Live news: Russia launches new drone strike on Odesa port and grain silos

UK homebuyers are taking longer mortgages to cope with high borrowing costs, housebuilder says

UK homebuyers are taking on longer mortgages to cope with higher borrowing costs, according to one of the UK’s largest housebuilders.

Taylor Wimpey said in half-year results on Wednesday that 27 per cent of its first time buyers had taken mortgage terms of over 36 years in the first half of the year, compared with just 7 per cent in 2021. The number of second time buyers taking out mortgages of over 30 years meanwhile rose to 42 per cent, from 28 per cent in 2021.

The housebuilder posted £237.7mn in pre-tax profit, in line with its previous guidance, and a 28.9 per cent fall year on year, as higher borrowing costs hit demand for homes in the second quarter.

Singapore PM ‘regrets’ delayed response to sex and corruption scandals

Singapore prime minister Lee Hsien Loong, the country’s leader since 2004, defended the integrity of the government © Ministry of Communications and Information via AP

Singapore’s prime minister said he “regrets” not responding sooner to scandals that have tarnished the city-state’s image just as it prepares for a major leadership transition.

Lee Hsien Loong, the son of founding father Lee Kuan Yew, said in a speech on Wednesday he should have “forced the issue earlier” upon discovering an affair between the speaker of parliament and another member of parliament.

But he defended the integrity of the government, which is dealing with a high-profile corruption investigation involving billionaire Ong Beng Seng and transport minister S Iswaran. Both men have been arrested and released on bail.

Lee, Singapore’s leader since 2004, is preparing to hand power to Lawrence Wong, the deputy prime minister.

BAE lifts sales 11% as war in Ukraine raises defence spending

© Simon Dawson/Bloomberg

BAE Systems has raised its guidance for the full year after the war in Ukraine and higher spending on submarines helped boost its order intake. 

Britain’s biggest defence contractor said on Wednesday it had secured £21.1bn of new orders in the six months to the end of June, boosting its order backlog to a record £66.2bn.

Sales rose 11 per cent to £12bn on a constant currency basis, while underlying earnings before interest and tax increased 10 per cent to £1.3bn.

BAE said it expects annual earnings per share to grow by 10-12 per cent this year, up from a previous forecast of 5-7 per cent.

The company has also announced another three-year share buyback programme worth £1.5bn.

Cathay Pacific chief executive expects lower air fares next year

Ronald Lam, chief executive of Hong Kong flag carrier Cathay Pacific, said continuing supply chain issues were ‘holding us back from a return to the premium service level’ © Lam Yik/Bloomberg

Cathay Pacific’s chief executive expects high air fares to become cheaper by next year as Hong Kong’s flag carrier restores operations amid staffing and supply chain challenges.

“Ticket prices would become more normal … [as we] catch up on the capacity front,” Ronald Lam told a conference on Wednesday. The airline has been facing a shortage of pilots and other staff.

Lam said supply chain issues were “holding us back from a return to the premium service level”, echoing International Air Transport Association director-general Willie Walsh’s remarks at the same event that delays to aircraft deliveries and maintenance could remain an issue “for a number of years”.

Russia launches new drone strike on Odesa port and grain silos

Russian suicide drones attacked targets across Ukraine before sunrise on Wednesday, including port facilities and a grain silo in the southern Odesa region, according to authorities.

“Air defence forces worked non-stop for almost three hours” over the Odesa region, Ukraine’s Southern Operational Command wrote on Telegram.

Odesa regional governor Oleh Kiper said fires had broken out at the port and emergency workers were rushing to put them out.

The air force had said the drones were heading toward the Danube river port of Izmail, which has taken on greater significance following Russia’s occupation of and attacks on Ukrainian Black Sea and Sea of Azov ports.

In Kyiv, more than 10 drones targeting the Ukrainian capital were shot down, according to the military.

Russian attacks on grain silos send Chicago wheat trades higher

Workers open the hatches of a railway wagon loaded with Ukrainian wheat at the harbour in Constanța, Romania. Russia’s attacks, and its scrapping of a grain shipment deal, have pushed prices higher © Daniel Mihăilescu/AFP via Getty Images

Wheat traded in Chicago jumped 4 per cent on Wednesday after Russia’s attacks on Ukrainian grain silos increased concerns over global food supplies.

