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Thursday, November 21, 2024

How Trump’s tariffs could spark a trade war and ‘Europe’s worst economic nightmare’

How Trump’s tariffs could spark a trade war and ‘Europe’s worst economic nightmare’

European countries could be among those hardest hit if Trump follows through on tariffs. 

The European Union says it wants to negotiate but is prepared to retaliate.




Shipping containers are stacked in Hamburg. (Phil Noble/Reuters)
By Ellen Francis
 and 
Kate Brady

The prospect of a trade war ignited by the Trump administration is looming over European capitals. The European Union — which counts the United States as its largest export market and one of its closest strategic allies — could be among those hardest hit if President-elect Donald Trump follows through on his tariff plans.



Already, Europe’s major economies are lagging behind the United States in their post-pandemic recovery. Economists say that protectionist policies imposed by Trump after taking office in January could trigger further contraction on the continent, while straining alliances.

Here’s what to know.


Trump has threatened the biggest tariff hike in nearly a century


Donald Trump holds a campaign rally in Raleigh, North Carolina, on Nov. 4. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)
Trump imposed hefty tariffs on steel and aluminum last time he was in office. But this time, he says he would go much further. He has threatened to slap tariffs of 60 percent on all Chinese goods and 10 to 20 percent on imports from other countries. That would include the E.U.
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Trump has expressed particular frustration with trade imbalances on cars and agriculture. The E.U. maintains a 10 percent tariff on cars (compared to the 2.5 percent U.S. rate) and agricultural tariffs of about 11 percent (more than double the U.S. rate).


Following

“I’ll tell you what, the European Union sounds so nice, so lovely, right? All the nice European little countries that get together,” Trump said at a Pennsylvania rally last month. “They don’t take our cars. They don’t take our farm products. They sell millions and millions of cars in the United States. No, no, no, they are going to have to pay a big price.”


Those tariffs could seriously hurt European economies


How big a price is uncertain. There is talk of “Europe’s worst economic nightmare” and “full-blown recession.”


Some economic models estimate that, faced with an across-the-board 10 percent tariff, euro zone exports to the United States could fall by nearly a third. That would be a big deal, because Europe is so export-dependent, and its largest economies are already facing sluggish growth and rising debt. Goldman Sachs calculates that trade conflict with the United States could subtract 0.9 percent from the euro zone economy.


Some models suggest that Trump’s floated tariffs could hurt Europe as much as or more than China. While China is the top single-country supplier to the United States, the total value of imports from the E.U. has tended to be greater than those from China, according to the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative. New U.S. tariffs on China could also have an indirect impact on Europe. If China responds by diverting more goods to the continent, that would increase supply and put downward price pressure on competing goods produced in Europe.


Germany and its car industry would be particularly vulnerable


New cars are parked at a logistics terminal in Essen, Germany. (Christopher Neundorf/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)

Germany — traditionally the economic engine of Europe, and a frequent target of Trump — would be especially exposed.


Among E.U. countries, Germany is by far the leading exporter to the United States, with exported goods valued at $171.8 billion in 2023, according to the German federal statistical office. A Trump tariff hike could lead to a damaging drop in those exports, with the biggest anticipated impact on the car and pharmaceutical industries.


Trump likes to take aim at German cars. But that sector is already struggling in the face of increased competition from China and weakened demand.


Volkswagen has said it may have to close plants for the first time in its history.

Meanwhile, the German economy has stagnated. And the prospect of a trade war has exacerbated recession fears in Berlin. The president of the German Federal Bank, Joachim Nagel, said new Trump tariffs could cost Germany 1 percent in economic output. “If the new tariffs actually materialize, we could even slip into negative territory,” he told German news weekly Zeit.


The German Economic Institute warned that the combination of 10 percent U.S. tariffs and retaliatory E.U. tariffs could result in a loss of more than $134 billion in Germany’s GDP by the end of Trump’s allotted four years in office. Tariffs of 20 percent from both sides could cost the German economy $190 billion.


Europe could retaliate with tariffs that target red states


Kentucky whiskey was among the past targets of E.U. tariffs. (Jeff Chiu/AP)

As they prepare for Trump’s return, E.U. officials have drafted lists of potential retaliatory tariffs.


“It’s a lose-lose situation because, yes, it means we’re fighting back, but it also hurts the economy on both sides,” said an E.U. diplomat, speaking on the condition of anonymity to share internal discussions.


