BRICS wants an increased influence that the West cannot ignore anymore

Six new countries are set to join the BRICS to make their presence felt on the global economic stage. But the Western world’s sustainability goals might suffer the consequences.

A somewhat surprising mix of countries is about to join the BRICS, the economic grouping of Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa – a decision made at the 15th BRICS summit, hosted by South Africa. In January 2024, the bloc will include developing country Argentina, Africa’s second-largest economy Egypt; Ethiopia, one of the fastest-growing economies in the region and oil giants Iran, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. What do they have in common? The only certain answer is that all six applied for membership.

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From a ‘lazy acronym’ to an unavoidable trade partner

BRICS, which had no clear purpose and many difficulties co-operating among themselves, now started to recruit. And they are not finished. Including the newly recruited members, more than 40 countries want to join the bloc, according to the 2023 summit chair South Africa.

“The sanctions against Russia and China over the last 18 months have acted as a catalyst,” Christopher Weafer, the CEO of business consultancy Macro-Advisory Ltd, said. Moscow and Beijing are trying to lower the excessive reliance on Western economies, essentially both having been exposed to what happens if they are penalised.

The foundation of BRICS in 2001 didn’t cause too much of a headache to the West for a while. “The grouping has been around for many years but really hasn’t progressed into anything effective or coordinated,” Weafer said.

“It’s always been an idea, almost like a lazy acronym, I guess you might describe it.”

Since then, the grouping hasn’t had much of an impact on world trade, however, they created a jointly-owned development bank – the New Development Bank. The lack of visible purpose and co-ordination but tangible differences in political interests, and production standards, let alone currencies, left them unable to become a heavyweight champion on the world stage of economics.

One could argue that the G7 nations (the seven largest advanced economies in terms of GDP including Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, US and the UK) were dismissive of some of the group’s demands and interests. However, lately, geopolitics started having an increased impact on economic ties. 

The continuing expansion offers the BRICS an opportunity to have a powerful voice on issues like climate management and the control of global financial systems.

The newcomers may see it as a way to diversify their business opportunities (and be less dependent on Western countries and their rules) with the promise of preferential trade terms between members and other incentives to increase trade and cross-border investments. 

The current members of the bloc represent about 42% of the world’s population and more than $27 trillion in accumulated gross domestic product. The enlarged grouping will account for 46.5% of the world population and using the IMF’s 2022 GDP data, we can calculate that it will account for $30.8 trillion of the global $100 trillion GDP. 

On the other hand, GDP based on purchasing power parity, or PPP (percentage share of global GDP based upon a common basket of goods which represents the actual purchasing power), shows a very different balance of forces. In total, this expanded BRICS now increases its share of global GDP to more than 36% on a PPP basis, surpassing that of the G7. 

What is next for the Sustainable Development Goals?

It is certain that the new grouping is hard to ignore as its members sit on 45% of the world’s oil production and possess significant iron ore, coal, and bauxite sectors let alone the key role they have in the world’s agriculture. 

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Therefore, developed nations, typically the G7, rely to a great extent on trade with them and also on co-ordination on such issues as climate change and environmental issues. Therefore “the strongest economies can no longer ignore the newly-shaping bloc’s needs,” says Weafer.

The expert believes that while technology, investment, and trade are going to be important issues on the table, one of the corner points of the discussion between the strongest economies and the BRICS countries could be bridging the gap on their interests in environmental issues and setting priorities.

“Developing nations do not see the environment as big a priority as people in the developed world do,” explains Weafer.

Even though countries like Saudi Arabia and the UAE keep listing sustainable growth as a priority, they need time to adjust. “Their priority is about economic and social development, in order to create a more stable economic basis, like the G7 and the EU already possess,” says Weafer. “And the argument is that, ‘give us time’, but there isn’t time.”

“I think it is important to get some common ground on how to deal with environmental issues because there is an enormous chasm right now,” Weafer adds. “I mean, enormous because when I travel in China and the Middle East I see that they just don’t see it. They think this is a problem that’s exaggerated by Europe and a way that the G7 is suppressing the potential evolution and growth of the developing world. I’ve even seen an article written by somebody saying it was a modern form of colonialism.”