Prices of maize added more than 2 per cent, while soybean oil prices rose 0.3 per cent.

Russian drones attacked port facilities in southern Ukraine’s Odesa region, its regional governor wrote on Telegram early on Wednesday.

Russian and Ukraine are two of the world’s most important exporters of grain. Moscow’s attacks, and its scrapping of a deal to allow Ukrainian grain shipments across the Black Sea last month, have pushed prices higher.

Country Garden Services stock rises 17% on repurchase plan

The property management arm of Chinese developer Country Garden said it would repurchase 10 per cent of its shares in an effort to restore confidence after a wave of volatile trading.

Country Garden Services Holdings said its shares have been trading at a price that does not reflect the group’s “intrinsic value”, and that the repurchase would demonstrate confidence in its “long-term business prospects”.

Country Garden, the affiliated developer, is at the centre of investor concerns over a potential deterioration in the country’s indebted real estate sector. On Monday it abruptly cancelled a $300mn share placement without providing a reason.

Shares in the services arm rose 17 per cent on Wednesday.

What to watch in Europe today

The Ferrari NV 296 GTB hybrid vehicle is displayed at last October’s Mondial de l’automobile in Paris. The Italian luxury carmaker releases its latest earnings data on Wednesday © Nathan Laine/Bloomberg

Events: It is Earth Overshoot day, when humans begin living beyond their ecological means and move into the equivalent of deficit spending. The day, conceived in 2006 by Andrew Simms of the UK’s New Economics Foundation think-tank, comes after July marked the hottest month ever recorded on Earth, according to the UN. Pope Francis begins a six-day visit to Portugal. The UK commemorates the 50th anniversary of the Summerland fire, which killed 50 people in a leisure centre on the Isle of Man.

Companies: Chinook Therapeutics shareholders meet to vote on the proposed acquisition by Novartis. Earnings are expected from weapons manufacturer BAE Systems, luxury car maker Ferrari and consumer giant Haleon.

Nomura shares decline sharply after quarterly earnings disappoint

Shares in Nomura declined as much as 8.5 per cent on Wednesday morning, after the Japanese investment bank posted disappointing earnings and declining wholesale revenues.

The bank reported net income of ¥23.3bn ($163mn) in the three months to June, up from ¥1.7bn reported in the same period a year earlier but short of the average ¥34.3bn forecast of analysts polled by Bloomberg.

Revenue at its wholesale banking unit, which includes trading and investment banking operations, declined 4 per cent, and profits slid 92 per cent.

Nomura shares later pared losses to be down about 7.6 per cent by mid-morning, but were still on track for their biggest one-day decline since March 2021.

China steps up rescue efforts as floods hit Beijing and surroundings

Rescue workers evacuate an elderly resident from a flood-affected village in Beijing’s Mentougou district on Tuesday © CNSphoto via Reuters

Rescue agencies have stepped up efforts as unprecedented floods inundated Beijing and neighbouring areas, leaving at least 20 dead and 33 missing. 

Hebei province announced the release of floodwaters from a local dam on Wednesday, the eighth discharge since rainfall soaked the Hai river basin four days ago, in a move which some commentators criticised for prioritising the capital over the surrounding rural areas. 

The Chinese government on Tuesday allocated Rmb110mn ($15.4mn) after leader Xi Jinping urged local officials to launch “all out” rescue efforts.

As of Tuesday, more than 1mn residents were evacuated in northern regions around Beijing, Tianjin and in Hebei, official data showed.

Asian equities decline after Fitch cuts US sovereign rating

Investors sold Asian equities and bought US Treasuries on Wednesday, as markets reacted to Fitch Ratings’ decision to downgrade its assessment of Washington’s sovereign debt.

Japan’s Topix shed 0.5 per cent, South Korea’s Kospi declined 0.3 per cent and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index fell 0.8 per cent.

After US markets closed on Tuesday, Fitch cut the country’s credit rating from triple A to double A plus, citing worsening fiscal conditions and governance.

US Treasury yields edged lower on Wednesday, as investors bought safe haven assets, with the yields on both the 10-year and two-year notes adding 0.03 percentage points to 4.017 per cent and 4.887 per cent, respectively. Yields move inversely to price.

