is three hours plus on any given bad day on our freeways, expressways, transurban ways if you like, and that needed to stop. That put a whole amount of pressure on the driver in relation to their fatigue and rest in which they are required to have by law, and what they are required to have because they are in charge of 60 to 80 tonne of equipment.

    When you’re driving along that, you want to know that the truck driver has been given a decent rest and is free of fatigue as far as reasonably possible, and that we can do and we can do that now in this great city of Sydney when this establishment opens very shortly. It’s been waiting here for quite a while, a long time for us to get to this base. And we don’t want to waste a minute in getting this established, and get it so that the drivers both coming through this great state or this city, but also local drivers who need to utilise this space as well. It’s for everyone within the transport industry, and I’m very delighted to be a part, and partnering up with both federal and state government, employer organisations. This is the transport community coming together and winning for drivers. Thank you so much.

    SIMON O’HARA [CEO, ROAD FREIGHT NSW]: Good morning all, and thank you Richard Olsen. It’s with such delight that we’re here today. This is a really positive announcement about the announcement relating to the heavy vehicle rest area here in western Sydney. This is a terrific development. For generations, the trucking industry has sought a rest area within metro Sydney, and now we’re looking at an announcement that will make that a reality. This is a terrific announcement today. This means that truckies will be able to rest. We’ve got members who come in from Wagga, come in, go out every day. This allows them to be able to rest, get some food, use the toilet facilities, have a shower. Over the course of the next couple of years, this will lead to greater results in terms of road safety on the roads.

    This means as well that truckies particularly- and Glenn mentioned before the point about dignity and respect. We are absolutely committed to dignity and respect for truckies. This is part and parcel of a key step to being able to make that a reality. During COVID, we had a lot to say, particularly around truckies not having any rest areas, having to keep moving all the time. And what this does today- and I’d like to particularly acknowledge Minister Graham, Minister King, Minister Bowen, Senator Sterle and Senator Tony Sheldon, this makes what we’ve been seeking for some time- we’ve advocated for this for a significant amount of time. This makes it a reality. Thanks very much.

    CATHERINE KING: Happy to take questions, for John or me. No one?

    JOURNALIST: Question for Minister Graham. What were the other sites being considered and why did this one get the nod?

    JOHN GRAHAM: Yeah. So we’ve done a big search across the Sydney basin to look at a range of sites, and we’ve also talked extensively to the freight community, 800 people involved in that consultation. The key really was accessibility. It’s no use having the best site in the world that’s too far from the M4 and the M7. So we’ve looked intensively around this area for the best site. And here we are five minutes from the M7, ten minutes from the M4. That really is the key to be able to allow drivers to get off those freeways, rest, and then get back on their journey as fast as possible. Of course, there’s a limited number of sites- their sites had a premium. That’s why this hasn’t happened before, but that’s why we’re so pleased that we’ve now found the site and this process can unfold.

    JOURNALIST: One more question. Sorry. In ‘22, you came out and said Sydney was the worst city in Australia for truckies. And here we are in ’25, we’ve got an announcement but still no work. Why did it take so long?

    JOHN GRAHAM: Oh look, this has been a tough problem to crack for generations. This has been a call from the industry. Now we’re here, where truckies will be resting as they come off the M4, come off the M7 as they’re delivering to the communities around Sydney. Even better news, they won’t be parked on suburban streets in these communities. So this isn’t an easy problem to solve. We never said it would be, but I’m so pleased to get to this moment today.

    CATHERINE KING: All good. Beautiful. Thank you.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Global: The gold price has surged to record highs. What’s behind the move?

    Source: The Conversation – Global Perspectives – By Dirk Baur, Professor of Finance, The University of Western Australia

    The gold price has surged to a new all-time high above US$2,900 (A$4,544) an ounce this month.

    It has risen by 12% since the start of the year and clearly outperformed US and Australian stock markets. The US stock index S&P500 is up 4% and the ASX 200 has gained just 2% in that time.

    That follows an extraordinary run in 2024, when the precious metal surged 27%, the biggest rise in 14 years.

    The drivers behind this surge include heightened uncertainty and fear of inflation that has been stoked by US President Donald Trump’s threats of tariffs, together with increased demand from central banks.



    What explains gold’s recent rally?

    There are many factors at play.

    The supply of gold through gold mine production and recycling is relatively constant over time. But the demand is more variable, and consists of four major components: jewellery, technology, investment and central banks.

    In 2024, jewellery accounted for about 50% of total demand, technology or industrial demand was 5%, investment demand was 25% and central bank demand was 20%.

    Investment demand refers to investors who buy gold as an asset. Central banks generally buy gold to diversify their reserve holdings.

    As all four demand components vary over time (some more than others), gold price movements are sometimes driven by jewellery demand, sometimes by investor demand, and sometimes – as has happened recently – by central bank demand.

    What adds to the difficulty is that both the gold supply and gold demand are global. The supply comes from gold mines across the globe, from emerging countries in Africa and industrial countries such as Australia and Canada.

    The same is true for demand. While China and India dominate jewellery demand, the demand comes from many countries, as does investment demand. Central bank demand stems from large and small central banks around the world.

    Why is there demand for gold?

    One key reason for the popularity of gold is that it is considered to be a store of value. This means gold rises with inflation and maintains its value in the long run.

    In other words, an ounce of gold buys the same basket of goods (or more) today than 20 years ago. This is not the case for money (or fiat currency) such as the US or Australian dollars.

    Due to inflation, the value of money is not constant but depreciates over time. Because gold holds its value, it is also called an inflation hedge.

    While the store of value property holds in the long run, there is another important property that is more short-lived and particularly relevant during crisis periods.

    Gold is seen as a safe haven in troubled times

    The safe haven property of gold means gold prices increase when investors seek shelter in response to a shock or crisis. For example, investors bought gold in reaction to the September 11 2001 terrorist attacks, the start of the global financial crisis in 2008, and the outbreak of COVID in 2020.

    The safe haven effect of gold is generally short-lived, often resulting in falling gold prices after about 15 days.

    Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, and the subsequent sanctions on Russia – especially the freeze of Russia’s foreign government bond holdings abroad – has highlighted the risk to governments of losing access to foreign currency holdings.

    It appears some governments or central banks reacted to this with increased gold purchases. This led to a record high of 1,082 tonnes of central bank gold purchases in 2022.

    2023 saw the second-highest annual purchase in history at 1,051 tonnes, followed by 1,041 tonnes in 2024.

    The potential reaction of central banks to the Russian invasion of Ukraine is akin to investors seeking a safe haven, but is a rather new phenomenon for central banks.



    There is an additional, secondary, effect of such central bank purchases and rebalancing from US dollars to gold.

