Evergrande

  • China Q4 GDP/Dec retail sales – 17/01

There was some scepticism when China reported Q3 growth of 1.3%, despite evidence over the quarter of weak domestic demand.

In the 3-months since then we've seen retail sales show modest improvements in October and November, while industrial production numbers have remained steady. The weak demand in the Chinese economy is already being reflected in headline inflation numbers with both CPI and PPI in deflation, as Chinese authorities wrestle with the problems posed by Evergrande, Country Garden and latterly Zhonghzi.

After a slow start to Q4 there was a modest improvement in retail sales while industrial production remained steady at 4.6%. In November we saw a decent uptick in retail sales to 10.1%, however this was still below expectations despite the numbers including Chinese Singles Day sales, and weak comparatives given that a lot of China still hadn't come out of lockdown measures in November 2022.

Industrial production was bette

Assessing Global Markets: From Chinese Stimulus to US Jobs Data

AUD/USD Holds Near 9-Month Lows as China's Economic Woes Persist

Kenny Fisher Kenny Fisher 21.08.2023 13:07
AUD/USD close to 9-month lows China fails to cut 5-year LPR   The Australian dollar is steady at the start of the new trading week. In the European session, AUD/USD is unchanged at 0.6404. It’s a very quiet week for Australian releases, with no tier-1 releases. On Wednesday, Australia releases services and manufacturing PMIs for August. Services and manufacturing both contracted in July, with readings below the 50.0 level. The Aussie has hit a rough patch and has reeled off five straight losing weeks against the US dollar, sliding over 400 basis points in that period. The economic picture in China continues to deteriorate, and this has been a major reason for the Australian dollar’s sharp deterioration. China is Australia’s number one trading partner, and when China sneezes there’s a good chance Australia will catch a cold. China’s economic data has been pointing downward and the world’s second-largest economy is experiencing deflation. Last week, Evergrande, a huge Chinese property developer, filed for bankruptcy in New York, raising fears of contagion to other parts of the economy. The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) responded to the economic slowdown with a surprise cut to the one-year medium-term lending rate. The central bank was expected to follow up with cuts to the one-year and five-year loan prime rates (LPR). On Monday, the PBOC trimmed its one-year LPR from 3.55% to 3.45%, but surprisingly, did not lower the 5-year LPR, a key lending rate that affects mortgages. Lower lending rates are intended to boost credit demand, but the central bank’s lukewarm move is unlikely to provide much of a boost to China’s ailing economy. That does not bode well for the struggling Australian dollar, and if China’s economy continues to show signs of weakening, I would expect the Australian dollar to continue losing ground.   AUD/USD Technical AUD/USD is putting pressure on resistance at 0.6431. Next, there is resistance at 0.6496 There is support at 0.6339 and 0.6274  
Boosting Stimulus: A Look at Recent Developments and Market Impact