What to watch in Asia today

Gaurav Gupta’s designs are shown on stage during India Couture Week. The annual showcase for the country’s apparel industry concludes in Delhi on Wednesday © Fashion Design Council of India

Events: India’s Supreme Court is expected to begin hearing applications challenging the abrogation of Article 370 of the constitution, which bestowed special status on the then state of Jammu and Kashmir. In 2019, India reorganised the Muslim-majority area as two directly administered territories, Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh. India Couture Week 2023, organised by the Fashion Design Council of India and Hyundai India, concludes in Delhi.

Indicators: South Korea’s July consumer price index is expected to show that inflation slowed further and is likely to drop to 1.8 per cent by the end of the year. Bank of Thailand is expected to raise its policy rate by 25 basis points to 2.25 per cent. Fitch analysts said the increase reflects the central bank’s recent “hawkish rhetoric” despite a sharp decline in price pressures. New Zealand releases the latest employment data, Australia provides a services purchasing managers’ index update and Singapore issues a manufacturing PMI.

Companies: China’s Kweichow Moutai and India’s Bharti Airtel release quarterly figures.

Markets: Futures in Tokyo and Hong Kong pointed lower on Wednesday morning. US stocks declined on Tuesday after economic data suggested that elevated interest rates were weighing on the economy. The S&P 500 closed 0.3 per cent lower, while the Nasdaq Composite dropped 0.4 per cent.

Fitch cuts US credit rating and warns of ‘fiscal deterioration’

The US’s credit rating has been cut to double A plus from triple A, in an unexpected blow to the world’s biggest economy by Fitch.

The rating agency said its downgrade “reflects the expected fiscal deterioration over the next three years, a high and growing general government debt burden, and the erosion of governance . . . over the last two decades that has manifested in repeated debt limit standoffs and last-minute resolutions”.

The US narrowly avoided a default just weeks ago, with the federal borrowing limit lifted at the eleventh hour after months of tension over spending cuts.

Tinder parent Match Group shares surge on rosy outlook and user growth

Match Group’s new Tinder marketing campaign, ‘It Starts with a Swipe’, ‘yielded both revenue acceleration and improved user trends’, the online dating company said © Gaia Squarci/Bloomberg

Tinder parent Match Group’s shares jumped 11.6 per cent in after-market trading after the online dating company forecast better than expected revenue for the current quarter, as its marketing campaign aimed at Gen Z attracts new users and helps boost revenue.

The Dallas-based company forecast third-quarter revenue in the range of $875mn to $885mn, exceeding analysts’ expectations of $863.8mn and an 8-9.3 per cent increase from the year-ago quarter. 

Match Group’s pricing optimisation and new Tinder marketing campaign, “It Starts with a Swipe”, “yielded both revenue acceleration and improved user trends”, the company said. 

Donald Trump indicted over 2020 election interference probe

US prosecutors have charged Donald Trump in connection with attempts to overturn the results of the 2020 election, the second federal indictment brought against the former president in as many months.

Trump was charged with four criminal counts including conspiracy to defraud the US, to obstruct an official proceeding and to threaten individual rights, according to an indictment filed in federal court in Washington on Tuesday.

The Department of Justice’s indictment stems from a probe led by special counsel Jack Smith into alleged meddling in the results of the 2020 election and attempts to stop the certification of Joe Biden’s victory.

Read more about the Trump indictment

Starbucks rides China rebound and pricier drinks to record revenue and profit

A Starbucks outlet in Beijing. In China, comparable store sales rose 46% from a year ago, with stores back to standard operations after the end of zero-Covid policies © Ng Hang Guan/AP

Starbucks reported record revenues and profits beat analysts’ expectations in the coffee chain’s latest quarter, helped by higher prices for its beverages and a recovery in the Chinese market.

Comparable store sales rose 10 per cent globally in the company’s third quarter, missing forecasts for 11.8 per cent.

In China, comparable store sales rose 46 per cent from a year ago, with stores back to standard operations after zero-Covid policies in 2022 forced it to close outlets or pause services in its second-largest market.