    Selling US dollars for gold implies a weakening US dollar, which increases the price of gold. (If the US dollar weakens, you need more US dollars to buy gold.) The inverse relationship between gold prices and currencies also makes gold a currency hedge. That means gold can protect investors from potential losses due to fluctuating exchange rates. This effect is particularly strong for rather volatile currencies such as the Australian dollar.

    In contrast to the shock caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the more recent increase in gold prices is harder to associate with a single shock.

    Broader economic worries

    The election of Trump has not only increased the risk of higher inflation due to tariffs and a trade war, it has also increased geopolitical risk as the US government reassesses its alliances with other countries.

    The relative unpredictability of Trump compared with his predecessors and with politicians more generally may have increased uncertainty and gold prices.
    The recent gold price trend highlights that “gold loves bad news”.

    Gold prices may anticipate geopolitical shocks or higher inflation. Gold prices rose well before inflation increased after the pandemic and started to fall when inflation had peaked in 2022.

    It is not clear exactly why gold has risen to all-time highs in 2025, but it’s possibly not good news for the world economy.

    Dirk Baur does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. The gold price has surged to record highs. What’s behind the move? – https://theconversation.com/the-gold-price-has-surged-to-record-highs-whats-behind-the-move-250391

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-Evening Report: The gold price has surged to record highs. What’s behind the move?

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Dirk Baur, Professor of Finance, The University of Western Australia

    The gold price has surged to a new all-time high above US$2,900 (A$4,544) an ounce this month.

    It has risen by 12% since the start of the year and clearly outperformed US and Australian stock markets. The US stock index S&P500 is up 4% and the ASX 200 has gained just 2% in that time.

    That follows an extraordinary run in 2024, when the precious metal surged 27%, the biggest rise in 14 years.

    The drivers behind this surge include heightened uncertainty and fear of inflation that has been stoked by US President Donald Trump’s threats of tariffs, together with increased demand from central banks.



    What explains gold’s recent rally?

    There are many factors at play.

    The supply of gold through gold mine production and recycling is relatively constant over time. But the demand is more variable, and consists of four major components: jewellery, technology, investment and central banks.

    In 2024, jewellery accounted for about 50% of total demand, technology or industrial demand was 5%, investment demand was 25% and central bank demand was 20%.

    Investment demand refers to investors who buy gold as an asset. Central banks generally buy gold to diversify their reserve holdings.

    As all four demand components vary over time (some more than others), gold price movements are sometimes driven by jewellery demand, sometimes by investor demand, and sometimes – as has happened recently – by central bank demand.

    What adds to the difficulty is that both the gold supply and gold demand are global. The supply comes from gold mines across the globe, from emerging countries in Africa and industrial countries such as Australia and Canada.

    The same is true for demand. While China and India dominate jewellery demand, the demand comes from many countries, as does investment demand. Central bank demand stems from large and small central banks around the world.

    Why is there demand for gold?

    One key reason for the popularity of gold is that it is considered to be a store of value. This means gold rises with inflation and maintains its value in the long run.

    In other words, an ounce of gold buys the same basket of goods (or more) today than 20 years ago. This is not the case for money (or fiat currency) such as the US or Australian dollars.

    Due to inflation, the value of money is not constant but depreciates over time. Because gold holds its value, it is also called an inflation hedge.

    While the store of value property holds in the long run, there is another important property that is more short-lived and particularly relevant during crisis periods.

    Gold is seen as a safe haven in troubled times

    The safe haven property of gold means gold prices increase when investors seek shelter in response to a shock or crisis. For example, investors bought gold in reaction to the September 11 2001 terrorist attacks, the start of the global financial crisis in 2008, and the outbreak of COVID in 2020.

    The safe haven effect of gold is generally short-lived, often resulting in falling gold prices after about 15 days.

    Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, and the subsequent sanctions on Russia – especially the freeze of Russia’s foreign government bond holdings abroad – has highlighted the risk to governments of losing access to foreign currency holdings.

    It appears some governments or central banks reacted to this with increased gold purchases. This led to a record high of 1,082 tonnes of central bank gold purchases in 2022.

    2023 saw the second-highest annual purchase in history at 1,051 tonnes, followed by 1,041 tonnes in 2024.

    The potential reaction of central banks to the Russian invasion of Ukraine is akin to investors seeking a safe haven, but is a rather new phenomenon for central banks.



    There is an additional, secondary, effect of such central bank purchases and rebalancing from US dollars to gold.

    Selling US dollars for gold implies a weakening US dollar, which increases the price of gold. (If the US dollar weakens, you need more US dollars to buy gold.) The inverse relationship between gold prices and currencies also makes gold a currency hedge. That means gold can protect investors from potential losses due to fluctuating exchange rates. This effect is particularly strong for rather volatile currencies such as the Australian dollar.

    In contrast to the shock caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the more recent increase in gold prices is harder to associate with a single shock.

    Broader economic worries

    The election of Trump has not only increased the risk of higher inflation due to tariffs and a trade war, it has also increased geopolitical risk as the US government reassesses its alliances with other countries.

    The relative unpredictability of Trump compared with his predecessors and with politicians more generally may have increased uncertainty and gold prices.
    The recent gold price trend highlights that “gold loves bad news”.

    Gold prices may anticipate geopolitical shocks or higher inflation. Gold prices rose well before inflation increased after the pandemic and started to fall when inflation had peaked in 2022.

    It is not clear exactly why gold has risen to all-time highs in 2025, but it’s possibly not good news for the world economy.

    Dirk Baur does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. The gold price has surged to record highs. What’s behind the move? – https://theconversation.com/the-gold-price-has-surged-to-record-highs-whats-behind-the-move-250391

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: President Lai meets Japanese House of Representatives Member Tamaki Yuichiro

