البورصةBourseBolsa股市AktienBorsaFinansФорексFXFinançasGiełdaΧρηματιστήριοBeursBörsPörssi금융
May 16, 2012 05:04PM GMT
     
 
  New York   London   Tokyo 
   
 

Is China Losing Its Steam?

By   |  Market Overview  |  Feb 13, 2012 04:56AM GMT  |  1 Comment
 
The latest January trade data of China showed the broadest measure of China's global trade surplus fell to a several-year low to around 2.7% of GDP.  Export also collapsed to a negative 0.5% year-over-year in January, down from +13.4% in December.  Imports looked even more dire with a 15.3% year-over-year decline.

China Trade Vacation
China Trade Vacation


Earlier this month, the IMF already issued a report on China stating that real estate remains the greatest domestic risk to China, and in the most sever scenario, China's growth could drop to 4%, less than half of the trend for the past decade.  According to the IMF, in this scenario, a downturn of the property market causes a sizable portion of credit to local government financial platforms, the real estate sector, and small and medium enterprises to become impaired.

IMF China Macro Scenario
 IMF China Macro Scenario


With major trade partners battered by recession, the new trade data seem to give credence to a China hard-landing crash scenario by some forecasters.  However, it remains difficult to conclude a definitive pattern yet as the Chinese Lunar New Year fell in January this year (vs. February in 2011) distorting the prior year and month-on-month comparison.

Furthermore, a look at the commodity imports volume also revealed a more upbeat picture. FT.com reported that based on preliminary customs data, China’s copper imports were 413,964 tonnes, an increase of 13.6% from January 2011. Crude oil imports also rose to 23.4m tonnes, equivalent to 5.5m barrels a day, compared to an average of 5.1m barrels a day last year.  In the next couple of years, many expect China may well overtake the U.S. as the world's biggest importer of oil.

Despite the mixed bag of data points and opinions, one thing we could say for certain is that the era of consecutive annual double-digit Chinese GDP growth  has most likely come and gone.  

China is starting to shift from the construction infrastructure growth stimulus model like the one implemented in post-2008 financial crisis, to soft infrastructure—welfare, education, and alternative energy, etc.—to encourage domestic consumption, which is much harder to execute and much slower to see the results showing in the GDP.

Furthermore, China is in the year of leadership transition which means less drastic and slow policy change by the incumbents as well as the new leaders, which would also translate into slower growth, at least in 2012 and into the first half of next year.  Meanwhile, the new leadership lineup, with a diverse and prestigious educational and professional background, is quite positive for China's future.

For now, the IMF expects the growth of China to still stay above 8% in 2012-13 under its base scenario, noting that "China has room for a countervailing fiscal response, and should use that space."

2012.1.30.ChinaGrowthPerPt
 2012.1.30.ChinaGrowthPerPt


As the chart above from the Center for Geoeconomic Studies points out, with its huge population, production and consumption, the Chinese economy is now so large that it will continue to make a significantly rising contribution to global growth even if its own growth rate continues to fall off moderately.

Disclaimer: Fusion Media would like to remind you that the data contained in this website is not necessarily real-time nor accurate. All CFDs (stocks, indexes, futures) and Forex prices are not provided by exchanges but rather by market makers, and so prices may not be accurate and may differ from the actual market price, meaning prices are indicative and not appropriate for trading purposes. Therefore Fusion Media doesn`t bear any responsibility for any trading losses you might incur as a result of using this data .

Fusion Media or anyone involved with Fusion Media will not accept any liability for loss or damage as a result of reliance on the information including data, quotes, charts and buy/sell signals contained within this website. Please be fully informed regarding the risks and costs associated with trading the financial markets, it is one of the riskiest investment forms possible.

Add a Comment

 
Comments
Joe Bucks
Joe Bucks   Feb 13, 2012 09:21PM GMT
This is so TRUE. This is actually the world main concern - even more than Europe - slowness of Chinese economy - which already started in my opinion. Good Job Forexpros for bringing Econmatters materials
  Reply
 
 
 

Successfully Reported

Thank you. This comment has been flagged for a moderator.
_touchLoadingMsg
 
 
CFDs Quotes
 SPX 500 Futures1329.95+1.70+0.13%  
 NQ 100 Futures2576.10-2.15-0.08%  
 US 3012653.50+21.50+0.17%  
 DAX6384.26-16.80-0.26%  
 UK 1005405.25-32.37-0.60%  
 Japan 2258801.17-99.57-1.12%  
 US Dollar Index81.48+0.04+0.05%  
CFDs Quotes
 Gold1540.75-16.35-1.05%  
 Silver27.435-0.645-2.30%  
 Copper3.478-0.039-1.11%  
 Crude Oil93.22-0.77-0.81%  
 Natural Gas2.595+0.096+3.82%  
 US Cotton No.277.69-1.47-1.86%  
 US Coffee C177.18-0.08-0.04%  
 
 EUR/USD1.2732+0.0003+0.02%  
 GBP/USD1.5933-0.0061-0.38%  
 USD/JPY80.27+0.08+0.10%  
 USD/CHF0.9434-0.0002-0.02%  
 AUD/USD0.9933-0.0003-0.03%  
 USD/CAD1.0103+0.0031+0.31%  
 EUR/CHF1.2012+0.0002+0.02%  
CFDs Quotes
 Euro Bund143.28-0.15-0.10%  
 Euro BTP99.94+0.53+0.53%  
 Euro BOBL125.925-0.080-0.06%  
 UK Gilt118.33+0.14+0.12%  
 US 2 YR T-Note110.23-0.02-0.02%  
 US 10 YR T-Note133.37-0.06-0.04%  
 US 30 YR T-Bond146.45-0.12-0.08%  
Recent Activity
Central Banks Rates
  Central Banks Interest Rates Next Meeting  
 
  FED0.00%-0.250%Jun 20, 2012 
  ECB1.000%Jun 07, 2012 
  BOE0.500%Jun 07, 2012 
  SNB0.000%Jun 14, 2012 
  RBA3.750%Jun 05, 2012 
  BOC1.000%Jun 05, 2012 
  RBNZ2.500%Jun 13, 2012 
  BOJ0.100%May 23, 2012