china

China Trade Collapses, Economists Suggest ‘Lackluster’ Global Demand

By |2016-03-08T12:55:31-05:00March 8th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

January and February economic accounts for China are notoriously difficult to judge because of the non-uniform occurrence of the Lunar New Year. That is why, for example, China’s National Bureau of Statistics doesn’t even bother with industrial production, retail sales or fixed asset investment in those individual months, preferring to combine them together in one release encompassing both January and [...]

A Slowdown That Won’t Stop Slowing Down

By |2016-03-01T10:49:32-05:00March 1st, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

China’s official manufacturing PMI slipped to just 49 in February, the worst monthly level since February 2009. It has been below 50 each of the past seven months (and increasingly so during that time) and less than 50.3 since November 2014, an incredible span of 15 straight months. The trend is inarguable, as even economists will now admit Chinese industry [...]

Adding Liquidity Into The Subtraction

By |2016-02-29T12:10:13-05:00February 29th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The PBOC surprised some by lowering the reserve requirement for the Chinese banking system this morning. That marks the sixth reduction since February 4 last year, totaling 350 bps (the reduction on April 19 was 100 bps). By orthodox calculations, that should have added about RMB 2.45 trillion in new “liquidity” as banks freed from holding reserves would have forwarded [...]

Not Fixed

By |2016-02-25T16:43:11-05:00February 25th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

All the warning signs were there, especially the backup in the CNY exchange rate. Chinese stocks had stood for a good run while the PBOC had flooded internal channels, but how much of that was real liquidity versus the appearance of stuffing funding into the narrow coffers of the largest state run banks? Increasingly it seemed far more the latter [...]

Consistency On China

By |2016-02-23T16:13:22-05:00February 23rd, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Score one for Chinese consistency. Back in December, Chinese officials suddenly announced that they were pulling back the Minxin PMI’s of smaller and mid-sized businesses in both manufacturing and services. Broadcasting the need for “major adjustments”, China Minsheng Banking Corp. and the China Academy of New Supply-side Economics had previously estimated a huge decline in economic activity suggested by their [...]

China and US, Producer Prices Very Much Agree

By |2016-02-18T18:27:31-05:00February 18th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The PPI estimate for China was not a fifth straight -5.9%, instead the estimate for January 2016 was -5.3%; not appreciably different but at least not blatantly sticking with a single number. China’s CPI remained below 2% at just 1.8% in January, showing that as far as calculated “inflation” none of the PBOC’s massive efforts since November last year have [...]

Another Estimate of ‘Dollar’ Destruction

By |2016-02-17T12:38:32-05:00February 17th, 2016|Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

December was one of the worst months on record for foreign dealing with the “dollar.” The latest TIC update further confirms why January was under such persistent and heavy liquidation pressure in almost every corner. There was a record monthly amount of “selling UST’s” in foreign channels, a dearth of private “dollar” activity and, perhaps most important of all, bank [...]

Never A Good Sign When Central Banks Feel the Need

By |2016-02-16T19:00:34-05:00February 16th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

You can’t blame the PBOC for trying, as if they were even going to do it, Monday was the day. With the US closed and after the turmoil all over the “dollar” up to last Thursday, the Chinese central bank was left with practically no choice. With Hong Kong shaping up to the mess in the eurodollar, there wasn’t any [...]

China Trade Unsurprisingly Collapses Again

By |2016-02-16T11:31:14-05:00February 16th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Last month when China’s exports “only” declined by 1.7% (revised) the entire orthodox world took it as a definitive signal for the long-awaited monetary stimulus effects. Whether it was the yuan’s “devaluation” or the six rate cuts and the often double shots of reserve requirement reductions that accompanied them, December trade figures were so very encouraging. Economists, in particular, were [...]

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