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Fears over China currency exaggerated? (Read 915 times)
bogarde73
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Fears over China currency exaggerated?
Jan 15th, 2016 at 9:07am
 

Why China fears are overblown
James Laurenceson - Business Spectator

The capacity of Australia’s financial markets to see ghosts lurking in China’s economy has reached new heights.

Analysts explain that the main reason $100 billion has been wiped from the value of local shares since the beginning of the year is that China is depreciating its currency, the renminbi (RMB), faster than expected.

And that must mean Chinese authorities are more worried about a growth slowdown than they have admitted.

This conclusion might be plausible were in not for some basic facts. 

For a start, consider that China’s currency hasn’t actually depreciated.


Ask Chinese tourists.

They won’t be hard to find. Over the past 12 months more than one million have visited Australia, up 22 per cent from a year earlier.

Or put the same question to Chinese students. The number enrolled at Australian schools and universities jumped 13 per cent last year.

According to data from the Reserve Bank of Australia, since the end of 2014 China’s currency has appreciated nearly 9 per cent against the Australian dollar.

Don’t think that this is just a quirky local currency story. 

China’s biggest export customer is the EU. Over the same period the renminbi has appreciated 4 per cent against the euro, and 8 per cent against the Japanese yen.

Far from Beijing stealthily trying to rescue its domestic economy through a beggar-thy-neighbour export push, it’s trade-exposed industries in Australia, Europe and Japan that have felt a boost. 

There’s really only one major currency that the renminbi has weakened against and that’s the US dollar. 

And therein lays the source of the confusion.

For decades China set its exchange rate with specific reference to the US dollar. But that approach was ditched last year in a bid to make the RMB more responsive to demand and supply conditions.

What China’s central bank said in December was that they expected the RMB would remain “basically stable” in 2016 against a basket of currencies.

So far this year the China Foreign Exchange Trade System RMB index, which includes a 6 per cent weighting for the Australian dollar, has depreciated by less than one per cent.   

Compared with the end of 2014, it has depreciated just 0.04 per cent. 

With the US increasing interest rates it’s likely that market forces will see the US dollar continue to strengthen against the renminbi and all other major currencies in the year ahead.

What does this mean for Australian investors?

To gauge the health of China’s economy, don’t get too hung up on the bilateral US dollar exchange rate.
There are plenty of other, more informative indicators, even if official GDP data are believed to be overstated.   

Retails sales expanded by 10.6 per cent in November. Online sales were up 34.5 per cent. Express parcel deliveries jumped 48.1 per cent, while air passenger traffic rose 11.2 per cent.

These are the markers of China’s new economy, where consumption accounts for 60 per cent of growth.


The outlook for consumption also remains positive. Last week the Westpac-MNI China Consumer Sentiment Survey reported confidence being up in December compared with November. The current reading is now higher than it was a year ago.

None of this is to say that China’s economy won’t face headwinds. There is ongoing weakness in the old growth engines of fixed asset investment and exports.

But last week the World Bank announced it was still expecting growth of 6.7 per cent growth for China this year. This forecast got relatively little attention amid the palpitations about the stock market.

Put differently, this means that around 50 per cent more purchasing power will be added to China’s economy in 2016 than in 2010.

If that’s what financial markets consider a Chinese hard landing, Australia’s real economy can breathe a sigh of relief.
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perceptions_now
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Re: Fears over China currency exaggerated?
Reply #1 - Jan 15th, 2016 at 3:17pm
 
Oh, I would suggest that Concerns over China are actually quite valid!

That said, there are also a number of other issues, which are also quite concerning & that concern is mounting!
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beer
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Re: Fears over China currency exaggerated?
Reply #2 - Jan 16th, 2016 at 7:56am
 
China has huge political power shifting problem in past 3 years, it is at a decisive stage now.
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bogarde73
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Re: Fears over China currency exaggerated?
Reply #3 - Jan 16th, 2016 at 1:36pm
 
perceptions_now wrote on Jan 15th, 2016 at 3:17pm:
Oh, I would suggest that Concerns over China are actually quite valid!

That said, there are also a number of other issues, which are also quite concerning & that concern is mounting!


I'd be interested to see you demolish his points one by one. Always willing to learn.
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Know the enemies of a civil society by their public behaviour, by their fraudulent claim to be liberal-progressive, by their propensity to lie and, above all, by their attachment to authoritarianism.
 
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perceptions_now
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Re: Fears over China currency exaggerated?
Reply #4 - Jan 16th, 2016 at 2:58pm
 
bogarde73 wrote on Jan 16th, 2016 at 1:36pm:
perceptions_now wrote on Jan 15th, 2016 at 3:17pm:
Oh, I would suggest that Concerns over China are actually quite valid!

That said, there are also a number of other issues, which are also quite concerning & that concern is mounting!


I'd be interested to see you demolish his points one by one. Always willing to learn.


No thanks! There certainly is a general race to the bottom, against the US$, the currency issues were not the main reason for my general comment.

That said, there appears to still be a belief that the old Devalue the currency trick can still work, like it used to, BUT times have changed & it just won't work!

Why? Because there are new drivers of the Global Economy, except those drivers are not driving Growth North, they are driving Growth South!

Those Drivers being -
1) Demographics
2) Energy
3) Climate Change
4) The existing Economy has already been driven over the edge, Too much, with Debt too high & interest rates too low, which means the Global Economy is not now capable of any "bounce Back", as it once did, regularly!

I hope that helps, a little at least?   
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