Asian Markets Await Detailed Plans After Politburo Pledges Support for China's Economy

Assessing the Future of Aluminium: Key Areas to Watch

Asia Morning Bites

Politburo pledges support for China's economy - we await detailed plans.

 

Global Macro and Markets

  • Global markets:  US equity markets made small gains yesterday, though the price action was far from conclusive. The S&P settled 0.4% higher than the previous day while the NASDAQ rose just 0.19%. Chinese stocks fell. The Hang Seng was down 2.13% and the CSI 300 fell 0.44%. That might change today after a Chinese Politburo meeting yesterday vowed to provide more aid for the property sector as well as boost consumption and tackle local government debt issues. Equity futures are positive, but we will reserve judgement until we hear some details. We have had plenty of vague promises already, which don’t amount to a great deal so far. US Treasury yields seem to have decided that this week’s FOMC meeting will be hawkish, and 2Y yields jumped up 8.2bp to 4.919% yesterday. The yield on 10Y bonds rose just 3.8bp to 3.872%. EURUSD fell again yesterday, dropping to 1.1063. The AUD was flat at 0.6734, Cable dipped to 1.2816, and the JPY remained stable at 141.59. Asian FX didn’t move much yesterday. The TWD fell 0.39% after industrial production fell slightly more than expected. At the other end of the spectrum, the KRW made gains of 0.28%. The CNY was unchanged.
  • G-7 macro:  PMI data yesterday was weaker across much of the Eurozone, and the aggregate composite PMI dropped a full point to 48.9, with very weak manufacturing (42.7 from 43.4) and a slowdown in service sector growth (51.5 from 53.7). The equivalent US series showed a smaller manufacturing contraction (49.0) but also showed service sector growth slowing (52.4 from 54.4). Today, Germany’s Ifo survey will add more detail on the German situation. The US releases house price data (S&P CoreLogic numbers as well as FHFA data). And the US Conference Board releases its July confidence data.
  • South Korea: Korea’s real GDP rose 0.6% QoQ sa in 2Q23 (vs 0.3% in 1Q23, 0.5% market consensus). 2QGDP was up from the previous quarter and slightly higher than the market consensus, but the details were quite disappointing. Net exports contributed to the growth (+1.3pt) but it was mainly because the contraction of imports (-4.2%) was deeper than that of exports (-1.8%). Looking ahead, we think that GDP in 2H23 will slow down again, as forward-looking data for domestic demand indicates a further deterioration. Please see our 2H23 outlook details here. 

    We think today’s data should be a concern for the Bank of Korea as exports remain sluggish amid expectations of a further worsening of domestic growth. Also, this year’s fiscal support is likely to remain weak, considering the tax revenue deficit and normalization of covid related fiscal spending. Thus, the BoK’s policy focus will gradually shift from inflation to growth over the next few months as we expect inflation to stay in the 2% range most of the time in 2H23.

  • Indonesia:  Bank Indonesia meets today to decide on policy.  BI is widely expected to keep rates untouched at 5.75% to help shore up the IDR and ensure FX stability.  Previous dovish comments from BI Governor Warjiyo suggesting rate cuts could be considered have been set aside for now and we could see an extended pause from BI with any rate cut only considered later on.

 

 

What to look out for: Central bank decisions

  • Bank Indonesia policy meeting (25 July)

  • Hong Kong trade (25 July)

  • US Conference board consumer confidence (25 July)

  • Australia CPI (26 July)

  • Singapore industrial production (26 July)

  • US new home sales (26 July)

  • US FOMC decision (27 July)

  • China industrial profits (27 July)

  • ECB policy decision (27 July)

  • US personal consumption, durable goods orders initial jobless claims (27 July)

  • South Korea industrial production (28 July)

  • Japan Tokyo CPI and BoJ policy (28 July)

  • Australia PPI (28 July)

  • US personal spending, core PCE, University of Michigan sentiment (28 July)

Assessing the Future of Aluminium: Key Areas to Watch

ING Economics

INGs global economists and strategists tell you whats happening and is likely to happen in the world of global markets.

Our analysis and forecasts will help you respond and stay a step ahead in the world of macroeconomics, central banks, FX, commodities and everything else in between. Visit ING.com.

Follow ING Economics on social media:

Twitter | LinkedIn