“It’ "It's so bad, it’s good”... betting on fiscal stimulus....Insane!
China’s
Slowdown Is So Bad, the Market Is Cheering
Data
released on Thursday by the world’s second-largest economy showed
the slowdown that’s been underway since late last year is
accelerating. The rebound that most economists had expected in China
in the second half of the year following rate cuts in June and July
has failed to materialize.
CNBC,
9
August, 2012
But
rather than being glum, investors are betting on still more stimulus,
propelling stocks and the Australian dollar higher on Thursday
“It’s
one of these situations where it’s so bad, it’s good,” John
Woods, Chief Investment Strategist for Asia Pacific at Citi Private
Banking told CNBC’s “Worldwide Exchange”. “The numbers were
pretty lackluster… there were some signs, in my view of stability,
but little in the way of recovery.”
China’s
Shanghai Composite finished up 0.6 percent on Thursday after data
showed inflation fell to a 30-month low and industrial production
dropped to the lowest in just over three-years. Retail sales numbers
also missed expectations.
The
numbers are prompting some bears to grow more confident that the
much-feared “hard landing” scenario for China is finally
underway.
Patrick
Chovanec, Associate Professor at Tsinghua University’s School of
Economics and Management, told CNBC on Thursday that China’s
economy is, in reality, probably growing at about 4 to 5 percent
right now. Growth of around 5 percent or below, is seen by many
economists as a “recession” in China’s case.
Economists
and strategists expect more rate cuts as well as cuts in the reserve
requirement ratio (RRR) but they also point out that the window for
more monetary stimulus may be closing, as higher food prices are
likely to lead to an acceleration in inflation later this year,
limiting the room to manoeuvre.
“We
as a house are expecting another rate cut soon and another couple of
RRR cuts soon in order to support this underlying domestic demand
story,” Woods said.
Fiscal
Stimulus Next?
But
incremental rate cuts may not do the trick anymore and Jing Ulrich,
Chairman of Global Markets, China at JPMorgan says policymakers will
have to “get much more creative to boost the economy.”
Most
analysts don’t expect China to go in for another big stimulus
package along the lines of its 2008-2009 program. At the time, China
announced spending worth $586 billion or around 14 percent of its
GDP.
That
spending is blamed for many of China’s economic problems in
subsequent years, including local government debt and over-investment
in housing and higher inflation.
But
Ulrich says China could cut taxes much more aggressively to support
domestic demand.
“China
is in a unique position because it does have a very strong financial
and fiscal position. The central government has a very strong tax
intake, it can afford tax reductions, while other governments
cannot,” Ulrich said.
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