    Source: Republic of China Taiwan

    Details
    2025-02-21
    President Lai meets Abe Akie, wife of late Prime Minister Abe Shinzo of Japan
    On the morning of February 21, President Lai Ching-te met with Abe Akie, the wife of late Prime Minister Abe Shinzo of Japan. In remarks, President Lai thanked Mrs. Abe for carrying on the legacy of former Prime Minister Abe, being a benevolent and determined force for regional peace and prosperity, and calling on all parties to continue to place attention on peace in the Taiwan Strait. The president stated that Taiwan will carry on the legacy and spirit of former President Lee Teng-hui and former Prime Minister Abe, safeguard the values of freedom and democracy, and deepen the Taiwan-Japan friendship. A translation of President Lai’s remarks follows: Last May, Mrs. Abe came to Taiwan to attend the inauguration ceremony for myself and Vice President Bi-khim Hsiao, and we reminisced about the past here at the Presidential Office. I would like to warmly welcome her back today. I am also delighted to be meeting with all guests in attendance. Yesterday, Mrs. Abe and I attended the opening of the very first Halifax Taipei forum, for which Mrs. Abe also delivered a keynote speech earlier today. In her speech, she offered valuable input on global security and democratic development. I would like to thank Mrs. Abe for making this special trip to Taiwan to take part, showing her strong support for Taiwan. Former Prime Minister Abe pioneered the vision of a free and open Indo-Pacific, and called on the international community to pay attention to peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait and Indo-Pacific. These have become common strategic goals of democratic countries around the world and will have a far-reaching influence over international developments and Taiwan’s security. They were important contributions that former Prime Minister Abe made in regard to the Taiwan Strait and the Indo-Pacific region. Recently, current Prime Minister of Japan Ishiba Shigeru and United States President Donald Trump held a meeting and jointly reiterated the importance of peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait, as well as opposed unilateral changes to the status quo by force or coercion. They also expressed support for Taiwan’s participation in international organizations. This shows that Prime Minister Ishiba is furthering the legacy of former Prime Minister Abe. We are very grateful for the former prime minister’s friendship toward Taiwan, and to Mrs. Abe for carrying on his legacy. Mrs. Abe is a benevolent and determined force for regional peace and prosperity, and has called on all parties at numerous public venues to continue to place attention on peace in the Taiwan Strait. Last December, for instance, she traveled at the invitation of President Trump and his wife to the US, where she addressed cross-strait issues and spoke up for Taiwan. We were deeply moved by this. As authoritarian states continue to expand, Taiwan will keep working alongside like-minded nations such as Japan and the US, as well as the European Union, to jointly contribute to regional and global peace and prosperity. I look forward to continued advancement of regional peace and prosperity with the help of Mrs. Abe’s efforts. Mrs. Abe will also be meeting with daughter of former President Lee and Lee Teng-hui Foundation Chairperson Annie Lee (李安妮) tomorrow. Former President Lee and former Prime Minister Abe were both fully devoted to promoting Taiwan-Japan relations. We will carry on their legacy and spirit, safeguard the values of freedom and democracy, and deepen the Taiwan-Japan friendship. In closing, I wish you all a smooth and successful visit. Mrs. Abe then delivered remarks, first expressing her sincere thanks to President Lai for taking the time to meet. She said that former Prime Minister Abe hailed from Yamaguchi Prefecture, and that accompanying her that day were House of Councillors Member Kitamura Tsuneo, Yamaguchi Prefecture Governor Muraoka Tsugumasa, Yamaguchi Prefectural Assembly Deputy Speaker Shimata Noriaki, and many other important figures from Yamaguchi. If former Prime Minister Abe’s spirit could look upon this scene, she said, he would certainly be very pleased. Mrs. Abe recalled that when the former prime minister passed away, then-Vice President Lai traveled to their official residence to express his condolences and pay tribute. She said that she will never forget such a gesture of deep friendship, heartfelt condolences, and care. The year before last, she indicated, a memorial photo exhibition for former Prime Minister Abe was held in Taiwan, and many Taiwanese people from all walks of life came to view it. Last year, Mrs. Abe continued, she had the privilege of attending President Lai’s inauguration ceremony, where she met with many friends from Taiwan and personally felt the close and beautiful ties that Taiwan and Japan share. Mrs. Abe stated that she will carry out the wishes of former Prime Minister Abe and do her utmost to help raise Taiwan-Japan relations to new heights, saying that she looks forward to hearing the advice that President Lai and all those present have to offer. The delegation also included Japan-Taiwan Exchange Association Taipei Office Chief Representative Katayama Kazuyuki.

    Details
    2025-02-21
    President Lai attends opening of 2025 Halifax Taipei forum
    On the afternoon of February 20, President Lai Ching-te attended the opening of the 2025 Halifax Taipei forum. In remarks, President Lai thanked the Halifax International Security Forum for their strong support for Taiwan, and for having chosen Taiwan as the first location outside North America to hold a forum. Noting that we face a complex global landscape, the president called on the international community to take action. He said that as authoritarianism consolidates, democratic nations must also come closer in solidarity, and called on the international community to create non-red global supply chains, as well as unite to usher in peace. President Lai emphasized that Taiwan will work toward maintaining peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait, and collaborate with democratic partners to form a global alliance for the AI chip industry and together greet a bright, new era. A transcript of President Lai’s remarks follows: To begin, I want to give a warm welcome to all the distinguished guests here at the very first Halifax Taipei forum. The Halifax International Security Forum, held every year in Canada, has been an important gathering for freedom-loving nations worldwide. I would like to thank Halifax and President [Peter] Van Praagh for their strong support for Taiwan. Every year since 2018, Taiwan has been invited to participate in the forum. Last year, former President Tsai Ing-wen was invited to speak, and this year, Halifax has chosen Taiwan as the first location outside North America to hold a forum. As President Van Praagh has said, “While the security challenges ahead are too big for any single country to solve alone, there is no challenge that can’t be met when the world’s democracies work together.” Today, we have world leaders and experts who traveled from afar to be here, showing that they value and support Taiwan. It demonstrates solidarity among democracies and the determination to take on challenges as one. I would like to express my gratitude and admiration to all of you for serving as defenders of freedom. At this very moment, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is still ongoing. Authoritarian regimes including China, Russia, North Korea, and Iran continue to consolidate. China is hurting economies around the world through its dumping practices. We face grave challenges to global economic order, democracy, freedom, peace, and stability. Taiwan holds a key position on the first island chain, directly facing an authoritarian threat. But we will not be intimidated. We will stand firm and safeguard our national sovereignty, maintain our free and democratic way of life, and uphold peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait. Taiwan cherishes peace, but we also have no delusions about peace. We will uphold the spirit of peace through strength, using concrete actions to build a stronger Taiwan and bolster the free and democratic community. I sincerely thank the international community for continuing to attach importance to the situation in the Taiwan Strait. Recently, US President Donald Trump and Japan’s Prime Minister Ishiba Shigeru issued a joint leaders’ statement expressing their firm support for peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait, and for Taiwan’s participation in international affairs. As we face a complex global landscape, I call on the international community to take the following actions: First, as authoritarianism consolidates, democratic nations must also come closer in solidarity. Just a few days ago, the top diplomats of the US, Japan, and South Korea held talks, underlining the importance of maintaining peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait. They also conveyed their stance against “any effort to destabilize democratic institutions, economic independence, and global security.” On these issues, Taiwan will also continue to contribute its utmost. I recently announced that we will prioritize special budget allocations to ensure that our defense budget exceeds 3 percent of GDP.  Soon after I assumed office last year, I formed the Whole-of-Society Defense Resilience Committee at the Presidential Office. This committee aims to combine the strengths of government and civil society to enhance our resilience in national defense, economic livelihoods, disaster prevention, and democracy. We will also deepen our strategic partnerships in the democratic community to mutually increase defense resilience, demonstrate deterrence, and achieve our goal of peace throughout the world. Second, let’s create non-red global supply chains.  For the democratic community to deter the expansion of authoritarianism, it must have strong technological capabilities. These can serve as the backbone of national defense, promote industrial development, and enhance economic resilience. So, in addressing China’s red supply chain and the impact of its dumping, Taiwan is willing and able to work with global democracies to maintain the technological strengths among our partners and build resilient non-red supply chains. As a major semiconductor manufacturing nation, Taiwan will introduce an initiative on semiconductor supply chain partnerships for global democracies. We will collaborate with our democratic partners to form a global alliance for the AI chip industry and establish democratic supply chains for industries connected to high-end chips. The achievements of today’s semiconductor industry in Taiwan can be attributed to our collective efforts. Government, industry, academia, and research institutions had to overcome various challenges over the last 50 years for us to secure this position.  We hope Taiwan can serve as a base for linking the capabilities of our democratic partners so that each can play a suitable role in the semiconductor industry chain and develop its own strengths, deepening our mutually beneficial cooperation in technology. This benefits all of us. Moreover, it allows us to further enhance deterrence and maintain global security. Third, let’s unite to usher in peace. China has not stopped intimidating Taiwan politically and militarily. Last year, China launched several large-scale military exercises in the Taiwan Strait. Its escalation of gray-zone aggression now poses a grave threat to the peace and stability of the Indo-Pacific region. As a responsible member of the international community, Taiwan will maintain the status quo. We will not seek conflict. Rather, we are willing to engage in dialogue with China, under the principles of parity and dignity, and work toward maintaining peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait. As the agenda of this forum suggests, democracy and freedom create more than just opportunities; they also bring resilience, justice, partnerships, and security. Taiwan will continue working alongside its democratic partners to greet a bright, new era. Once again, a warm welcome to all of you. I wish this forum every success. Thank you. Also in attendance at the event were Mrs. Abe Akie, wife of the late former Prime Minister Abe Shinzo of Japan, and Halifax International Security Forum President Van Praagh.