Boosting Stimulus: A Look at Recent Developments and Market Impact

Ipek Ozkardeskaya Ipek Ozkardeskaya 28.08.2023 09:15
Here, get more stimulus!  By Ipek Ozkardeskaya, Senior Analyst | Swissquote Bank   The Federal Reserve (Fed) Chair Jerome Powell's Jackson Hole speech was boring, wasn't it? Powell repeated that inflation risks remain to the upside despite recent easing and pointed at resilient US growth and tight US jobs market, and reiterated the Fed's will to keep the interest rates at restrictive levels for longer. The US 2-year pushed above 5%, as Powell's comments kept the idea of another 25bp hike on the table before the year end, but the rate hike will probably be skipped in September meeting and could be announced in the November meeting instead, according to activity on Fed funds futures. The US 10-year yield is steady between the 4.20/4.30%. The S&P500 gained a meagre 0.8% last week, yet managed to close the week above the 4400 mark and above its ascending trend base building since last October, while Nasdaq 100 gained 2.3% over the week, although Nvidia's stunning results failed to keep the share price above the $500 mark, even though that level was hit after the results were announced last week. And the disappointing jump in Nvidia despite beating its $11bn sales forecast and despite boosting its sales forecast for this quarter to $16bn, was a sign that the AI rally is now close to exhaustion.   What's up this week?  This week will be busy with some important economic data from the US. We will watch JOLTS job openings tomorrow, Australian and German CPIs and US ADP and GDP reports on Wednesday, to see if the US economy continues to be strong, and the jobs market continues to be tight. On Thursday, Chinese PMI numbers, the Eurozone's CPI estimate and the US core PCE will hit the wire, and on Friday, we will watch the US jobs report and ISM numbers. Note that the US dollar index pushed to the highest levels since May after Powell's Jackson Hole speech. The EURUSD is now trading a touch below its 200-DMA, even though the European Central Bank (ECB) chief Lagarde repeated that the ECB will push the rates as high as needed. Yet, the worsening business climate, and expectations in Germany somehow prevent the euro bulls from getting back to the market lightheartedly, while the yen shorts are comforted by the Bank of Japan (BoJ) governor's relaxed view on price growth – which remains slower than the BoJ's goal, but the possibility of a direct FX intervention to limit the USDJPY's upside potential keeps the yen shorts reasonably on the sidelines, despite the temptation to sell the heck out of the yen with the BoJ's incredible policy divergence versus the rest of the developed nations.   Here, get more stimulus!  The week started upbeat in China and in Hong Kong, after the government announced measures to boost appetite for Chinese equities. Beijing halved the stamp duty on stock trades, while Hong Kong said it plans a task force to boost liquidity. The CSI 300 rallied more than 2% and HSI jumped more than 1.5%. But gains remain vulnerable as data released yesterday showed that Chinese company profits fell 6.7% last month from a year earlier. That's lower than 8.3% printed in June, but note that for the first seven months of 2023, profits declined 15.5%, and that is highly disquieting given the slowing economic growth and rising deflation risks, along with the default risks for some of the country's biggest companies. Evergrande, for example, posted a $4.5 billion loss in the H1.  Therefore, energy traders remain little impressed with China stimulus measures. The barrel of US crude trades around the $80pb level, yet the failure to break below a major Fibonacci support last week – major 38.2% Fibonacci retracement on the latest rally, keeps oil bulls timidly in charge of the market despite the weak China sentiment. Oil trading volumes show an unusual fall since July when compared to volumes traded in the past two years. That's partly due to weakening demand fears and falling gasoline inventories, but also due to tightening oil markets as a result of lower OPEC supply. We know that the demand will advance toward fresh records despite weak Chinese demand. We also know that OPEC will keep supply limited to push prices higher. Consequently, we are in a structurally positive price setting, although any excessive rally in oil prices would further fuel inflation expectations, rate hike expectations and keep the topside limited in the medium run.    
Key Economic Events and Corporate Earnings Reports for the Week Ahead – September 5-9, 2023

