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What’s *Really* Going On In China?

By |2020-04-17T16:29:12-04:00April 17th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Questioning the veracity of Chinese estimates (for anything) has always been something of an amateur sport. For a stat like real GDP, everyone “knows” that it is managed. In a complex world where an economic system for a billion and a half is incomprehensibly unpredictable, there’s really no other way to always hit your government’s mark (unless the Chinese are [...]

PBOC’s Got A Lot To Juggle

By |2020-01-29T19:23:21-05:00January 29th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

While China’s coronavirus outbreak dominates Western media attention, the Chinese economy has been off for its Golden Week New Year celebrations. Unfortunate timing, to say the least. While global markets have been digesting the latest developments, domestic markets in China have been closed. Nobody really knows how they will reopen on Monday. As a consequence, the People’s Bank of China [...]

China’s Financial Stability: A Squeeze and a Strangle

By |2019-11-26T16:44:18-05:00November 26th, 2019|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I do get a big kick out of the way Communists over in China announce how they are dealing with their enormous problems especially as they may be getting worse. Each month, for example, the country's National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) will publish figures on retail sales or industrial production at record lows but in the opening paragraphs the text [...]

The Fed and PBOC: Joined At The Zoo

By |2019-10-25T12:48:35-04:00October 25th, 2019|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Federal Reserve wasn’t the only major central bank conducting open market operations (OMO’s) this week. On the other side of the Pacific, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) had been, too. Big ones. And in both places, nobody really seems to know what to make of them even though they are actually connected to the same offshore dollar problem. [...]

The China Conundrum

By |2019-09-30T12:30:31-04:00September 25th, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It seems as if we’ve found one of those interim periods that often accompany times of uncertainty. Markets, stocks as well as bonds, are in a wait-and-see mode. Either the next shoe drops, as is feared, or the grand response works, as is widely hoped. Which way are the risks perhaps rebalancing? The global downturn that developed late last year [...]

China Nastier Number Four

By |2019-09-16T13:38:36-04:00September 16th, 2019|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Officials in China seem to be taking a page out of Mario Draghi’s playbook. Before Europe was pushed to the bring of recession, the President of Europe’s central bank would downplay any weakness in the European economy. In 2018 especially, Draghi frequently referred to 2017 as if it was something special. No cause for concern, he reassured, any softening was [...]

Dollar (In) Demand

By |2019-09-11T12:32:45-04:00September 11th, 2019|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The last time was bad, no getting around it. From the end of 2014 until the first months of 2016, the Chinese economy was in a perilous state. Dramatic weakness had emerged which had seemed impossible to reconcile with conventions about the country. Committed to growth over everything, and I mean everything, China was the one country the world thought [...]

China’s Next Warning

By |2019-09-06T16:03:51-04:00September 6th, 2019|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Chinese monetary authorities announced today what will be for some of its banks a seventh round of “stimulus.” For the largest institutions, it will "only" be their sixth and the first one since January 2019. The PBOC has decided it is time for more RRR cuts. Effective September 16, the ratio all banks are required to hold of reserves will [...]

China Throws More ‘Stimulus’ At The Wall

By |2019-08-27T12:31:19-04:00August 27th, 2019|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Earlier this year, Chinese authorities reduced the VAT tax the government charges auto manufacturers. Intended to boost consumption, the levy was reduced from 16% to 13% in the hope automakers would pass along the savings to consumers. Many if not most manufacturers did. The results were immediate, and fleeting. In the month of March 2019, total car sales fell “only” [...]

The Fingerprints of Bumbling (China)

By |2019-08-21T17:46:46-04:00August 21st, 2019|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

For a cabal of superpatient supergeniuses, the Chinese tend to play with fire quite often. According to many, the Communists have perfected the art of technocracy and are merely waiting out the impetuously free West. The dollar system will destroy itself (there’s the kernel of truth) allowing a perfectly positioned China to swoop in and rescue the global economy with [...]

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