    Details
    2025-02-21
    President Lai meets British-Taiwanese All-Party Parliamentary Group delegation
    On the morning of February 18, President Lai Ching-te met with a delegation from the British-Taiwanese All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG). In remarks, President Lai thanked the delegation members, the Parliament of the United Kingdom, and the UK government for continuing to demonstrate support for Taiwan through a variety of means. He also stated that Taiwan-UK relations have advanced significantly in recent years, noting that the Taiwan-UK Enhanced Trade Partnership (ETP) is the first institutionalized economic and trade framework signed between Taiwan and any European country. The president said he looks forward to continuing to deepen Taiwan-UK relations and jointly maintaining regional and global peace and stability, and indicated that together, we can create win-win developments for both Taiwan and the UK and Taiwan and European nations. A translation of President Lai’s remarks follows: This is the first UK parliamentary delegation of the current session to visit Taiwan. On behalf of the people of Taiwan, I extend my sincerest welcome to you all. APPG Chair Sarah Champion visited Taiwan last May to attend the inauguration ceremony of myself and Vice President Bi-khim Hsiao. In July, she also attended the annual summit of the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China (IPAC), which was held in Taipei. I am delighted that we are meeting once again. Taiwan-UK relations have advanced significantly in recent years. I would especially like to thank our distinguished guests, as well as the UK Parliament and government, for continuing to demonstrate support for Taiwan through a variety of means. For example, the House of Commons held a debate on Taiwan’s international status last November. After the debate, a motion was unanimously passed affirming that United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) Resolution 2758 does not mention Taiwan. Responding to the motion, Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State Catherine West stated that the UK opposes any attempt to broaden the interpretation of the resolution to rewrite history. This highlighted concrete progress in Taiwan-UK bilateral relations. I would also like to thank the UK Parliament and government for openly opposing on multiple occasions any unilateral change to the status quo across the Taiwan Strait, and for emphasizing that the security of the Indo-Pacific and transatlantic regions is closely intertwined. We look forward to continuing to deepen Taiwan-UK relations and jointly maintaining regional and global peace and stability. Together, we can create win-win developments for both Taiwan and the UK and Taiwan and European nations. For example, the Taiwan-UK ETP is the first institutionalized economic and trade framework signed between Taiwan and any European country. We hope to swiftly conclude negotiations on signing sub-arrangements on investment, digital trade, and energy and net-zero transition. This will facilitate even more exchanges and cooperation between Taiwan and the UK. We also hope that the UK will continue to support Taiwan’s accession to the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership. Together, we can build even more resilient global supply chains and further contribute to global prosperity and development. I believe that this visit adds to a strong and solid foundation for future Taiwan-UK cooperation. Thank you once again for backing Taiwan. I wish you a fruitful and successful visit. Chair Champion then delivered remarks, thanking President Lai for his warm welcome and for the hospitality he has shown to her and the delegation, and thanking Taiwan’s excellent team of officials for their care and attention. Chair Champion expressed that she thinks the IPAC conference held in Taiwan at the end of July last year was very significant, with legislators from 23 countries coming to show support for Taiwan, adding that that is something they have built on since the conference. She stated that she is also very proud that the UK Parliament supported the motion which made very clear that UNGA Resolution 2758 is specific to China and only to China, expressing that it was important and powerful that they recognize that. The chair went on to say that after the UK’s general election, more than half of the members of parliament are now new. She said she is very proud that there are new MPs as part of the delegation, and that she hopes it gives President Lai reassurance that their commitment to Taiwan is still there.  Chair Champion emphasized that the all-party group is important because it is indeed all-party, and that they work together for their common interests, stating that the common interest for the UK and for the world is to maintain Taiwan’s sovereignty. She also noted that the United States has now come out very much in support of Taiwan, which she said she hopes encourages other countries around the world to do the same. Chair Champion said that the UK will be going into the 27th trade negotiation with Taiwan, and that they hope the partnership that develops is very fruitful. The chair closed by saying that it is wonderful for the delegation to be meeting President Lai, as well as legislators and ministers, and to be understanding more about the culture of Taiwan so that they can build a deeper, longer-lasting friendship. The delegation also included Lord Purvis of Tweed of the House of Lords and Members of Parliament Ben Spencer, Helena Dollimore, Noah Law, and David Reed. The delegation was accompanied to the Presidential Office by Political and Communications Director at the British Office in Taipei Natasha Harrington.  