US Jobs Data Signals Potential Fed Pause as Savings Dwindle

ING Economics ING Economics 01.09.2023 10:18
Jobs day!  By Ipek Ozkardeskaya, Senior Analyst | Swissquote Bank   August ended on a downbeat note for the S&P500 and on an upbeat note for the US dollar as, even though the Federal Reserve's (Fed) favourite gauge of inflation, PCE, came in line with expectations in July for both the core and headline figures – and even though the core PCE posted the smallest back-to-back rise since late 2020, the supercore services inflation – very closely watched by Mr. Powell and team, and that excludes not only energy but also housing, rose by the most on a monthly basis since the year began. Plus, personal spending remained strong – in line with the GDP data released earlier this week.   Digging deeper, the personal income fell slightly, meaning that Americans continue to tap into the reserves to continue spending. But the good news for the Fed is that the consumer spending at this speed could continue as long as the savings are available. And according to the latest data, personal savings in the US fell from 4.3% in June to 3.5% in May. Before the pandemic, the savings level was close to 9%. In conclusion, savings are melting, housing affordability is falling, mortgage rates are up, low-income Americans reportedly fall behind their important payments like rent, and the main street gives away signs of suffering. But the GDP remains above 2%, above the long-term trend which is thought by the Fed to be around 1.8%, and the scenario of soft landing is what the market is pricing convincedly.  Jobs day!  The US jobs data shows signs of loosening but the numbers are still at historically strong levels. Due to be released later today, the US unemployment rate is expected to remain at a multi-decade low of 3.5%, and the US economy is expected to have added around 170K new nonfarm jobs in August. In the last twelve months, the US economy added almost 280K jobs on average. If today's data comes in line with expectations, the last 12-month average will still remain close to 270K monthly job additions on average. Historically, we expect NFP to fall to around 50K per month a few months into recession. So, to tell you that: we are not there just yet.   Today, a softer than expected NFP figure, a slight deterioration in the unemployment rate, or softer-than-expected wages data could further cement the idea that the Fed will skip a pause at the September meeting, and maybe at the November as well. So far, the US Treasuries have had their best week since mid-July. The US 2-year yield retreated to 4.85%, while the 10-year yield flirted with the 4% mark for the first time in three weeks. But who says a rapid jump, also says a rising possibility of a correction. One thing is sure, we don't expect any major central banker to call victory on inflation just yet...  European inflation sticks around 5.3% due to rising energy  Latest CPI estimate showed that Eurozone inflation stagnated at 5.3% in August due to the sticky energy costs, versus a fall to 5.1% expected by analysts. Inflation in France for example accelerated at a much faster pace than expected in August, while the latest PMI numbers showed weakness in activity. German retail sales also fell faster than expected in July, whereas inflation in Germany also ticked higher last month. The combination of weak economic data and sticky inflation is a nightmare scenario for the European Central Bank (ECB). The ECB should raise the rates to continue fighting inflation, even though the underlying economies are under pressure. Today, the final PMI figures will likely confirm the ongoing slowdown. The EURUSD gave back most of its weekly advance after yesterday's inflation data, hinting that the market is worried that further ECB hikes will further damage economic activity. The bears are tempted to retest the 200-DMA support. If they are successful, the next natural bearish target stands at a distant 1.0615, the major 38.2% Fibonacci retracement on past year's rally, which should distinguish between the continuation of the actual positive trend and a bearish medium term reversal.   More stimulus from China  This week's PMI data showed that the Chinese manufacturing contracted at a slower pace, and today's Caixin PMI showed that it stepped into the expansion zone in August, whereas the Chinese services PMI fell short of expectations and the wave of further bad news, like Country Garden announcing an almost $7bn loss in H1, talk of the company's yuan denominated bond default, Moody's downgrading of the firm to Ca and Evergrande's wealth unit saying that it couldn't make payments on its investment products due to a cash crunch, combined to the existing and worsening property crisis get the People's Bank of China (PBoC) to announce lower payment requirements for first and second-time house buyers, and to encourage lower rates on existing mortgages. But it won't improve the situation overnight. The CSI 300 is closing a week PACKED with fresh stimuli on a meagre note.   Crude rallies  The barrel of American crude jumped more than 2% yesterday and is consolidating above the $84pb level. The next bullish targets stand at $85pb, the August peak, and $89pb, in the continuation of an ABCD pattern. But the rally can't extend above $90 without reviving global inflation expectations and recession worries, which would then start playing against the bulls. 
Asia Weakness Sets Tone for Lower European Open on 26th September 2023

