February 8: China market moves
TRADE
In January,
- China's trade surplus fell to $20 billion from $50 billion, year-on-year, and
- Imports skyrocketed 35 %, year-on-year, shocking market watchers.
RMB
The RMB ell over 1% today.
- The most it's traded off since August of 2015 devaluation.
And the RMB has been trading below 6.30 now for over a week, even traded briefly at 6.25
- 'Many see 6.20 and 6.25 as very important levels because that's the August of 2015 devaluation - from there you had the August 2015 2% devaluation that unsettled world markets,' according to Bob Savage of TRACK.
Why the weakening? Three reasons, Bob says:
- 'The RMB did not like the trade data at all, and it weakened immediately.'
- 'The news overnight that HNA had a technical default.
- 'The lenders to HNA - Deutsche Bank being probably one of the largest - were immediately under the scope.'
- 'Deutsche Bank shares were hit overnight, and the euro was hit because the banking sector in Europe was under the gun.'
'Overnight, the world has moved a little bit away from its U.S.-centric obsession about equity volatility in the United States and around the world to what's going on in China,' says Bob Savage, CEO of TRACK and member of the soon-to-be-launched China Analyst Network.
Specifically:
- China's falling trade surplus and
- The Renminbi's weakening on the trade news and on the news of HNA's credit technical default.
Part one: trade
'There's an obsession with watching what goes on withChinese trade. China trade is a barometer for global demand for goods. Anychange in that trade balance is an indication that something's changing there.'
'And, China's falling trade surplus shocked people. InJanuary, China's trade surplus fell to $20 billion from $50 billion, andimports skyrocketed 35 %, year-on-year. There are two explanations for it.'
'First is the more boring seasonal effect of the ChineseLunar New Year holiday, where people realize they'll need goods over Februaryand March but that they're going to be on holiday for a lot of February - so, they better just get the stuff in in January.Some of the imported goods came that way.'
- Interestingly, 'a lot of theses imports are in commoditiesand, strangely enough, that just means that Chinese inventory holdings ofcommodity goods went up.'
- That turned commodities prices bearish today. 'People sawthat the Chinese bought a lot of commodities in January, and it means thatthey're not going to buy a lot in February or probably March as they draw downthose inventories.'
Second - and more important in the long run for its potential impact on China's current account - is this.
- 'Overall there's been a 3-1/2% appreciation of the RMB against the dollar.' That's made imports cheaper.
- 'And guess what the Chinese did? They imported more goods, because they felt richer.'
- 'Now, the United States knows a lot about how when you make consumers feel richer with cheaper imports: they import more goods and the trade deficit gets worse.'
- Why is this important? 'China wants to stoke domestic demand,' to become a consumer-driven economy.
- But it succeeds, this 'has an implication for whether or not China continues to be a current account surplus country.'
- If China is 'truly successful in creating domestic consumer demand - like that in Europe, Japan and the United States - then, it's probably going to start running a current account deficit, unless it actually targets trade.'
1. Part one: why China's trade surplus is down
'Overnight, the world has moved a little bit away from its U.S.-centric obsession about equity volatility in the United States and around the world to what's going on in China,' says Bob Savage, CEO of TRACK and member of the soon-to-be-launched China Analyst Network.
Specifically:
China's falling trade surplus andThe Renminbi's weakening on the trade news and on the news of HNA's credit technical default.
Part one: trade
'There's an obsession with watching what goes on with Chinese trade. China trade is a barometer for global demand for goods. Any change in that trade balance is an indication that something's changing there.'
'And, China's falling trade surplus shocked people. In January, China's trade surplus fell to $20 billion from $50 billion, and imports skyrocketed 35 %, year-on-year. There are two explanations for it.'
'First is the more boring seasonal effect of the Chinese Lunar New Year holiday, where people realize they'll need goods over February and March but that they're going to be on holiday for a lot of February - so, they better just get the stuff in in January. Some of the imported goods came that way.'
Interestingly, 'a lot of theses imports are in commodities and, strangely enough, that just means that Chinese inventory holdings of commodity goods went up.'That turned commodities prices bearish today. 'People saw that the Chinese bought a lot of commodities in January, and it means that they're not going to buy a lot in February or probably March as they draw down those inventories.'
Second - and more important in the long run for its potential impact on China's current account - is this.
'Overall there's been a 3-1/2% appreciation of the RMB against the dollar.' That's made imports cheaper.'And guess what the Chinese did? They imported more goods, because they felt richer.''Now, the United States knows a lot about how when you make consumers feel richer with cheaper imports: they import more goods and the trade deficit gets worse.'Why is this important? 'China wants to stoke domestic demand,' to become a consumer-driven economy. But it succeeds, this 'has an implication for whether or not China continues to be a current account surplus country.'If China is 'truly successful in creating domestic consumer demand - like that in Europe, Japan and the United States - then, it's probably going to start running a current account deficit, unless it actually targets trade.'
2. Part 2: how far will will the RMB weaken?
'Part two is about the Renminbi today and is the more important story today.'
'The RMB did not like the trade data at all, and it weakened immediately, falling more than 1% - even though the official rate setting China does every morning suggested that the RMB would, instead, be slightly stronger today.'
'This is the most it's traded off since August of 2015. There are two other reasons for this, besides the trade numbers.'
'First, the news overnight that HNA had had a technical default.'
'The lenders to HNA - Deutsche Bank being probably one of the largest - were immediately under the scope.' Deutsche Bank shares were hit overnight, and the euro was hit because the banking sector in Europe was under the gun.'
Second, the Chinese were looking at where the renmimbi has traded - it's been below 6.30 now for over a week, and it looked like yesterday it was trading at 6.25 for a brief shining moment.'
'This is important because many see 6.20 and 6.25 as very critical levels.'Why? 'Because that's the August 2015 devaluation level - and from there you had the 2% devaluation that unsettled the world.''It is also important because that's the also level where many thought that Chinese export competitiveness was under threat by a too strong RMB.'
'So, after the trade number and after the HNA default, which is emphasizes the need for cheap money for the rollover debt, the issue is that RMB weakness is now putting in a floor below 6.30 - that something the market is going to really watch closely.'
'And, if we think that the RMB could go to 6.40 or 6.50 again, then that has implications for the rest of the foreign exchange world, particularly Korea and Europe.'
What to watch for. 'Today was an exciting day. I'm paying a lot of attention to see if 630 is the new bottom for the dollar-RMB relationship, and to see if there's going to be more concern about:
'Higher interest rates, and 'Debt rollover of some of the more leveraged corporations in China.'