china

Textbook

By |2017-08-08T12:42:18-04:00August 8th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

China’s export growth disappointed in July, only we don’t really know by how much. According to that country’s Customs Bureau, exports last month were 7.2% above (in US$ terms) exports in July 2016. That’s down from 11.3% growth in June, which as usual had been taken in the mainstream as evidence of “strong” or “robust” global demand. According to China’s [...]

China’s Banks Deliver RMB In June

By |2017-07-25T18:57:50-04:00July 25th, 2017|Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Updated statistics from the People’s Bank of China shed some light on changing money conditions in RMB. The Big 4 State-owned banks have been the primary liquidity conduit for all policies and activities going back to 2014. These institutions had been since the middle of 2016 increasingly squeezed as to excess funding available to be forwarded into money markets. This [...]

Copper And The Upside

By |2017-07-25T14:14:03-04:00July 25th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Copper prices are up very sharply today, igniting across markets a reborn “reflation.” Treasuries along with eurodollar futures have been stuck in anti-“reflation” for quite some time. Copper, on the other hand, is not just now breaking from the pack. Going back to May 9, this important economic indication has been so far steadily bucking the trend. When we talk [...]

Why Might Hong Kong Still Be Interesting?

By |2017-07-19T19:14:03-04:00July 19th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

When the People’s Republic of China (PROC) was granted full UN status in 1971, everything was then set in motion. The successor to Chaing Kai-shek’s nationalist government in the Republic of China (ROC, or what we call today Taiwan) was originally granted as a founding member and one of five Security Council seats. UN General Assembly Resolution 2758 instead recognized [...]

China’s Ghosts Are A Future Property

By |2017-07-17T13:12:58-04:00July 17th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The term “ghost city” is a loaded one, often deployed to skew toward a particular viewpoint. In the context of China’s economy, it has become shorthand for perhaps the largest asset bubble in human history. While that may ultimately be the case, in truth China’s ghost cities aren’t about the past but its future. There is a great deal that [...]

The Ghost Recovery

By |2017-07-13T16:37:41-04:00July 13th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

To the naked eye, it represents progress. China has still an enormous rural population doing subsistence level farming. As the nation grows economically, such a way of life is an inherent drag, an anchor on aggregate efficiency Chinese officials would rather not put up with. Moving a quarter of a billion people into cities in an historically condensed time period [...]

US Trade Stalls, Too

By |2017-07-06T16:55:52-04:00July 6th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

US imports rose year-over-year for the seventh straight month, but like factory orders and other economic statistics there is a growing sense that the rebound will not go further. The total import of goods was up 9.3% in May 2017 as compared to May 2016, but growth rates have over the past five months remained constrained to around that same [...]

Some Global Odd & Ends

By |2017-07-03T13:41:28-04:00July 3rd, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

When it comes to central bank experimentation, Japan is always at the forefront. If something new is being done, Bank of Japan is where it happens. In May for the first time in human history, that central bank’s balance sheet passed the half quadrillion mark. It should be unsettling where a trillion is a rounding error. And yet, despite what [...]

Basic China Money Math Still Doesn’t Add Up To A Solution

By |2017-06-21T16:56:51-04:00June 21st, 2017|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There are four basic categories to the PBOC’s balance sheet, two each on the asset and liability sides of the ledger. The latter is the money side, composed mainly of actual, physical currency and the ledger balances of bank reserves. Opposing them is forex assets in possession of the central bank and everything else denominated in RMB. Because liabilities need [...]

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