Asia Weakness Sets Tone for Lower European Open on 26th September 2023

Ipek Ozkardeskaya Ipek Ozkardeskaya 26.09.2023 14:41
05:40BST Tuesday 26th September 2023 Asia weakness set to see lower European open By Michael Hewson (Chief Market Analyst at CMC Markets UK)   European markets got off to a poor start to the week yesterday as concerns around sticky inflation, and low growth (stagflation), or recession served to push yields higher, pushing the DAX to its lowest levels since late March, pushing both it and the CAC 40 below the important technical level of the 200-day SMA. Recent economic data is already flashing warning signs over possible stagnation, especially in Europe while US data is proving to be more resilient.   Worries over the property sector in China didn't help sentiment yesterday after it emerged Chinese property group Evergrande said it was struggling to organise a process to restructure its debt, prompting weakness in basic resources. The increase in yields manifested itself in German and French 10-year yields, both of which rose to their highest levels in 12 years, with the DAX feeling the pressure along with the CAC 40, while the FTSE100 slipped to a one week low.   US markets initially opened lower in the face of a similar rise in yields with the S&P500 opening at a 3-month low, as US 10-year yields continued to push to fresh 16-year highs above 4.5%. These initial losses didn't last as US stocks closed higher for the first time in 5 days. The US dollar also made new highs for the year, rising to its best level since 30th November last year as traders bet that the Federal Reserve will keep rates higher for much longer than its counterparts due to the greater resilience of the US economy. The focus this week is on the latest inflation figures from Australia, as well as the core PCE Deflator from the US, as well as the latest flash CPI numbers for September from France, Germany, Spain as well as the wider EU flash number which is due on Friday. This could show the ECB erred a couple of weeks ago when it tightened the rate hike screw further to a record high.   On the data front today the focus will be on US consumer confidence for September, after the sharp fall from July's 117.00 to August's 106.10. Expectations are for a more modest slowdown to 105.50 on the back of the continued rise in gasoline prices which has taken place since the June lows. The late rebound in US markets doesn't look set to translate into today's European open with Asia markets also sliding back on the same combination of stagflation concerns and reports that Chinese property company Evergrande missed a debt payment.   Another warning from ratings agency Moody's about the impact of another government shutdown on the US economy, and its credit rating, didn't help the overall mood, while Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari said he expects another Fed rate rise before the end of the year helping to further boost the US dollar as well as yields.     EUR/USD – slid below the 1.0600 level yesterday potentially opening the prospect of further losses towards the March lows at 1.0515. Currently have resistance at 1.0740, which we need to get above to stabilise and minimise the risk of further weakness.      GBP/USD – slipped to the 1.2190 area, and has since rebounded, however the bias remains for a retest of the 1.2000 area. Only a move back above the 1.2430 area and 200-day SMA stabilises and argues for a return to the 1.2600 area.       EUR/GBP – currently have resistance at the 200-day SMA at 0.8720, which is capping the upside. A break here targets the 0.8800 area, however while below the bias remains for a pullback. If we slip below the 0.8660 area, we could see a move back to the 0.8620 area.     USD/JPY – has continued to climb higher towards the 150.00 area with support currently at the lows last week at 147.20/30. Major support currently at the 146.00 area.     FTSE100 is expected to open at 7,624     DAX is expected to open at 15,405     CAC40 is expected to open at 7,124  
China's Property Debt Crisis, Economic Momentum, and Upcoming Meetings: A Market Analysis

China's Property Debt Crisis, Economic Momentum, and Upcoming Meetings: A Market Analysis

