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Today's Post - https://bahnsen.co/3EicX1X
Following yesterday’s dismal economic data out in China and the largest rate cut there in 3 years (mind you, we are only talking about 15 bps), there was some add-on stress revealed in the real estate and financial markets today. One of China’s larger wealth management and shadow banking firms, with over $138B in assets, missed some repayments on some of its investments and is under review.
It is too early to tell if more financial contagion will occur definitively, and of course, you have a government there that can act if needed, but having managed client capital through the GFC in the US myself, a declining real estate market followed by several cracks like this in the financial system are eerily familiar warning signs and worth following. I do suspect the likely path is continued easing in monetary policy and, eventually, some form of stimulus to revive the Chinese economy, but since I know David will have more insight in this Friday’s Dividend Cafe on the subject, I will leave it there for now.
Interestingly in Asia, however, is Japan’s economic resurgence. Japan’s GDP last quarter was up a shocking 6% q/q on exports (recall how weak the Yen has been), which was the best organic reading since 2015. Going around the horn to the US, we had Fed minutes released from July’s meeting, leaving further potential rate increases on the table and some better-than-expected housing and industrial production numbers out. So what do you get with such a divergent economic paradigm amongst the first, second, and third largest economies of the world?
Links mentioned in this episode:
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Today's Post - https://bahnsen.co/3EicX1X
Following yesterday’s dismal economic data out in China and the largest rate cut there in 3 years (mind you, we are only talking about 15 bps), there was some add-on stress revealed in the real estate and financial markets today. One of China’s larger wealth management and shadow banking firms, with over $138B in assets, missed some repayments on some of its investments and is under review.
It is too early to tell if more financial contagion will occur definitively, and of course, you have a government there that can act if needed, but having managed client capital through the GFC in the US myself, a declining real estate market followed by several cracks like this in the financial system are eerily familiar warning signs and worth following. I do suspect the likely path is continued easing in monetary policy and, eventually, some form of stimulus to revive the Chinese economy, but since I know David will have more insight in this Friday’s Dividend Cafe on the subject, I will leave it there for now.
Interestingly in Asia, however, is Japan’s economic resurgence. Japan’s GDP last quarter was up a shocking 6% q/q on exports (recall how weak the Yen has been), which was the best organic reading since 2015. Going around the horn to the US, we had Fed minutes released from July’s meeting, leaving further potential rate increases on the table and some better-than-expected housing and industrial production numbers out. So what do you get with such a divergent economic paradigm amongst the first, second, and third largest economies of the world?
Links mentioned in this episode:
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