    Details
    2025-02-21
    President Lai meets former United States Deputy National Security Advisor Matthew Pottinger
    On the morning of February 17, President Lai Ching-te met with a delegation led by former United States Deputy National Security Advisor Matthew Pottinger. In remarks, President Lai thanked the delegation for demonstrating staunch support for Taiwan through their visit. The president pointed out that increased cooperation between authoritarian regimes is posing risks and challenges to the geopolitical landscape and regional security. He emphasized that only by bolstering our defense capabilities can we demonstrate effective deterrence and maintain peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait and around the world. The president stated that moving forward, Taiwan will continue to enhance its self-defense capabilities. He also expressed hope of strengthening the Taiwan-US partnership and jointly building secure and resilient non-red supply chains so as to ensure that Taiwan, the US, and democratic partners around the world maintain a technological lead. A translation of President Lai’s remarks follows: I am delighted to welcome our good friends Mr. Pottinger and retired US Rear Admiral Mr. Mark Montgomery to Taiwan once again. Last June, Mr. Pottinger and Mr. Ivan Kanapathy came to Taiwan to launch their new book The Boiling Moat. During that visit, they also visited the Presidential Office. We held an extensive exchange of views on Taiwan-US relations and regional affairs right here in the Taiwan Heritage Room. Now, as we meet again eight months later, I am pleased to learn that Mr. Kanapathy is now serving on the White House National Security Council. The Mandarin translation of The Boiling Moat is also due to be released in Taiwan very soon. This book offers insightful observations from US experts regarding US-China-Taiwan relations and valuable advice for the strengthening of Taiwan’s national defense, security, and overall resilience. I am sure that Taiwanese readers will benefit greatly from it. I understand that this is Mr. Montgomery’s fourth visit to Taiwan and that he has long paid close attention to Taiwan-related issues. I look forward to an in-depth discussion with our two friends on the future direction of Taiwan-US relations and cooperation. Increased cooperation between authoritarian regimes is posing risks and challenges to the geopolitical landscape and regional security. One notion we all share is peace through strength. That is, only by bolstering our defense capabilities and fortifying our defenses can we demonstrate effective deterrence and maintain peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait and around the world. Moving forward, Taiwan will continue to enhance its self-defense capabilities. We also hope to strengthen the Taiwan-US partnership in such fields as security, trade and the economy, and energy. In addition, we will advance cooperation in critical and innovative technologies and jointly build secure and resilient non-red supply chains. This will ensure that Taiwan, the US, and democratic partners around the world maintain a technological lead. We believe that closer Taiwan-US exchanges and cooperation not only benefit national security and development but also align with the common economic interests of Taiwan and the US. I want to thank Mr. Pottinger and Mr. Montgomery once again for visiting and for continuing to advance Taiwan-US exchanges, demonstrating staunch support for Taiwan. Let us continue to work together to deepen Taiwan-US relations. I wish you a smooth and fruitful visit.  Mr. Pottinger then delivered remarks, first congratulating President Lai on his one-year election anniversary and on the state of the economy, which, he added, is doing quite well. Mentioning President Lai’s recent statement pledging to increase Taiwan’s defense budget to above 3 percent of GDP, Mr. Pottinger said he thinks that the benchmark is equal to what the US spends on its defense and that it is a good starting point for both countries to build deterrence. Echoing the president’s earlier remarks, Mr. Pottinger said that peace through strength is the right path for the US and for Taiwan right now at a moment when autocratic, aggressive governments are on the march. He then paraphrased the words of former US President George Washington in his first inaugural address, saying that the best way to keep the peace is to be prepared at all times for war, which captures the meaning of peace through strength. In closing, he said he looks forward to exchanging views with President Lai.

    Details
    2025-02-21
    President Lai meets Deputy Prime Minister Thulisile Dladla of the Kingdom of Eswatini
    On the afternoon of February 11, President Lai Ching-te met with a delegation led by Deputy Prime Minister Thulisile Dladla of the Kingdom of Eswatini. In remarks, President Lai thanked Eswatini for continuing to support Taiwan’s international participation at international venues. The president stated that Taiwan and Eswatini work closely in such areas as agriculture, the economy and trade, education, and healthcare, and expressed hope that the two countries will continue to support each other on the international stage and strive together for the well-being of both peoples.  A translation of President Lai’s remarks follows: I warmly welcome our distinguished guests to the Presidential Office. Deputy Prime Minister Dladla previously visited Taiwan while serving as minister of foreign affairs. This is her first time leading a delegation here as deputy prime minister. I want to extend my sincerest welcome. Deputy Prime Minister Dladla has earned a high degree of recognition and trust from His Majesty King Mswati III. She was not only Eswatini’s first woman foreign minister, but is also the second woman to have held her current key position. She shows an active interest in people’s welfare, and has a reputation for being deeply devoted to her compatriots. I have great admiration for this. I am truly delighted to meet with Deputy Prime Minister Dladla today. I would like to take this opportunity to once again express my gratitude to His Majesty the King for leading a delegation to attend the inauguration ceremony for myself and Vice President Bi-khim Hsiao last year. This demonstrated the close diplomatic ties between our countries. I also want to thank Eswatini for continuing to support Taiwan’s international participation at international venues. I would ask that when Deputy Prime Minister Dladla returns to Eswatini, she conveys Taiwan’s greetings and gratitude to His Majesty the King and Her Majesty the Queen Mother Ntombi Tfwala. Diplomatic ties between Taiwan and Eswatini have endured for over half a century. Our two nations have continued to work closely in such areas as agriculture, the economy and trade, education, and healthcare. Our largest collaboration to date has been assisting Eswatini in the construction of a strategic oil reserve facility. We will continue to push forward with this project, and look forward to achieving even greater results in all areas. I understand that Deputy Prime Minister Dladla is very concerned about issues regarding gender equality and women’s empowerment. During her term as foreign minister, she facilitated bilateral cooperation in those areas. Now, as deputy prime minister, she is actively attending to the disadvantaged and advancing social welfare. These policies are very much in line with the priorities of my administration. I look forward to strengthening cooperation with Deputy Prime Minister Dladla for the benefit of both our societies. Taiwan and Eswatini are peace-loving nations. Faced with a constantly changing international landscape and the growing threat posed by authoritarianism, we hope that our two countries will continue to support each other on the international stage and strive together for the well-being of both our peoples. In closing, I wish Deputy Prime Minister Dladla and our distinguished guests a pleasant and successful visit. Deputy Prime Minister Dladla then delivered remarks, first greeting President Lai on behalf of the King, the Queen Mother, and the people of Eswatini, and extending gratitude for the warm reception afforded to her and her delegation, which underscores the strong bonds of friendship between our two nations. The deputy prime minister stated that, in reflecting on the fruits of our partnership, the evidence of Taiwan’s commitment to Eswatini is all around us. The strategic oil reserve project launching in April, she indicated, will redefine Eswatini’s energy security, and the Central Bank complex and electrification project stand as monuments of Taiwan’s vision for Eswatini’s progress and indicate that our partnerships are very strong. Deputy Prime Minister Dladla pointed out that education is the foundation of any nation’s progress, and that Taiwan’s contribution to Eswatini’s education sector cannot be overstated. Through Ministry of Foreign Affairs scholarship programs, she said, Eswatini has sent numerous students to Taiwan, where they’ve received world-class education in various disciplines, including engineering, business, and medicine. In turn, she said, these graduates are now contributing to the development of Eswatini. The deputy prime minister stated that Taiwan has also strengthened Eswatini’s industrial and technological sectors, with collaborations and partnerships that create new opportunities for employment and innovation, and that Taiwan’s technical and medical assistance has strengthened Eswatini’s healthcare systems and uplifted the expertise of its professionals. Deputy Prime Minister Dladla also congratulated President Lai once again on his presidency, which she stated will lead Taiwan to new heights, adding that His Majesty coming to Taiwan personally for the inauguration was a resounding declaration of Eswatini’s enduring support for Taiwan’s sovereignty, stability, and rightful place on the world stage. She emphasized that Eswatini stands with Taiwan always and unwaveringly. In conclusion, the deputy prime minister stated that Eswatini fully agrees with Taiwan that we must all safeguard our national sovereignty and protect the lives and property of our people. She said that our common enemy will always be poverty and natural disasters, but against all odds, we will stand united, and we shall remain united and be one. The delegation was accompanied to the Presidential Office by Eswatini Ambassador Promise Sithembiso Msibi.