The plans haven’t been made public. But clues can be found in the E.U.’s response to the steel and aluminum tariffs of Trump’s last presidency. Then, as now, the E.U. favored targeted tariffs designed for maximum political impact. The block went after industries based in the home states of Republican leaders. Among the goods singled out: Kentucky bourbon, Harley-Davidson motorcycles and Levi’s jeans.


Europe is strategizing to avert a trade war


A flight deck crew member signals to an F-35 jet on the USS George Washington. (Kim Kyung-Koon/Reuters)

The strong preference among European officials would be to collectively persuade Trump to forgo steep tariffs. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen laid out the intended approach. “First of all: engage,” she said. “Secondly, discuss common interests … and then go into negotiations.”


E.U. officials assess that Trump may be using the threat of tariffs as leverage. His real goal, they say, may be to trigger new trade talks and extract concessions. They think he could be enticed by European offers to buy more liquefied natural gas or military equipment from U.S. companies. He might also welcome European pledges to take a harder line on Chinese trade by imposing their own new tariffs or otherwise restricting Chinese goods.


Trump’s tariffs threats could divide the E.U.


Parmigiano-Reggiano Parmesan cheese wheels are stored in Noceto, near Parma, Italy. (Antonio Calanni/AP)

European leaders are emphasizing the need to remain united in the face of tariff threats, but that could prove difficult.


There are diverging views within the E.U. on whether a harder line on China would be a reasonable concession. Germany is especially reluctant to relinquish the Chinese market for German cars or to lose access to manufacturing facilities that German companies have set up there.


“There’ll be a risk of division among Europeans, depending on the sectoral interests and of different countries, some of which are very exposed to the Chinese market,” French President Emmanuel Macron warned, “while others who are more dependent on the American market will give in more quickly to the pressure that the American federal government may put on them.”


There is also concern that Trump could try to play favorites among leaders in Europe or that individual countries could seek tariff exceptions from a transaction-oriented administration. Trump allies have described Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, the rising star of Europe’s far right, as “a natural partner.” Could that be enough to shield Italian cheeses from tariff hikes?


“There is a risk that he will cozy up to some and shut others out — that this will play to divisions,” said a second E.U. diplomat. “But there’s also a chance to figure out something together.”⍐

Who is Gautam Adani? Indian billionaire hit with fraud charges in U.S.

Who is Gautam Adani? Indian billionaire hit with fraud charges in U.S.

Adani, an Indian business magnate and one of the richest men in Asia, faces new allegations of fraud to secure solar energy supply contracts.

Indian billionaire Gautam Adani is facing
business and legal challenges, including charges
announced on Wednesday by U.S. prosecutors related to
an alleged bribery scheme. (Kobi Wolf/Bloomberg)

By Bryan Pietsch, Niha Masih and Rachel Pannett

November 21, 2024 The WP

Indian billionaire Gautam Adani is one of Asia’s richest men, revered in India and beyond for his meteoric rise in business and proximity to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. His companies — including the massive conglomerate Adani Group — have their tentacles in myriad parts of India’s society and economy, from port infrastructure and energy to media.

But in recent years, he has faced a number of setbacks, the most recent being charges announced on Wednesday by U.S. prosecutors related to an alleged bribery scheme.

Here’s what to know about Adani, his businesses and his legal challenges.

Who is Gautam Adani?

While he’s now a billionaire and the second-richest man in India, according to Bloomberg’s Billionaires Index, he came from humble beginnings. Adani, 62, was born in the western state of Gujarat to a textile merchant. A college dropout, he traded plastics, traveling by scooter, early in his career.

It was a failed deal that led to the start of his empire. In 1991, Adani was working as a middleman to develop a salt mine in Gujarat for Minnesota-based food giant Cargill.

When the deal fell through, Adani turned the land in the coastal city of Mundra into a port. The deep water port became India’s most efficient port, handling coal and commodities.

While coal still accounts for the bulk of Adani Group’s revenue, it has expanded into a wide array of industries in India. Its businesses include logistics, sewage treatment, produce, data centers, packaged foods and real estate.

Its reach extends beyond India: An Adani-led group bought the Haifa port in Israel last year for $1.15 billion, Reuters reported. In Australia, an Adani subsidiary owns and operates a coal port. Another subsidiary runs a coal mine in the country. And another runs a solar farm. The group also has projects in Sri Lanka and Tanzania.

Last week, Adani congratulated President-elect Donald Trump on his victory and promised to invest $10 billion in energy and infrastructure projects in the United States.



What is the United States charging him for?

Adani’s solar endeavors are at the center of the U.S. fraud allegations announced on Wednesday.