Starbucks reported revenue of $9.2bn in its third quarter, a record, but below Wall Street forecasts for $9.3bn. Earnings of 99 cents a share topped forecasts and were up 20 cents from a year ago.

Summarize this content to 100 words UK homebuyers are taking longer mortgages to cope with high borrowing costs, housebuilder saysAkila Quinio in LondonUK homebuyers are taking on longer mortgages to cope with higher borrowing costs, according to one of the UK’s largest housebuilders.Taylor Wimpey said in half-year results on Wednesday that 27 per cent of its first time buyers had taken mortgage terms of over 36 years in the first half of the year, compared with just 7 per cent in 2021. The number of second time buyers taking out mortgages of over 30 years meanwhile rose to 42 per cent, from 28 per cent in 2021.The housebuilder posted £237.7mn in pre-tax profit, in line with its previous guidance, and a 28.9 per cent fall year on year, as higher borrowing costs hit demand for homes in the second quarter.Singapore PM ‘regrets’ delayed response to sex and corruption scandalsMercedes Ruehl in Singapore Singapore prime minister Lee Hsien Loong, the country’s leader since 2004, defended the integrity of the government © Ministry of Communications and Information via AP Singapore’s prime minister said he “regrets” not responding sooner to scandals that have tarnished the city-state’s image just as it prepares for a major leadership transition. Lee Hsien Loong, the son of founding father Lee Kuan Yew, said in a speech on Wednesday he should have “forced the issue earlier” upon discovering an affair between the speaker of parliament and another member of parliament. But he defended the integrity of the government, which is dealing with a high-profile corruption investigation involving billionaire Ong Beng Seng and transport minister S Iswaran. Both men have been arrested and released on bail. Lee, Singapore’s leader since 2004, is preparing to hand power to Lawrence Wong, the deputy prime minister.BAE lifts sales 11% as war in Ukraine raises defence spendingSylvia Pfeifer in London© Simon Dawson/BloombergBAE Systems has raised its guidance for the full year after the war in Ukraine and higher spending on submarines helped boost its order intake. Britain’s biggest defence contractor said on Wednesday it had secured £21.1bn of new orders in the six months to the end of June, boosting its order backlog to a record £66.2bn.Sales rose 11 per cent to £12bn on a constant currency basis, while underlying earnings before interest and tax increased 10 per cent to £1.3bn.BAE said it expects annual earnings per share to grow by 10-12 per cent this year, up from a previous forecast of 5-7 per cent. The company has also announced another three-year share buyback programme worth £1.5bn.Cathay Pacific chief executive expects lower air fares next yearChan Ho-him in Hong Kong Ronald Lam, chief executive of Hong Kong flag carrier Cathay Pacific, said continuing supply chain issues were ‘holding us back from a return to the premium service level’ © Lam Yik/Bloomberg Cathay Pacific’s chief executive expects high air fares to become cheaper by next year as Hong Kong’s flag carrier restores operations amid staffing and supply chain challenges.“Ticket prices would become more normal … [as we] catch up on the capacity front,” Ronald Lam told a conference on Wednesday. The airline has been facing a shortage of pilots and other staff.Lam said supply chain issues were “holding us back from a return to the premium service level”, echoing International Air Transport Association director-general Willie Walsh’s remarks at the same event that delays to aircraft deliveries and maintenance could remain an issue “for a number of years”.Russia launches new drone strike on Odesa port and grain silosChristopher Miller in KyivRussian suicide drones attacked targets across Ukraine before sunrise on Wednesday, including port facilities and a grain silo in the southern Odesa region, according to authorities.