    Details
    2025-02-14
    President Lai holds press conference following high-level national security meeting
    On the morning of February 14, President Lai Ching-te convened the first high-level national security meeting of the year, following which he held a press conference. In remarks, President Lai announced that in this new year, the government will prioritize special budget allocations to ensure that Taiwan’s defense budget exceeds 3 percent of GDP. He stated that the government will also continue to reform national defense, reform our legal framework for national security, and advance our economic and trade strategy of being rooted in Taiwan while expanding globally. The president also proposed clear-cut national strategies for Taiwan-US relations, semiconductor industry development, and cross-strait relations. President Lai indicated that he instructed the national security and administrative teams to take swift action and deliver results, working within a stable strategic framework and according to the various policies and approaches outlined. He also instructed them to keep a close watch on changes in the international situation, seize opportunities whenever they arise, and address the concerns and hope of the citizens with concrete actions. He expressed hope that as long as citizens remain steadfast in their convictions, are willing to work hand in hand, stand firm amidst uncertainty, and look for ways to win within changing circumstances, Taiwan is certain to prevail in the test of time yet again. A translation of President Lai’s remarks follows: First, I would like to convey my condolences for the tragic incident which occurred at the Shin Kong Mitsukoshi department store in Taichung, which resulted in numerous casualties. I have instructed Premier Cho Jung-tai (卓榮泰) to lead the relevant central government agencies in assisting Taichung’s municipal government with actively resolving various issues regarding the incident. It is my hope that these issues can be resolved efficiently. Earlier today, I convened this year’s first high-level national security meeting. I will now report on the discussions from the meeting to all citizens. 2025 is a year full of challenges, but also a year full of hope. In today’s global landscape, the democratic world faces common threats posed by the convergence of authoritarian regimes, while dumping and unfair competition from China undermine the global economic order. A new United States administration was formed at the beginning of the year, adopting all-new strategies and policies to address challenges both domestic and from overseas. Every nation worldwide, including ours, is facing a new phase of changes and challenges. In face of such changes, ensuring national security, ensuring Taiwan’s indispensability in global supply chains, and ensuring that our nation continues to make progress amidst challenges are our top priorities this year. They are also why we convened a high-level national security meeting today. At the meeting, the national security team, the administrative team led by Premier Cho, and I held an in-depth discussion based on the overall state of affairs at home and abroad and the strategies the teams had prepared in response. We summed up the following points as an overall strategy for the next stage of advancing national security and development. First, for overall national security, so that we can ensure the freedom, democracy, and human rights of the Taiwanese people, as well as the progress and development of the nation as we face various threats from authoritarian regimes, Taiwan must resolutely safeguard national sovereignty, strengthen self-sufficiency in national defense, and consolidate national defense. Taiwan must enhance economic resilience, maintain economic autonomy, and stand firm with other democracies as we deepen our strategic partnerships with like-minded countries. As I have said, “As authoritarianism consolidates, democratic nations must come closer in solidarity!” And so, in this new year, we will focus on the following three priorities: First, to demonstrate our resolve for national defense, we will continue to reform national defense, implement whole-of-society defense resilience, and prioritize special budget allocations to ensure that our defense budget exceeds 3 percent of GDP. Second, to counter the threats to our national security from China’s united front tactics, attempts at infiltration, and cognitive warfare, we will continue with the reform of our legal framework for national security and expand the national security framework to boost societal resilience and foster unity within. Third, to seize opportunities in the restructuring of global supply chains and realignment of the economic order, we will continue advancing our economic and trade strategy of being rooted in Taiwan while expanding globally, strengthening protections for high-tech, and collaborating with our friends and allies to build supply chains for global democracies. Everyone shares concern regarding Taiwan-US relations, semiconductor industry development, and cross-strait relations. For these issues, I am proposing clear-cut national strategies. First, I will touch on Taiwan-US relations. Taiwan and the US have shared ideals and values, and are staunch partners within the democratic, free community. We are very grateful to President Donald Trump’s administration for their continued support for Taiwan after taking office. We are especially grateful for the US and Japan’s joint leaders’ statement reiterating “the importance of maintaining peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait as an indispensable element of security and prosperity for the international community,” as well as their high level of concern regarding China’s threat to regional security. In fact, the Democratic Progressive Party government has worked very closely with President Trump ever since his first term in office, and has remained an international partner. The procurement of numerous key advanced arms, freedom of navigation critical for security and stability in the Taiwan Strait, and many assisted breakthroughs in international diplomacy were made possible during this time. Positioned in the first island chain and on the democratic world’s frontline countering authoritarianism, Taiwan is willing and will continue to work with the US at all levels as we pursue regional stability and prosperity, helping realize our vision of a free and open Indo-Pacific. Although changes in policy may occur these next few years, the mutual trust and close cooperation between Taiwan and Washington will steadfastly endure. On that, our citizens can rest assured. In accordance with the Taiwan Relations Act and the Six Assurances, the US announced a total of 48 military sales to Taiwan over the past eight years amounting to US$26.265 billion. During President Trump’s first term, 22 sales were announced totaling US$18.763 billion. This greatly supported Taiwan’s defensive capabilities. On the foundation of our close cooperation with the past eight years’ two US administrations, Taiwan will continue to demonstrate our determination for self-defense, accelerate the bolstering of our national defense, and keep enhancing the depth and breadth of Taiwan-US security cooperation, along with all manner of institutional cooperation. In terms of bilateral economic cooperation, Taiwan has always been one of the US’s most reliable trade partners, as well as one of the most important cooperative partners of US companies in the global semiconductor industry. In the past few years, Taiwan has greatly increased both direct and indirect investment in the US. By 2024, investment surpassed US$100 billion, creating nearly 400,000 job opportunities. In 2023 and 2024, investment in the US accounted for over 40 percent of Taiwan’s overall foreign investment, far surpassing our investment in China. In fact, in 2023 and 2024, Taiwanese investment in China fell to 11 percent and 8 percent, respectively. The US is now Taiwan’s biggest investment target. Our government is now launching relevant plans in accordance with national development needs and the need to establish secure supply systems, and the Executive Yuan is taking comprehensive inventory of opportunities for Taiwan-US economic and trade cooperation. Moving forward, close bilateral cooperation will allow us to expand US investment and procurement, facilitating balanced trade. Our government will also strengthen guidance and support for Taiwanese enterprises on increasing US investment, and promote the global expansion and growth of Taiwan’s industries. We will also boost Taiwan-US cooperation in tech development and manufacturing for AI and advanced semiconductors, and work together to maintain order in the semiconductor market, shaping a new era for our strategic economic partnership. Second, the development of our semiconductor industry. I want to emphasize that Taiwan, as one of the world’s most capable semiconductor manufacturing nations, is both willing and able to address new situations. With respect to President Trump’s concerns about our semiconductor industry, the government will act prudently, strengthen communications between Taiwan and the US, and promote greater mutual understanding. We will pay attention to the challenges arising from the situation and assist businesses in navigating them. In addition, we will introduce an initiative on semiconductor supply chain partnerships for global democracies. We are willing to collaborate with the US and our other democratic partners to develop more resilient and diversified semiconductor supply chains. Leveraging our strengths in cutting-edge semiconductors, we will form a global alliance for the AI chip industry and establish democratic supply chains for industries connected to high-end chips. Through international cooperation, we will open up an entirely new era of growth in the semiconductor industry. As we face the various new policies of the Trump administration, we will continue to uphold a spirit of mutual benefit, and we will continue to communicate and negotiate closely with the US government. This will help the new administration’s team to better understand how Taiwan is an indispensable partner in the process of rebuilding American manufacturing and consolidating its leadership in high-tech, and that Taiwan-US cooperation will benefit us both. Third, cross-strait relations. Regarding the regional and cross-strait situation, Taiwan-US relations, US-China relations, and interactions among Taiwan, the US, and China are a focus of global attention. As a member of the international democratic community and a responsible member of the region, Taiwan hopes to see Taiwan-US relations continue to strengthen and, alongside US-China relations, form a virtuous cycle rather than a zero-sum game where one side’s gain is another side’s loss. In facing China, Taiwan will always be a responsible actor. We will neither yield nor provoke. We will remain resilient and composed, maintaining our consistent position on cross-strait relations: Our determination to safeguard our national sovereignty and protect our free and democratic way of life remains unchanged. Our efforts to maintain peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait, as well as our willingness to work alongside China in the pursuit of peace and mutual prosperity across the strait, remain unchanged. Our commitment to promoting healthy and orderly exchanges across the strait, choosing dialogue over confrontation, and advancing well-being for the peoples on both sides of the strait, under the principles of parity and dignity, remains unchanged. Regarding the matters I reported to the public today, I have instructed our national security and administrative teams to take swift action and deliver results, working within a stable strategic framework and according to the various policies and approaches I just outlined. I have also instructed them to keep a close watch on changes in the international situation, seize opportunities whenever they arise, and address the concerns and hope of the citizens with concrete actions. My fellow citizens, over the past several years, Taiwan has weathered a global pandemic and faced global challenges, both political and economic, arising from the US-China trade war and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Through it all, Taiwan has persevered; we have continued to develop our economy, bolster our national strength, and raise our international profile while garnering more support – all unprecedented achievements. This is all because Taiwan’s fate has never been decided by the external environment, but by the unity of the Taiwanese people and the resolve to never give up. A one-of-a-kind global situation is creating new strategic opportunities for our one-of-a-kind Taiwanese people, bringing new hope. Taiwan’s foundation is solid; its strength is great. So as long as everyone remains steadfast in their convictions, is willing to work hand in hand, stands firm amidst uncertainty, and looks for ways to win within changing circumstances, Taiwan is certain to prevail in the test of our time yet again, for I am confident that there are no difficulties that Taiwan cannot overcome. Thank you.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-Evening Report: What do young people want to see in politics? More than 20,000 pieces of their writing hold some answers

