Thursday, January 7, 2016

China keeps 2014 GDP growth rate unchanged at 7.3%

China keeps 2014 GDP growth rate unchanged at 7.3%

[BEIJING] China kept its annual economic growth rate in 2014 unchanged at 7.3 per cent in its final verification of the data though it revised down the value of gross domestic product slightly, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said on Thursday.
The final revised GDP stood at 63.591 trillion yuan (US$9.65 trillion) in 2014, down 22.9 billion yuan from the previous estimate, as they revised down the size of the services sector.
The NBS reports annual GDP figures in three stages: a preliminary calculation and second and final revisions.
China is set to release 2015 full-year GDP data on Jan 19.
REUTERS

George Soros sees crisis in global markets that echoes 2008

George Soros sees crisis in global markets that echoes 2008

[COLOMBO] Global markets are facing a crisis and investors need to be very cautious, billionaire George Soros told an economic forum in Sri Lanka on Thursday.
China is struggling to find a new growth model and its currency devaluation is transferring problems to the rest of the world, Mr Soros said in Colombo. A return to positive interest rates is a challenge for the developing world, he said, adding that the current environment has similarities to 2008.
Global currency, stock and commodity markets are under fire in the first week of the new year, with a sinking yuan adding to concern about the strength of China's economy as it shifts away from investment and manufacturing toward consumption and services. Almost US$2.5 trillion (S$3.5 trillion) was wiped from the value of global equities this year through Wednesday, and losses deepened in Asia on Thursday as a plunge in Chinese equities halted trade for the rest of the day.
"China has a major adjustment problem," Mr Soros said. "I would say it amounts to a crisis. When I look at the financial markets there is a serious challenge which reminds me of the crisis we had in 2008." Mr Soros, whose hedge-fund firm gained about 20 per cent a year on average from 1969 to 2011, has a net worth of about US$27.3 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. He began his career in New York City in the 1950s and gained a reputation for his investing prowess in 1992 by netting US$1 billion with a bet that the U.K. would be forced to devalue the pound.
Measures of volatility are surging this year. The Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index, known as the fear gauge or the VIX, is up 13 per cent. The Nikkei Stock Average Volatility Index, which measures the cost of protection on Japanese shares, has climbed 43 per cent in 2016 and a Merrill Lynch index of anticipated price swings in Treasury bonds rose 5.7 per cent.
China's Communist Party has pledged to increase the yuan's convertibility by 2020 and to gradually dismantle capital controls. Weakness in the world's second-largest economy remains even after the People's Bank of China has cut interest rates to record lows and authorities pumped hundreds of billions of dollars into the economy. Data this week reinforced a sluggish manufacturing sector.
BLOOMBERG