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How realistic is a common currency for the BRICS?

One of the re-circling questions about the BRICS is whether or not they are working on a system to use a common currency. “The challenge is comparable to cutting the Gordian knot,” says Weafer. Creating the euro took decades and that was a bloc composed of far less physically diverse and distant countries.

Increasing bilateral trade and finding ways to settle that in bilateral currencies is a lot more likely. At the moment this works only with Russia and China after the countries’ central banks took years to set up a system to allow it. Recently Russian President Vladimir Putin said that 80% of the trade between Russia and China is settled in either Russian rubles or Chinese yuan. 

On the other hand, it has its risks. For instance, Russia is selling a lot of oil to India but the payments, which are in rupees, are being trapped in the Indian banks because of capital controls and the nonconvertibility of the rupee. 

Realistically, in the next 10 years, the members have time just enough to try to iron out some of these bilateral trade settlements. 

Where does further expansion lead the bloc?

The already peculiar selection of countries may well be joined by new members such as Kazakhstan and Thailand, who have reportedly applied already. The criteria is hazy, says Weafer. “I think the admission criteria is primarily the willingness of a country to join. The reason is that they’re just looking for diversification, eyeing countries with a reasonable size. For instance, Indonesia is definitely a target.”

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Also, already existing groups could be invited to join such as the Eurasia Economic Union and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization. 

The expert believes that geopolitical events such as the existing conflict in Ukraine and the potential conflict with Taiwan are going to keep dominating the world’s economic stage. 

The next 12 months will reveal more about the challenges and potentials the BRICS is about to bring until the next summit. 

Since the Russian President couldn’t visit the summit this year after the International Criminal Court (ICC) issued an arrest warrant for him, Vladimir Putin announced that plans have been made to hold the next BRICS summit in Kazan in October 2024. 

By then, we may even learn the name of the new bloc which seems to be a challenge for the group that added every new member’s first letter to its name so far.

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Earnings Momentum May Push the Stock Market to New Highs

KEY

TAKEAWAYS

  • The stock market ended on a positive note in spite of a hiccup
  • Strong earnings and softer PCE helped push the stock market higher
  • Volatility showed some erratic movement but settled down at the end of the week

“Bearish engulfing pattern,” “outside day,” “key reversal”—all of these are terms you may have heard after the stock market’s performance on Thursday. But one day’s price action doesn’t necessarily make a trend. Encouraging fundamental data reversed investor pessimism and changed the overall picture relatively quickly.

A couple of key data points that were released are:

  • The initial estimate suggests the US economy grew at a 2.4% annual rate in Q2. Compare that to the 1% Q1 growth. The US economy is still growing, and at a rate that’s better than what economists expected.
  • The Fed’s favorite inflation indicator, personal consumption expenditures price index (PCE), came in slightly cooler than expected. Core PCE gained 0.2% month-over-month, which is in line with the Dow Jones estimate of a 0.2% increase. Year-over-year core PCE came in lower than estimates—up 4.1% vs. an estimate of 4.2%. That’s the lowest rate since September 2021.

A few days earlier, the Fed raised interest rates another 25 basis points. Given that future interest rate decisions will be data-dependent, this piece of data is an encouraging sign that supports the possibility that an end to the tightening is near.

The GDP and inflation data helped the equity market regain its strength. After the previous day’s performance, this was welcome news that restored the negative investor conference. Strong earnings from Intel Corp (stock symbol: INTC) helped the Tech sector make up some of the losses from the day before. Mega tech stocks such as Tesla (stock symbol: TSLA), Advanced Micro Devices (stock symbol: AMD), Amazon (stock symbol: AMZN), META Platforms (stock symbol: META), Apple (stock symbol: AAPL), Alphabet (stock symbol: GOOGL), and NVIDIA (stock symbol: NVDA) rose and were among the most actively traded during the trading day.