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Philippa Collin, Professor, Institute for Culture and Society, Western Sydney University

    Shutterstock

    Ahead of the Australian election, candidates, advisers and political parties might be paying attention to what young people think. And if they’re not, they should be.

    This election will be the first in which Gen Z and Millennial voters (aged 18–40) will outnumber Baby Boomers (aged 60–79). Many of these young people were in high school during the previous two elections.

    While there are concerns about the effectiveness of civics and citizenship education, there is also evidence young people are interested in, and active on, many issues.

    So what do young people care about most? We analysed thousands of pieces of writing by young Australians to find out.

    What matters to young people?

    For the past 20 years, young people have been telling us what matters to them as part of the Whitlam Institute’s What Matters? writing competition. Students in years 5–12 can write about whatever they like. Most are directed by their schools to contribute as a part of their civics curriculum. Some opt to enter the competition out of interest.

    A unique sample, our analysis of 22,500 entries from 2019 to 2024 provides insight into the issues that resonate most with this generation.

    We identified common themes: society and democracy, mental health, environment and climate change, intergenerational justice and (social) media.

    1. Society and democracy

    We found young people were actively grappling with complex and diverse issues in an increasingly fragmented political landscape. They are also concerned about anti-democratic forces.

    They reflect on what makes this moment exceptional – climate change, war and violence, rapid technological change – and consider actions needed from individuals, communities and institutions for them to have a future.

    Our research shows young people prioritise care in local and global futures, valuing peer support, family, intergenerational ties, and connections across communities and borders. The most common topic was family, followed by pollution, racism and poverty.