InstaForex Analysis InstaForex Analysis 27.09.2023 14:32
In this market pulse, we delve into the complex terrain of China's property debt overhang, examining the challenges faced by giants like Evergrande. We also assess the current economic momentum, highlighted by positive indicators and upcoming Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) data releases. Moreover, we emphasize the pivotal role of impending crucial meetings, including the Third Plenary Session and the 6th National Financial Work Conference, in shaping China's economic policies.   Key Points: Examining the enormity of China's property debt crisis, including Evergrande's challenges. Highlighting recent signs of recovery and the significance of the upcoming PMI data. Previewing the upcoming Third Plenary Session and 6th National Financial Work Conference. Introduction China Evergrande's ongoing financial troubles and defaults have once again taken center stage, casting a dark cloud over the equity market. Meanwhile, China's economic recovery is showing signs of life, with attention turning to key economic indicators like the Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI). In addition to these economic developments, several crucial meetings on China's economic and financial policies are on the horizon. This article will delve into these topics, providing an analysis of the current situation and what lies ahead. China Property Developer Debt Overhang China Evergrande, one of the nation's largest property developers, has recently made headlines due to its inability to meet regulatory qualifications for issuing new debt. This situation escalated when its mainland unit, Hengda Real Estate Group, failed to make a scheduled payment of RMB4 billion in principal and interest. The broader issue here is the massive debt overhang in the Chinese property sector, totaling RMB60 trillion. A significant portion of this debt, RMB40 trillion, consists of mortgage debts that are relatively less risky for banks as long as the pre-sold units are completed and delivered to buyers. The focus for Chinese authorities is to resolve these pre-sold units to ensure contractors get paid and homebuyers receive their properties. The completion of unfinished housing projects requires substantially additional funds, estimated to be over RMB2 trillion, which may be shared by state-owned enterprises that take over the projects, local governments, and the central government. However, the more problematic area is the RMB20 trillion in property developer debts. It's highly unlikely that China will bail out insolvent property developers. Instead, these developers and their banks will likely sell encumbered projects, along with their loans, to stronger entities, often state-owned enterprises with government backing. The recent regulatory easing on housing demand may stabilize the housing market to some extent. Still, the overhang of housing inventories in lower-tier cities facing population decline will persist for several years. This will lead to more headlines about defaults, restructuring, and liquidation of insolvent developers, causing losses for shareholders, bondholders, banks, and investors in trust and wealth management products tied to property projects. Some trust companies and private equity funds in the shadow banking sector may be subject to losses detrimental to their financial viability. While the banking sector, which holds around 75% of the RMB20 trillion developer debts, has sufficient capital buffers to absorb losses, the extent of the impact will depend on the successful liquidation of housing inventories by insolvent developers to stronger entities, likely brokered by local governments. This process is expected to negatively affect the profitability of banks in China. Economic Momentum and PMI Data Recent economic indicators have shown signs of improvement in the Chinese economy. The Citi China Economic Surprise Index (Figure 1) has rebounded, indicating fewer instances of economic data falling below expectations. As discussed in last week's Market Pulse note, retail sales, industrial production, trade, and inflation data improved in August.    The release today of a bounce in August industrial profit growth to 17.2% YoY (Figure 2), the first monthly year-on-year growth since June of last year, provides additional support for the pick-up in growth found in the industrial production released last week.    
Crucial Upcoming PMI Data and High-Stake Meetings Shape China's Economic Landscape

Crucial Upcoming PMI Data and High-Stake Meetings Shape China's Economic Landscape

