### Summary
The blog emphasizes that the war on inflation has been won, with the Consumer Price Index (CPI) showing a 12-month inflation rate of +3.3%. However, BLS's imputation of shelter costs using lagged data means that the CPI would be significantly below the Fed's target of 2%. The market believes that the current Fed Funds rate will remain unchanged for the rest of the year.
### Facts
- The economists at three Regional Federal Reserve Banks believe that a recession is coming, despite the official forecast of "no recession" from the Fed. The probability of recession is higher than during the last two recessions.
- The Conference Board's Leading Economic Indicators (LEI) have been negative for 16 consecutive months, which has a 100% track record in predicting recessions.
- The freight industry is experiencing a recession, with the Cass Freight Index down -8.9% over the year. Housing is also struggling, with mortgage loan applications at 30-year lows and significant declines in new and existing home sales.
- Seasonally adjusted retail sales for July were +0.7%, but the actual raw data fell -0.4% from June to July. The weak data suggests a different story than what the seasonally adjusted numbers portray.
- Home Depot, Target, and Walmart reported lower Q2 revenues, with general merchandise sales at Walmart contracting.
- Industrial Production rose 1.0% in July, driven by utility output and auto production. However, the seasonal adjustment may be questionable.
- Inflation rates in developed countries are just above 2%, with China experiencing deflation. One-year inflation expectations are rapidly falling, which is positive for controlling inflation.
- China's economy is faltering, with industrial production and retail sales declining. Q2 real GDP growth is anemic, and the crisis in the real estate sector is worsening. China's struggles will have a negative impact on the global economy and its major trading partners.
### Emoji
- 📉: Recession
- 📊: Economic indicators
- 🚂: Freight industry
- 🏘️: Housing market
- 🛍️: Retail sales
- 🏭: Industrial production
- 💰: Inflation
- 🇨🇳: China's economy
- 📉💼: Global economy
### Summary
The upcoming Jackson Hole Symposium is expected to deliver a hawkish but cautious message from the Fed chair, with a focus on the strong US economy, resilient US consumer, and persistent inflation.
### Facts
- 📉 Last year, the markets experienced a major selloff following the Fed chair's unexpectedly hawkish speech at Jackson Hole.
- 💪 This year, the markets are pessimistic due to the strong US economic numbers, including a predicted 5.8% growth for Q3.
- 🎙️ The Fed chair will likely discuss the possibility of a November rate hike but may roil the markets if he mentions further rate hikes.
- 🌐 The slowdown of China's economy is a concern as it is the second-largest economy globally, and reduced outlooks for Chinese GDP are being reported by major institutions.
- 💼 China's high levels of local government debt and shadow banking pose a risk of contagion, with real estate and shadow bank crises being the main focus.
- 📉 A selloff in China could lead to an emerging market selloff, but India may experience a heavier selloff due to the significant amount of money investors have made there.
- 🌍 The opaque nature of China's government and lack of data make it challenging to fully understand the depth of the country's economic issues.
### Summary
The Chinese economy has slipped into deflationary mode, with retail sales, industrial production, and exports all missing forecasts. Shrinking domestic demand and a debt-fueled housing crisis are the main causes behind this slowdown.
### Facts
- 📉 Retail sales in July grew by 2.5% year-on-year, compared to 3.1% in June.
- 🏭 Value-added industrial output expanded by 3.7% y-o-y, slowing from 4.4% growth in June.
- 📉 China's exports fell by 14.5% in July compared to the previous year, and imports dropped 12.4%.
- 💼 Overall unemployment rate rose to 5.3% in July, with youth unemployment at a record 21.3% in June.
- 📉 Consumer Price Index-based inflation dropped to (-)0.3%, indicating a deflationary situation.
- 🏢 China's debt is estimated at 282% of GDP, higher than that of the US.
### Causes of the slowdown
- The debt-fueled housing sector collapse, which contributes to 30% of China's GDP.
- Stringent zero-Covid strategy and lockdown measures that stifled the domestic economy and disrupted global supply chains.
- Geopolitical tensions and crackdowns on the tech sector, resulting in revenue losses and job cuts.
### Reaction of global markets
- The S&P 500 fell 1.2% following the grim Chinese data.
- US Treasury Secretary warns China's slowing economy is a risk factor for the US economy.
- Japanese stocks and the Indian Nifty were also impacted.
- China's central bank cut its benchmark lending rate, but investors were hoping for more significant stimulus measures.
### Global market concerns
- China's struggle to achieve the 5% growth target may impact global demand.
- China is the world's largest manufacturing economy and consumer of key commodities.
- A slowdown in China could affect global growth, with the IMF's forecast of 35% growth contribution by China seeming unlikely.