    An ethics of care shapes their sense of belonging and responsibility –
    and the responsibilities of government. As a senior student wrote in 2022:

    Children are being abused, or watching one of their parents be abused countless times. The Government needs to step up and do their job properly by using more effective ways of helping children and their parents get out of unsafe environments.

    Our sentiment analysis shows that they write with hope – and frequently with anxiety and fear.

    2. Mental health

    Many young people write about “health”, including physical health and the health of communities and natural environments. Most often, though, they write about mental health and the causes of worry, distress and illness.

    Young people want governments and leaders to tackle the causes of the causes of ill-health. In other words, they want action on what creates the drivers of ill-health, including climate change, inequality and loneliness.

    For policymakers and advocates, this means recognising mental health as deeply connected to broader social and political issues – issues young people believe governments must address if they are serious about improving wellbeing.

    3. Environment and climate change

    Environmental issues, particularly climate change, were dominant themes — more so than in previous years. Students write about their relationship to the environment and the benefits of connecting to nature.

    Concerns about climate change were a common theme across the entries.
    Shutterstock

    Some are calling out extractive relationships with the environment, particularly by large corporations. They demand urgent action from individuals and institutions, advocating for policies that prioritise future generations and the planet.

    A senior student wrote in 2019:

    our future is under threat because of climate change […] it is our generation’s future that is on the line, yet we continue to be unheard.

    4. Intergenerational justice

    Young people see intergenerational justice and social justice as interconnected, demanding climate action, economic opportunity and democratic participation. Their concerns reflect a commitment to human rights including refugee rights, gender equality and Indigenous justice.

    Their writing shows awareness of Australia’s role in the world. Many discuss global conflicts and the responsibilities of nations in promoting peace and security. They want to contribute to efforts to address these issues.

    Young people want to trust and have more of a role in Australian democracy. They want those in power, and the institutions and agencies over which they preside, to be more transparent, to communicate regularly and honestly, and to show how they are taking action for a better future for all generations.

    Key areas where young people want greater accountability are in government, the media and business. Twelve-year-old Ivy said in an interview:

    young children should have a direct voice to parliament […] adults would take us more seriously instead of just viewing us as just kids. If issues affect kids right now or this generation, they should have a say about that to parliament.

    Young people want their activism and efforts recognised and supported. They hope for a democracy in which they’re not just heard, but are actively engaged by leaders, with a direct voice in government (at all levels) and institutions.

    5. (Social) media

    Young people highlight social media’s pros and cons, calling for strategies that better engage with them to reduce harm and maximise benefits.

    Young Australians painted a nuanced picture of social media.
    Shutterstock

    They stress the need for digital literacy to navigate online information critically, and they want online environments to be supportive and safe.

    Young people are concerned about how they are represented in the media generally. They argue that inclusive and accurate portrayals are key to having their voices heard and respected – crucial for meaningful civic participation.

    Candidates on notice

    Young people are not just future constituents – they are voting at the next election.

    The young people whose writing we analysed have formed civic and political values during a turbulent time in Australian and world history: catastrophic bushfires and floods, a climate crisis, a pandemic, and digital technologies that are changing our lives.

    They reject the idea they are too young to understand issues, and instead want a participatory democracy in which their voices influence real decisions. Indeed, the public has shown a desire to let young people have more of a say.

    Our analysis tells us many of this year’s 18–24-year-old voters are informed, engaged and ready to hold leaders accountable. They want action on climate, mental health, economic justice and democratic accountability. They’re tired of being ignored and sidelined.


    The authors would like to acknowledge research assistant Ammar Shoukat Randhawa for their work on the research this article reports.

    Philippa Collin receives funding from the Australian Research Council, Telstra Foundation, Google, batyr, Whitlam Institute, Academy Of The Social Sciences In Australia and NSW Health. In recent years she has received funding from the NHMRC, the Federal Department of Education, Centre for Resilient and Inclusive Societies.

    Azadeh Dastyari is the Director, Research and Policy at the Whitlam Institute. She also receives funding from the Australian Communications Consumer Action Network (ACCAN).

    Michael Everitt Hartup has no conflict of interest.

    Sky Hugman receives funding from The Whitlam Institute

    ref. What do young people want to see in politics? More than 20,000 pieces of their writing hold some answers – https://theconversation.com/what-do-young-people-want-to-see-in-politics-more-than-20-000-pieces-of-their-writing-hold-some-answers-250062

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Back out there: Custody Unit reopens on the North Shore

    Source: New Zealand Police (National News)

    Police is re-opening a state-of-the-art custody unit, ready to support frontline policing operations across the North Shore and Rodney.

    Crucially, it will reduce the time frontline staff in the area spend transporting people in custody.

    The Waitematā East District Custody Unit, based at the North Shore Policing Centre, officially began accepting detainees this morning.

    Police Commissioner Richard Chambers, Minister of Police Mark Mitchell and Waitematā District Commander Superintendent Naila Hassan were in attendance at this morning’s opening.

    The North Shore facility has undergone improvement works in recent months and will support Waitematā District’s existing unit based in Henderson.

    Commissioner Chambers says the population across North Shore and Rodney communities continues to grow.

    “Waitematā is a vast district geographically and it’s important my staff aren’t unnecessarily taken of the road for lengthy periods of time,” he says.

    “The new District Custody Unit will mean reduced travel times for staff working as far north as Wellsford, down to Devonport.”

    Advanced facilities will also mean reduced processing times for arresting officers.

    “The facility is technologically advanced and future-focused for our custody staff,” Commissioner Chambers says.

    “At the end of the day we’ll have frontline staff back out there faster working to keep the community safe.”

    Around the country, Police manage more than 120,000 people in custody each year.

    “Our Custody Units are an important part of managing people in our care and custody safely.

    “In many instances those people in custody require intensive monitoring, and features such as high-quality CCTV and intercom systems will help custody staff.”

    Commissioner Chambers acknowledges the team involved in re-commissioning the unit.

    “It’s great to see the use of technology to make savings and efficiencies, such as the high-quality audio-visual link suite installed,” he says.

    “In many instances for those detainees appearing in court remotely this will remove some costs and complexities associate in transporting them.”

    Superintendent Hassan says the North Shore facility is a welcome addition to the district.

    “We are continuing to find ways to adapt to the growing demand and population across communities in Waitemata,” she says.

    “This facility will be supported by sworn Police staff, alongside additional Authorised Officers recruited into the roles.”

    The facility has been re-opened after being decommissioned in 2013.

    It has been utilised by Police periodically, as required, including periods to support police operations during the pandemic response.

    ENDS

    Jarred Williamson/NZ Police

    MIL OSI New Zealand News