InstaForex Analysis InstaForex Analysis 27.09.2023 14:34
Looking ahead, investors are closely watching the upcoming PMI data releases. The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) is set to release Manufacturing and Non-manufacturing PMI data on September 30. The Emerging Industries PMI's rise to 54.0 in September, up from 48.1 in August, has boosted expectations for a Manufacturing PMI above 50 for the first time since March. Non-manufacturing PMI is also anticipated to show growth, driven by infrastructure construction and local government bond issuance. The Caixin Manufacturing PMI and Services PMI are scheduled to release on Sunday, October 1. Bloomberg's survey is projecting the Caixin Manufacturing PMI to increase to 51.2, up from 51.0 in August. Having a higher weight in exporters in the eastern coastal regions of China, the Caixin survey tends to be influenced by the export trend in China. The first 20-day trade data in Korea showed a rebound in trading activities with China and pointed to the potential of a positive surprise in this data. But the fact that the Korean data this September had 2.5 more working days might caution such a conjecture. The Caixin Services PMI is expected to tick up to 52 from 51.8. These PMI indicators serve as timely barometers of economic activity and provide insights into the pace of recovery of the Chinese economy. If they come in higher, it will tend to confirm our base case for a gradual recovery in progress and a tactical rally in the making for Chinese equities. Nonetheless, if the majority of them come in lower than expected or even fall, the equity market will be at risk of making new lows. The upcoming PMI data will be pivotal for the near-term direction of the Hong Kong and mainland Chinese markets. It's worth noting that during this period, the Stock Exchange of Hong Kong will be closed for the National Day holiday on Monday, October 2, while mainland bourses will be closed for six sessions to observe the Mid-autumn festival and the National Day holidays from Friday, September 29 to Friday, October 6, 2023.   Crucial Meetings on the Horizon Looking beyond the immediate economic data, several crucial meetings are on the horizon that will significantly impact China's economic and financial policies. The Third Plenary Session of the 20th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China is expected to convene in late October. This session will address critical economic policies and set the strategic framework for economic development over the next 5 to 10 years. Another important meeting is the 6th National Financial Work Conference, which guides major financial system reforms and addresses critical issues in the financial system. It is held every five years, and the last one was held in 2017. While it was initially slated for 2022, it was postponed and is widely expected to be held in Q4 this year. This conference is likely to cover topics such as deleveraging in the property sector, shadow banking, and local government debts. Additionally, it will likely shape the financial system in ways that focus on serving the real economy, the government’s industrial policies, and comprehensive national security. Additionally, the Central Economic Work Conference in December will review the economic performance of 2023 and begin formulating policies for 2024. These meetings come at a crucial juncture for China's economic trajectory and provide an opportunity for policymakers to address pressing issues and shape the country's economic future.   Closing Thoughts In conclusion, the situation surrounding China Evergrande and the broader property developer debt overhang remains a significant concern. There is no expectation of a policy bailout for property developers, and the focus is on clearing housing inventory and completing pre-sold units. Deleveraging efforts will continue in the property sector, shadow banking, and local government financing vehicles. Recent economic data show tentative signs of a recovery in the Chinese economy. The upcoming PMI data releases will provide further insights into the sustainability of this recovery. Beyond that, the forthcoming critical meetings, such as the Third Plenary Session and the 6th National Financial Work Conference, will play a vital role in shaping China's economic and financial policies. In light of these developments, the base case remains a gradual economic recovery. However, it's important to monitor the evolving situation and be prepared for potential market volatility based on the outcomes of these meetings and economic data. For now, a tactical trade to go long on China and Hong Kong equities for Q4 is intact, but investors should remain vigilant and adaptable in the face of uncertainty.
Crude Oil Eyes 200-DMA Amidst Positive Growth Signals and Inflation Concerns

Soft Australian 3Q23 GDP and Moody's Negative China Outlook Shape Market Sentiment