Adani and his co-defendants, including his nephew and solar power executives, are accused of hatching a plan to pay more than $250 million in bribes to Indian government officials to obtain “lucrative solar energy supply contracts.”

The scheme, the Justice Department said, was set to generate more than $2 billion in posttax profits over two decades.

Adani, according to prosecutors, “personally met” with an Indian government official as part of the scheme.

On top of the bribery allegations, Adani and his associates are accused of misleading U.S. and international investors about their anti-bribery practices as they sought funding for the solar contracts.

The indictment alleges that the accused documented their efforts. Prosecutors claim that Sagar Adani, his nephew, tracked the details of the offered bribes on his cellphone; one executive took a photograph on his phone of a document listing some alleged bribe amounts; while another prepared a PowerPoint analysis summarizing possible options for payments and the concealment of bribes.

Separately, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission charged Adani and his nephew for allegedly violating the antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws. The SEC complaint names Adani Green Energy — India’s largest renewable energy company — at the center of the scandal.

In a statement Thursday, an Adani Group spokesperson denied the allegations calling them “baseless” and said the company will seek all possible legal remedies.

“The charges in the indictment are allegations and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty,” the spokesperson said.

What other allegations has Adani faced?

In 2023, a U.S. investment firm that probes companies for signs of fraudulent activity and then shorts their stocks alleged that Adani had artificially inflated the share prices of his companies by using shell companies linked to his family members.

The allegations by Hindenburg Research led to a massive sell-off in Adani subsidiaries, forcing Indian markets to halt the trading of some Adani businesses. The company denied the allegations in a 413-page response, but Adani’s wealth and reputation took a substantial hit and the billionaire has spent much of the past year trying to move past the damaging claims.

Some experts said the report was complicated by the fact that Hindenburg is an “activist short seller” with an incentive to see the company’s share price fall.

Adani is a polarizing figure in India. His detractors argue that his success owes to his close ties to Modi, while admirers say he has helped build critical infrastructure that juiced the nation’s growth.

In its report, Hindenburg Research highlighted Adani’s apparent ability to evade regulatory scrutiny and silence any criticism in local media.

The Post has previously reported on his political sway in India, with Modi’s government repeatedly taking steps to aid Adani’s fossil fuel business — despite the ambitious goals announced by Indian leaders to transition toward renewable energy. On at least three occasions, the Indian government revised laws to help his coal businesses, saving him at least $1 billion.

Adani’s influence is global. In Australia, its local arm has lobbied lawmakers for tougher penalties to stop environmental activists disrupting its giant Carmichael coal mine in central Queensland state. A 2019 state law banned the use of lock-on devices used by protesters to strap themselves to train tracks to prevent the coal from being hauled to port.

An investigation by the Australian Financial Review newspaper last year alleged inconsistencies in the accounts of Adani’s Australian venture. Adani said its businesses complied with local regulations and were audited by Australian accounting firms.⍐

Gerry Shih contributed to this report.

Wednesday, November 20, 2024

Billionaire Gautam Adani of India's Adani Group charged in US with bribery; bond deal pulled

 


Indian businessman Gautam Adani charged with bribery in US

Indian businessman and billionaire Gautam Adani has been charged in the US over a $250 million bribery scheme, threatening to throw his conglomerate back into turmoil just as it rebounded from fraud allegations.

US Federal prosecutors alleged on Wednesday that Mr Adani, one of the world’s richest people, and seven other defendants, including his nephew Sagar Adani, promised to pay more than $250 million in bribes to Indian government officials to win solar energy contracts, expected to yield $2 billion of profit over 20 years. They also allegedly concealed the plan as they sought to raise money from US investors.

“The defendants orchestrated an elaborate scheme to bribe Indian government officials to secure contracts worth billions of dollars,” said Breon Peace, US attorney for the Eastern District of New York, which brought the case. US law allows federal prosecutors to pursue foreign corruption allegations if they involve links to American investors or markets.

A judge has issued arrest warrants for Gautam Adani and Sagar Adani, and prosecutors plan to hand those warrants to foreign law enforcement, court records show.

File Photo- FT

The fallout for the Adani empire was immediate.

Adani Green Energy cancelled plans on Thursday to raise $600 million in US dollar-denominated bonds, according to sources. The bond had been priced but was pulled following the news.

The group’s existing US-currency notes plunged in Asian trading. The falls were the largest since a short-seller report last year by Hindenburg Research sparked a more than $150 billion rout in Adani Group stocks.

The Adani Group has not commented so far on the allegations.