### Impact on India
- India's aim to compete with China in the global supply chain could benefit if Chinese exports decline.
- However, if China cuts back on commodity production due to slowing domestic demand, it may push commodity prices higher.
### Summary
The global economy is showing signs of decoupling, with the US economy remaining strong and China's economy disappointing at the margin. The recent data suggests that the US economy is resilient, with consumption and other indicators pointing in a positive direction. However, there are concerns about the bear steepening of the US curve and the repricing of the long end of the curve. In contrast, China's economy continues to struggle, with weak data and monetary policy easing. Japan has surprised with positive data, but there are questions about whether the current inflation shift will lead to tighter monetary policy. Overall, there are concerns about a potential global economic recession and its impact on various economies.
### Facts
- 💰 Despite the decoupling of the US and China economies, concerns remain about the negative impact of a China slowdown on global growth.
- 💹 Recent data show that the US economy, particularly consumption, remains resilient.
- 🔒 The bear steepening of the US curve and the repricing of the long end of the curve are causing concerns.
- 🇨🇳 In China, weak data on consumption and investment and declining house prices continue to affect the economy. The PBoC has eased monetary policy.
- 🇯🇵 Japan's 2Q data surprised with strong export growth, but there are concerns about the impact of a potential inflation shift on global yields.
- 🌍 The global economy is at risk of recession, with concerns about the impact on emerging market economies and the US economy.
### Summary
The People's Bank of China is expected to cut interest rates, but may need to take a larger action to calm the uncertainty in the market. Other factors like the US Federal Reserve's Jackson Hole Symposium and the BRICS summit will also impact investor sentiment.
### Facts
- 💰 The People's Bank of China is expected to cut interest rates to soothe market concerns.
- 💼 Bank of Korea and Bank Indonesia are expected to keep interest rates on hold this week.
- 🌍 The US Federal Reserve's Jackson Hole Symposium and the BRICS summit will affect investor thinking.
- 📉 Chinese policymakers' conservative nature may result in more aggressive moves in the interest rate cut.
- 🔒 The currency is already weak and vulnerable, posing a risk to further cuts.
- 📉 Economists are lowering Chinese GDP growth forecasts, doubting the country will achieve its 2023 goal.
- 🏘️ The real estate crisis and the scale of indebtedness raise questions about the stability of the shadow banking system.
- 🔧 Beijing is taking steps to boost confidence, but measures seem insufficient.
- 📉 Chinese blue chip stocks have decreased by 6% in the last two weeks.
- 🌐 Global markets are facing a deteriorating backdrop, with the dollar surging, US Treasury yields rising, and stock markets experiencing instability.
- 🗓️ Key developments on Monday include China's interest rate decision, Thailand's Q2 GDP, and Hong Kong's July inflation.
China's economy, which has been a model of growth for the past 40 years, is facing deep distress and its long era of rapid economic expansion may be coming to an end, marked by slow growth, unfavorable demographics, and a growing divide with the US and its allies, according to the Wall Street Journal.
The blog emphasizes that the war on inflation has been won and that a recession is coming, as indicated by various indicators such as CPI, recession probabilities, freight industry performance, and weak retail sales. The post also highlights the struggles in China's economy and suggests that investors should buy bonds.
China's economy has slipped into deflation for the first time in two years, raising concerns about its post-pandemic recovery and drawing comparisons to Japan's struggles with stagnant growth and deflation in the 1990s, as China faces challenges in its property sector and a need to shift towards consumer spending.
The Federal Reserve faces new questions as the U.S. economy continues to perform well despite high interest rates, prompting economists to believe a "soft landing" is possible, with optimism rising for an acceleration of growth and a more sustainable post-pandemic economy.
China's economy is facing challenges with slowing growth, rising debt, tumbling stock markets, and a property sector crisis, and some analysts believe that heavy-handed government intervention and a lack of confidence are underlying causes that cannot be easily fixed. However, others argue that China's problems are solvable and that it remains a superpower despite its considerable problems.
China's economy is struggling and facing a lurching from one economic challenge to the next due to failures in economic policy and the centralization of power under President Xi Jinping, which is causing bad decision-making and a decline in living standards.
China's unexpected economic slowdown, driven by excessive investment in the property sector and local government spending, is leading experts to question whether a collapse is imminent, although they believe a sudden collapse is unlikely due to China's controlled financial system; however, the slowdown will have implications for global growth and emerging markets, particularly if the U.S. enters a recession next year.
China's economic struggles, including a real estate slump, high youth unemployment, and rising tensions with the West, could lead to deflation and sluggish growth, potentially impacting the global economy and causing a "new normal" of slower GDP growth worldwide.
The economy is experiencing a soft landing, but the long-term consequences of easy money policies are still uncertain, with bankruptcies and a potential shakeout in office real estate looming.
