global trade

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 [...]

Chinese Basis For Anti-Reflation?

By |2017-06-15T19:33:09-04:00June 15th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Yesterday was something of a data deluge. In the US, we had the predictable CPI dropping again, lackluster US Retail Sales, and then the FOMC’s embarrassing performance. Across the Pacific, the Chinese also reported Retail Sales as well as Industrial Production and growth of investments in Fixed Assets (FAI). When deciding which topics to cover yesterday, it was easy to [...]

Questions Persist About China Trade

By |2017-06-08T18:47:17-04:00June 8th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Chinese trade statistics were for May 2017 better than expected by economists, but on the export side questions remain as to their accuracy. Earlier this year discrepancies between estimates first published by the General Administration of Customs (GAC), those you find reported in the media, and what is captured by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), backed up by data [...]

Staying Stuck

By |2017-05-15T16:49:08-04:00May 15th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The rebound in commodity prices is not difficult to understand, perhaps even sympathize with. With everything so depressed early last year, if it turned out to be no big deal in the end then there was a killing to be made. That’s what markets are supposed to do, entice those with liquidity to buy when there is blood in the [...]

Trying To Reconcile Accounts; China

By |2017-05-15T12:19:11-04:00May 15th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Chinese economic data for April 2017 has been uniformly disappointing. External trade numbers resembled too much commodity prices, leaving an emphasis on them rather than actual economic forces. The latest figures for the Big 3, Industrial Production, Retail Sales, and Fixed Asset Investment, unfortunately also remained true to the pattern. Industrial Production had seemingly accelerated in March, rising to a [...]

Lackluster Trade, China April Edition

By |2017-05-08T11:58:00-04:00May 8th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

China’s trade statistics for April 2017 uniformly disappointed. They only did so, however, because expectations are being calibrated as if the current economy is actually different. It is instead merely swinging between bouts of contraction and low-grade growth, but so low-grade it really doesn’t qualify as growth. Positive numbers do get the mind racing, but since the end of 2011 [...]

Lackluster Trade

By |2017-05-05T18:00:14-04:00May 5th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

US imports rose 9% year-over-year (NSA) in March 2017, after being flat in February and up 12% in January. For the quarter overall, imports rose 7.3%, a rate that is slightly more than the 2013-14 comparison. The difference, however, is simply the price of oil. Removing petroleum, imports rose instead 6.3% in March and just 4% for the first quarter [...]

Blatant Similarities

By |2017-05-01T18:36:47-04:00May 1st, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Declines in several of the world’s PMI’s in April have furthered doubts about the global “reflation.” But while many disappointed, some sharply, it isn’t just this one month that has sown them. In China, for example, both the manufacturing and non-manufacturing sentiment indices declined to 6-month lows. While that might be erased next month as normal short run volatility, the [...]

It Will Restart All Over Again In the Small Things

By |2017-04-19T16:34:15-04:00April 19th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Six months ago back in October, IBM reported what seemed to be encouraging results. Though revenues at the company were down for the eighteenth consecutive quarter, they were so by the slimmest of margins, just -0.3%. For Big Blue, that had been the best revenue comparison since the first quarter of 2012 back when global recovery was the most plausible. [...]

What Was Chinese Trade in March?

By |2017-04-13T16:52:34-04:00April 13th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

As with all statistics, there are discrepancies that from time to time may obscure the meaning or validity of the particular estimate in question. For the vast majority of the time, any such uncertainties amount to very little. Overall, harmony among the major accounts reduces the signal noise from any one featuring a significant inconsistency. There are, of course, various [...]

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