“While Adani has shown resilience in weathering past allegations, including those from Hindenburg, this development underscores the persistent risks associated with emerging markets, particularly around governance, transparency and regulatory scrutiny,” said Mohit Mirpuri, a fund manager at Singapore-based SGMC Capital.

The Adani Group operates ports, airports, power lines and motorway developments in India.

Prosecuting the case would take months, if not years, meaning that it will fall to the incoming Trump administration’s Justice Department to determine how to proceed.

Although the US and India have an extradition treaty, it’s likely that India would fight to protect its citizens from being forced to stand trial in America. If convicted, the defendants could face years behind bars, prosecutors said on Wednesday.

Beyond the Justice Department investigation, Adani has been dealing with Hindenburg claims that the conglomerate manipulated its stock price and committed accounting fraud. The group has vigorously denied those allegations and its shares climbed back from their initial plunge caused by the report.

In January, India’s Supreme Court also ruled a separate probe was not needed beyond the investigation being carried out by the country’s markets regulator, the Securities and Exchange Board of India, following Hindenburg's allegations.

Gautam Adani's fortune has also rebounded. He is the world’s 18th richest person with more than $85.5 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

Obstructing justice

Prosecutors on Wednesday charged four of the eight defendants with conspiring to obstruct justice by deleting electronic evidence and lying to representatives of the Justice Department, Securities and Exchange Commission and FBI.

According to the SEC, Gautam Adani led an effort to pay or promise hundreds of millions of dollars in bribes to Indian state government officials to induce them to enter contracts that Adani Green needed to develop India’s largest solar power plant project. Another company involved in the power plant project, Azure Power Global, agreed to pay some of the bribes, the SEC alleged.

In its lawsuit, the SEC said another one of the co-defendants, Cyril Cabanes, served as a director on the board at Azure Power Global and as a representative of the company’s largest stockholder, pension fund company Caisse de Depot et Placement du Quebec, which is known as CDPQ. While serving as a director, Mr Cabanes and others “schemed” to make payments to bribe state government officials in India, the SEC said in its lawsuit.

“CDPQ is aware of charges filed in the US against certain former employees,” a representative of the pension manager said. “Those employees were all terminated in 2023 and CDPQ is co-operating with US authorities.”

US authorities ramped up an existing probe into Adani Group by looking into the conduct of the company’s billionaire founder, Bloomberg reported in March. Officials were focused on whether there were improper payments made to officials in India for favourable treatment on an energy project.⍐

With inputs from Bloomberg and Reuters

NPP appoints two defeated candidates as NL MPs

NPP appoints two defeated candidates as NL MPs

They are Abubakar Adambawa and Ranthnayake Hettige Upali Samarasinghe, who unsuccessfully contested from the Digamadulla and Vanni Districts, respectively.

NPP's General Election TV Advert-ENB Snap shot

 The Island 
The NPP yesterday released the names of its National List (NL) MPs and they include two of its candidates who failed to secure enough votes to enter Parliament in last week’s general election.They are Abubakar Adambawa and Ranthnayake Hettige Upali Samarasinghe, who unsuccessfully contested from the Digamadulla and Vanni Districts, respectively.

The NPP obtained 18 out of 29 NL seats. Other NPP NL MPs are as follows: Bimal Niroshan Rathnayake, Dr. Anura Karunathilake, Prof. Upali Pannilage, Eranga Udesh Weerarathna, Aruna Jayasekara, Dr. Harshana Sooriyapperuma, Janitha Ruwan Kodithuwakku, Punya Sri Kumara Jayakody, Ramalingam Chandrasekar, Dr. Najith Indika, Sugath Thilakaratne, Lakmali Kanchana Hemachandra, Sunil Kumara Gamage, Gamini Rathnayake, Prof. Ruwan Chaminda Ranasinghe and Sugath Wasantha de Silva.

The NPP original list contained those 16 names along with Dr. Wasantha Subhasinghe, Keerthi Walisarage, Chamila Kumudu Peris, Abdul Fatah Mohammad Ikram, Ranjan Jayalal Perera, Mohomed Mohammadu Nazeeer Ikram, Clomet Martin Nelson, Romesh Mohan De Mal, Benita Prishanthi Hettithantri, Pubudu Nuwan Samaraweera, Sarath Lal Perera, Anura Hettigoda Gamage and Hemathilaka Gamage.⍐

“Nowadays, many people wondering how even to celebrate Christmas and find their daily meals,” Cardinal

Speaking to the media ahead of Christmas on Dec. 19, the cardinal urged Catholics to remember the less fortunate this Christmas, encouraging...