ING Economics ING Economics 12.12.2023 12:36
Asia Morning Bites Australian 3Q23 GDP comes in soft; Moody's negative China outlook will likely dominate risk sentiment today. Taiwan CPI out later.   Global macro and markets Global markets:  US Treasury markets continued to rally on Tuesday, helped by declines in Eurozone bond yields as one of the ECB’s more hawkish board members (Isabel Schnabel) noted that further hikes were “unlikely”. US yields were then given an additional downward push by some soft JOLTS job opening figures. 2Y Treasury yields fell 5.9bp to 4.577%, while 10Y yields fell 8.8bp to 4.165%. The slightly bigger falls in Eurozone bond yields helped EURUSD to decline to 1.0793 and that has also led AUD to decline to 0.6553, Cable to drop to 1.2593, while the JPY stayed fairly steady at 147.18. As the EURUSD move has more to do with EUR weakness than USD strength, these G-10 moves look unnecessary, and a case could probably be made for these other currencies to appreciate against both the EUR and USD, especially those where rate cuts are not on the agenda (JPY) or will be later and probably less than in the US (AUD). The KRW also weakened on Tuesday, rising back to 1311.20. The IDR was also softer at 15505, as were most of the other Asian FX pairs. There may be a bit of further weakness today, though for the same arguments as for the G-10, the rationale for this is quite weak, and we wouldn’t be totally surprised to see this go the other way. Equities didn’t know which way to turn yesterday, given the weak labour demand figures but the lower bond yields, and the S&P 500 ended the day virtually unchanged. The NASDAQ made a small gain of 0.31%. Chinese stocks were battered by the outlook shift to negative from Moody’s, which pointed to the rising debt levels and higher deficits China is adopting to try to underpin the property sector. Though the decision on Evergrande’s winding up was postponed until January, which could have provided some relief. The Hang Seng fell 1.91% and the CSI 300 fell 1.90%.   G-7 macro:  As mentioned, the JOLTS job openings data showed a large decrease in vacancies, to 8733K in October (for which we already have non-farm payroll data) from 9553K in September. The service sector ISM index was actually a little stronger than in October, rising to 52.7 from 51.8, and the employment subindex rose to 50.7 from 50.2, though this has little correlation with month-on-month directional payrolls trends. After a rare “hit” with its weak reading last month, attention may revert back to the ADP employment data later today.  A 130K  increase is the latest consensus estimate. The consensus for Friday’s non-farm payrolls is higher at 187K, with an unchanged unemployment rate of 3.9%. Outside the US, German factory orders and Eurozone retail sales are the main releases, along with a Bank of Canada rate decision (no change expected to the 5% policy rate).   Australia: 2Q23 GDP slowed from a 0.4%QoQ pace in 2Q23 to only 0.2% in 3Q23, weaker than the 0.5% consensus estimate (ING f 0.3%). A more negative contribution to GDP from net exports in data revealed yesterday was the main clue that the figure was going to undershoot. Yesterday’s RBA no change statement showed no additional sign that the RBA is done hiking rates and merely repeated the previous language. Today’s GDP data slightly increases the probability that rates have peaked – however.   Taiwan:  November CPI inflation should show a further moderation, dropping to 2.80% from 3.05% in October. We don’t see this having any impact on the central bank’s policy rates for the time being though.   What to look out for: Australia GDP and US jobs numbers Australia GDP (6 December) Taiwan CPI inflation (6 December) US ADP employment and trade balance (6 December) Australia trade (7 December) China trade (7 December) Thailand CPI inflation (7 December) US initial jobless claims (7 December) Japan GDP (8 December) India RBI meeting (8 December) Taiwan trade (8 December) US NFP (8 December)
Federal Reserve's Stance: Holding Rates Steady Amidst Market Expectations, with a Cautionary Tone on Overly Aggressive Rate Cut Pricings

China's Economic Pulse: Analyzing Q4 GDP and December Retail Sales Figures - Insights and Expectations

Michael Hewson Michael Hewson 16.01.2024 11:48
China Q4 GDP/Dec retail sales – 17/01 There was some scepticism when China reported Q3 growth of 1.3%, despite evidence over the quarter of weak domestic demand. In the 3-months since then we've seen retail sales show modest improvements in October and November, while industrial production numbers have remained steady. The weak demand in the Chinese economy is already being reflected in headline inflation numbers with both CPI and PPI in deflation, as Chinese authorities wrestle with the problems posed by Evergrande, Country Garden and latterly Zhonghzi. After a slow start to Q4 there was a modest improvement in retail sales while industrial production remained steady at 4.6%. In November we saw a decent uptick in retail sales to 10.1%, however this was still below expectations despite the numbers including Chinese Singles Day sales, and weak comparatives given that a lot of China still hadn't come out of lockdown measures in November 2022. Industrial production was better coming in at 6.6% the best performance since February 2022. For December retail sales are expected to slow again with an increase of 8%, although here again we need to be careful given that Chinese authorities relaxed lockdown measures at that start of December 2022 so the comparatives here could well see a sizeable skew. Industrial production is expected to be unchanged at 6.6%, however Q4 GDP is still expected to slow to 0.9%.       

currency calculator