China lets yuan fall faster, share trading suspended as prices tumble

China lets yuan fall faster, share trading suspended as prices tumble

[SHANGHAI] China accelerated the depreciation of the yuan on Thursday, sending regional currencies and stock markets tumbling as investors feared the Asian giant could trigger competitive currency devaluations from trading partners.
China's stock markets were suspended for the rest of the day less than half an hour after opening as a new circuit-breaking mechanism was tripped for the second time this week.
The People's Bank of China (PBOC) again surprised markets by setting the official midpoint rate on the yuan, also known as the renminbi (RMB), at 6.5646 per dollar, the lowest since March 2011.
That was 0.5 per cent weaker than the day before and the biggest daily drop since last August, when an abrupt near 2 per cent devaluation of the currency also roiled markets.
Regional currencies promptly went into a tailspin. The Australian dollar AUD-D4 , often used by foreign exchange dealers as a liquid proxy for the yuan, fell half a US cent in a blink.
The PBOC's China Foreign Exchange Trade System (CFETS) repeated on Thursday that there was no basis for the yuan's continuous depreciation and that it was stable against a basket of currencies in 2015.
But the central bank's fixings have helped drive the yuan down not just against the dollar this week, but also other major currencies, including a 3.5 per cent fall against the yen and 0.8 per cent against the euro.
That raised concerns that China might be aiming for a competitive devaluation to help its struggling exporters. "That's the fear of the market," said Sim Moh Siong, FX strategist for Bank of Singapore, adding that it was a zero sum game as other currencies weakened in response, and the end result would be greater volatility.
Others in the market were unsure what policy Beijing was pursuing. "Frankly speaking, we are still not quite sure where the PBOC boundary is at the current stage. The fear of the unknown has become the largest risk for RMB in the near term, despite China's sizable current account surplus," said Singapore-based Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation (OCBC).
OCBC noted that against a basket of currencies, the RMB index was still only fractionally down for 2016, despite this week's fixes against the dollar.
ANZ bank said in a note that the PBOC's action would nevertheless "create one-way expectation of RMB depreciation, propelling capital flight and leading to significant financial instability".
This week's slide comes ahead of the expected release later in the day of China's foreign exchange reserve data for December, which traders fear will show a further sharp decline as investors pull money out of the slowing economy.
China's reserves, the world's largest, fell by US$87.2 billion in November to US$3.44 trillion, the lowest level since February 2013 and the third-largest monthly drop on record.
Some fear the yuan's quickening slide suggests the world's second-largest economy is in deepening trouble, though for now economists say there has been no material change in their expectations of a gradual but bumpy slowdown, with no hard landing.
STOCK FRIGHT
A sustained depreciation in the yuan puts pressure on other Asian countries to devalue their currencies to stay competitive with China's massive export machine.
It also makes commodities denominated in US dollars more expensive for Chinese buyers, which could hurt demand and thus further depress commodity prices in a vicious chain reaction.
Equities markets were also notable and immediate casualties, especially domestic Chinese shares.
Shanghai stocks slid 7 per cent to trigger the halt in trading, a repeat performance of Monday's sudden tumble. Japan's Nikkei shed 1.8 per cent in sympathy.
The halt mechanism, intended to calm market volatility, was having the opposite effect, according to a 22-year-old retail investor in Guangzhou surnamed Hu.
He said he bought shares on Wednesday when the market rebounded, but was now trapped by the circuit breaker, which he said was "killing investors" and creating panic.
China's securities regulator also unveiled new rules on Thursday to restrict selling by big shareholders who have been locked into their holdings for six months since Beijing banned them from offloading stocks to arrest a summer market crash.
In rules that take effect on Jan 9, they can't sell more than 1 percent of a listed company's share capital every three months.
The new rules didn't go down well with investors. "This is crazy. Chinese regulators set off on this path in July and they cannot get out of it. They have ruined whatever hope investors still had in the market," said Alberto Forchielli, founder of Mandarin Capital Partners.
REUTERS

Singapore dollar's slide approaching band limit, Barclays says

Singapore dollar's slide approaching band limit, Barclays says

[SINGAPORE] Singapore's dollar slid to a six-year low after China's central bank reduced its reference rate for the yuan by the most since August. Barclays Plc said further declines are set to slow as the island-state's currency is probably close to the bottom of the central bank's policy band.
The Monetary Authority of Singapore guides the local dollar against an undisclosed basket of currencies of its major trading partners and competitors. The currency is "pretty close to the bottom end of the band" based on Barclays' calculations, said Mitul Kotecha, the bank's Singapore-based head of Asia currency and rates strategy.
"The Singapore dollar is one of the currencies that's more susceptible to a depreciation of the yuan," Mr Kotecha said. "I'm a bit more skeptical of further sharp declines in the Singapore dollar given the fact that we're already where we are trading relative to the band."
The local dollar tumbled as much as 0.5 per cent on Thursday to S$1.4431 against the US currency, the weakest level since September 2009. It pared declines to be little changed at S$1.4349 as of 12:15 pm in Singapore amid speculation China's central bank had propped up its currency in the offshore yuan market.
Singapore's central bank intervenes to keep the exchange rate within an unspecified band and changes the slope, width and center of that band when it wants to adjust the pace of appreciation or depreciation of the local dollar.
Analysts predict Singapore's currency will trade at S$1.44 at the end of the first quarter, before weakening to S$1.47 by year-end, according to median estimates in a Bloomberg survey.
BLOOMBERG

China to see a market-based yuan currency mechanism in 2016



China to see a market-based yuan currency mechanism in 2016


[BEIJING] China will continue to proceed with reforms to bring about a market-based yuan currency mechanism this year, the China Foreign Exchange Trade System (CFETS) said on Thursday.
The yuan was stable against a basket of other currencies in 2015, CFETS said in a statement published on its website.
It added that China has ample foreign exchange reserves while there is no basis for the yuan's continuous depreciation. Economic fundamentals will support the yuan in the long term.
REUTERS





China central bank sets yuan midpoint 0.5% weaker, biggest daily fall since Aug devaluation

China central bank sets yuan midpoint 0.5% weaker, biggest daily fall since Aug devaluation

[SHANGHAI] The People's Bank of China set its official midpoint rate at 6.5646 per dollar prior to the market open on Thursday, its weakest level since March 2011.
The central bank also fixed the official guidance rate 0.5 per cent weaker than Wednesday's fix of 6.5314, its biggest daily fall since last August, when Beijing surprised the market with an abrupt near 2 percent devaluation of the Chinese currency.
Beijing has said it is moving towards valuing the yuan's exchange rate on a trade-weighted basis, loosening the Chinese currency's peg to the greenback.
REUTERS

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