“Air defence forces worked non-stop for almost three hours” over the Odesa region, Ukraine’s Southern Operational Command wrote on Telegram.Odesa regional governor Oleh Kiper said fires had broken out at the port and emergency workers were rushing to put them out.The air force had said the drones were heading toward the Danube river port of Izmail, which has taken on greater significance following Russia’s occupation of and attacks on Ukrainian Black Sea and Sea of Azov ports.In Kyiv, more than 10 drones targeting the Ukrainian capital were shot down, according to the military. Russian attacks on grain silos send Chicago wheat trades higherWilliam Langley in Hong Kong Workers open the hatches of a railway wagon loaded with Ukrainian wheat at the harbour in Constanța, Romania. Russia’s attacks, and its scrapping of a grain shipment deal, have pushed prices higher © Daniel Mihăilescu/AFP via Getty Images Wheat traded in Chicago jumped 4 per cent on Wednesday after Russia’s attacks on Ukrainian grain silos increased concerns over global food supplies.Prices of maize added more than 2 per cent, while soybean oil prices rose 0.3 per cent.Russian drones attacked port facilities in southern Ukraine’s Odesa region, its regional governor wrote on Telegram early on Wednesday. Russian and Ukraine are two of the world’s most important exporters of grain. Moscow’s attacks, and its scrapping of a deal to allow Ukrainian grain shipments across the Black Sea last month, have pushed prices higher.Country Garden Services stock rises 17% on repurchase plan Thomas Hale in ShanghaiThe property management arm of Chinese developer Country Garden said it would repurchase 10 per cent of its shares in an effort to restore confidence after a wave of volatile trading.Country Garden Services Holdings said its shares have been trading at a price that does not reflect the group’s “intrinsic value”, and that the repurchase would demonstrate confidence in its “long-term business prospects”.Country Garden, the affiliated developer, is at the centre of investor concerns over a potential deterioration in the country’s indebted real estate sector. On Monday it abruptly cancelled a $300mn share placement without providing a reason. Shares in the services arm rose 17 per cent on Wednesday.What to watch in Europe todayDonato Paolo Mancini in London The Ferrari NV 296 GTB hybrid vehicle is displayed at last October’s Mondial de l’automobile in Paris. The Italian luxury carmaker releases its latest earnings data on Wednesday © Nathan Laine/Bloomberg Events: It is Earth Overshoot day, when humans begin living beyond their ecological means and move into the equivalent of deficit spending. The day, conceived in 2006 by Andrew Simms of the UK’s New Economics Foundation think-tank, comes after July marked the hottest month ever recorded on Earth, according to the UN. Pope Francis begins a six-day visit to Portugal. The UK commemorates the 50th anniversary of the Summerland fire, which killed 50 people in a leisure centre on the Isle of Man.Companies: Chinook Therapeutics shareholders meet to vote on the proposed acquisition by Novartis. Earnings are expected from weapons manufacturer BAE Systems, luxury car maker Ferrari and consumer giant Haleon.Nomura shares decline sharply after quarterly earnings disappointWilliam Langley in Hong KongShares in Nomura declined as much as 8.5 per cent on Wednesday morning, after the Japanese investment bank posted disappointing earnings and declining wholesale revenues.The bank reported net income of ¥23.3bn ($163mn) in the three months to June, up from ¥1.7bn reported in the same period a year earlier but short of the average ¥34.3bn forecast of analysts polled by Bloomberg.Revenue at its wholesale banking unit, which includes trading and investment banking operations, declined 4 per cent, and profits slid 92 per cent.Nomura shares later pared losses to be down about 7.6 per cent by mid-morning, but were still on track for their biggest one-day decline since March 2021.China steps up rescue efforts as floods hit Beijing and surroundingsGloria Li in Hong Kong Rescue workers evacuate an elderly resident from a flood-affected village in Beijing’s Mentougou district on Tuesday © CNSphoto via Reuters Rescue agencies have stepped up efforts as unprecedented floods inundated Beijing and neighbouring areas, leaving at least 20 dead and 33 missing. Hebei province announced the release of floodwaters from a local dam on Wednesday, the eighth discharge since rainfall soaked the Hai river basin four days ago, in a move which some commentators criticised for prioritising the capital over the surrounding rural areas. The Chinese government on Tuesday allocated Rmb110mn ($15.4mn) after leader Xi Jinping urged local officials to launch “all out” rescue efforts.As of Tuesday, more than 1mn residents were evacuated in northern regions around Beijing, Tianjin and in Hebei, official data showed. Asian equities decline after Fitch cuts US sovereign ratingWilliam Langley in Hong KongInvestors sold Asian equities and bought US Treasuries on Wednesday, as markets reacted to Fitch Ratings’ decision…
https://www.ft.com/content/b0e815ed-28d3-45cb-89e9-3460d9b91ce1 Live news: Russia launches new drone strike on Odesa port and grain silos

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