China's economy will struggle with low growth under 5% through 2024, leading to a "structural hard landing" due to tight monetary policy, disappointing economic reopening, and challenges in real estate and stock markets, according to TS Lombard strategists.
The U.S. economy may achieve a soft landing, as strong labor market, cooling inflation, and consumer savings support economic health and mitigate the risk of a recession, despite the rise in interest rates.
China's failure to restructure its economy according to President Xi Jinping's bold reform plans has raised concerns about the country's future, with the possibility of a financial or economic crisis looming and a slow drift towards stagnation being the most likely outcome. The three potential paths for China include a swift, painful crisis; a gradual winding down of excesses at the expense of growth; or a switch to a consumer-led model with structural reforms that bring short-term pain but lead to a faster and stronger emergence.
China's trade and inflation data for the week are expected to show a fragile economic recovery, leading policymakers to consider further stimulus measures, although the effects of recent policy measures may take some time to be reflected in the data.
China's economic boom, once seen as a miracle, now appears to be a mirage due to failed reforms, an outdated reliance on old economic models, and a growing debt burden, raising concerns about the nation's economic future and the potential for a financial crisis.
The prospect of a prolonged economic slump in China poses a serious threat to global growth, potentially changing fundamental aspects of the global economy, affecting debt markets and supply chains, and impacting emerging markets and the United States.
Despite recent optimism around the U.S. economy, Deutsche Bank analysts believe that a recession is more likely than a "soft landing" as the Federal Reserve tightens monetary conditions to curb inflation.
Australia's economy may not experience a soft landing, according to Treasurer Jim Chalmers, due to potential risks such as China's slowing economy and a slump in household consumption resulting from rising interest rates.
S&P Global's chief economist, Paul Gruenwald, discusses soft economic landings, sticky inflation, the dash to decarbonize, and the emergence of India as key subjects of concern in the global economy.
China's foreign ministry rejects claims by US President Joe Biden that its economy is faltering and asserts that its economy is resilient and has not collapsed, stating that it has great potential for sustained and healthy development.
Despite economists' hopes for a "soft landing" of the economy, signs such as inflation and uncertain variables make it difficult to determine whether the U.S. economy has achieved this outcome.
Signs of improvement in China's economy, such as improving credit demand and easing deflationary pressures, may not be enough to stabilize the economy due to bigger concerns of decreasing affordability, tight wages, and rising costs that have not been addressed. A comprehensive policy revamp may be necessary for China's economy to recover.
China's economic data for August shows a mixed picture, with retail sales and production on the rise, property investment declining, and the urban jobless rate ticking downward, leading experts to believe that while there may be modest improvements in growth, a strong recovery is still unlikely.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen believes that the U.S. economy is on a path of a "soft-landing" and can withstand near-term risks, including a United Auto Workers strike, a government shutdown threat, a resumption of student loan payments, and spillovers from China's economic issues.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell indicates that while policymakers project a "soft landing" for the US economy, he does not confirm it as a baseline expectation due to external factors beyond their control such as the autoworker strike, government shutdown, and higher borrowing costs.
China's economy showed positive signs of recovery in August, with an increase in industrial output, retail sales, and consumer inflation, indicating resilience despite concerns of "stagnation" or "collapse" in Western media reports; willingness to spend also recovered, with an increase in residents' income, per capita consumption spending, and domestic tourism; furthermore, China's exports remained resilient, with a steady increase in the export share of intermediate and capital goods, outweighing the decline in the export share of consumer goods.
The US economy may struggle to achieve a "soft landing" with low inflation and low unemployment due to several economic uncertainties and headwinds, including toughened lending standards and the resumption of student loan payments, according to experts.
China is facing challenges in its economic recovery, including calls for policy clarity, concerns over over-reliance on Chinese EVs, inadequate scientific literacy, declining luxury spending by the middle class, and a shrinking US middle class.
China's economy is showing signs of a stronger recovery, with indicators such as increased activity around shopping malls, a pickup in cement manufacturing, and a surge in traffic congestion, suggesting renewed consumer confidence and a positive direction for the construction sector.
China's economy is on the brink of a potential "apocalyptic" collapse that could have disastrous effects on global stock markets, as the country's economic indicators continue to plummet and financial experts warn of an imminent crash.
China's trade slump is gradually easing as September's exports fell less than expected, indicating a potential bottoming-out of global trade; however, uncertainties in the property sector and weak confidence among private firms continue to pose risks to the country's economic recovery.
China's economic growth model, built on real estate speculation and debt, is starting to unravel as the property market collapses and other sectors show strain, leading to shrinking demand, unstable supply chains, and a more precarious global economic landscape.