Other industries showed strength as well. If you scroll through the Market Summary tool and view the US Industry Indexes, airlines, biotechs, gold, oil services, retailers, and transports were all up greater than one percentage point.

If you were disappointed that the Dow Jones Industrial Average ($INDU) didn’t make it to a 14-day winning streak, there’s still a shining light. The index has seen three weeks of gains. The weekly chart below shows the uptrend is still in play.

CHART 1: DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE ($INDU) REGISTERS THIRD STRAIGHT WEEK OF GAINS. Despite a hiccup on Thursday, the weekly chart is still trending higher and doesn’t have too much in the way of resistance on the path to reaching its high. Chart source: StockCharts.com (click chart for live version). For educational purposes.

Even small-cap stocks enjoyed advances. The daily chart of the S&P 600 Small Cap Index ($SML) below shows that small caps are rallying, and the market breadth as indicated by the percentage of small-cap stocks above their 50-day moving average, the Advance-Decline Percent, and the Volume Advance-Decline Percent are showing positive breadth.

CHART 2: SMALL-CAP STOCKS DON’T WANT TO BE LEFT BEHIND. A rally and relatively strong market breadth suggest there may be some good finds in the small-cap space. Chart source: StockCharts.com (click on chart for live version). For educational purposes.

When the stock market is overextended, it’s natural for investors to get jittery. So it’s a good idea to watch the CBOE Volatility Index ($VIX). On Thursday, when the stock market saw a significant drop, the VIX saw a pretty wide range—from 12.74 to 15.02, closing at 14.41. This erratic VIX movement heightened fear among investors, and many thought the week would end on a negative note. But that changed, and by Friday’s close, VIX closed at 13.33.


StockCharts Tip. The Market Overview panel on Your Dashboard summarizes stock market activity in real time during the trading day. Click on the four tabs across the top—Equities, Bonds, Commodities, Crypto—to stay on top of the market action.


The Bottom Line

This week ended on a positive note. Earnings continue next week with bellwether companies AMZN and AAPL reporting. We’ll also get a look at jobs data, which could give us a look at one of the important areas the Fed looks at when making interest rate decisions. It remains to be seen if earnings momentum and economic data can push the stock market to new highs. 

End of Week Wrap Up

US equity indexes up; volatility down

  • $SPX up 0.99% at 4582.23, $INDU up 0.5% at 35,459.29; $COMPQ up 1.9% at 14,316.66
  • $VIX down 7.43% at 13.34
  • Best performing sector for the week: Communication Services
  • Worst performing sector for the week: Utilities
  • Top 5 Large Cap SCTR stocks: Super Micro Computer (SMCI), Pohang Iron & Steel (PKX), Palantir Technologies (PLTR), NVIDIA Corp. (NVDA), DraftKings Inc. (DKNG)

On the Radar Next Week

  • More earnings. Some companies reporting next week: Amazon (AMZN), Apple (AAPL), Merck (MRK), Toyota Motor Corp (TM), Pfizer (PFE), Caterpillar (CAT), and more. 
  • July PMI
  • July ISM Manufacturing
  • July ISM Services
  • July Non Farm Payrolls

Disclaimer: This blog is for educational purposes only and should not be construed as financial advice. The ideas and strategies should never be used without first assessing your own personal and financial situation, or without consulting a financial professional.

Jayanthi Gopalakrishnan

About the author:
Jayanthi Gopalakrishnan is Director of Site Content at StockCharts.com. She spends her time coming up with content strategies, delivering content to educate traders and investors, and finding ways to make technical analysis fun. Jayanthi was Managing Editor at T3 Custom, a content marketing agency for financial brands. Prior to that, she was Managing Editor of Technical Analysis of Stocks & Commodities magazine for 15+ years.
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Morning Digest | Ron DeSantis launches 2024 presidential bid to challenge Donald Trump; GDP growth may cross 7% in 2022-23: RBI Governor, and more

RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das.
| Photo Credit: ANI

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