Sentiment around Asian indices has been weakening. CHNComp and HKComp contracts were heavily discounted today due to weaker Chinese economy.
- China's real estate sector has been experiencing a continued slowdown, and one of the country's largest real estate developers, Country Garden (nearly $70 billion in annual revenues), has teetered on the brink of insolvency after failing to make interest payments to bondholders (the market estimates its Q2 losses at more than $7 billion). The company is now likely to restructure and renegotiate contracts with creditors;
- China's home sales fell more than 30% in July putting a huge question mark over the ongoing health of consumers and their propensity to consume amid broader uncertainty. Chinese citizens remain uncertain about the economy's continued post-pandemic rebound and remain reluctant to spend;
- Data from China's National Bureau of Statistics on new home prices in July showed an average annual seasonally adjusted month-on-month decline of 2.5% for 70 key cities. Home prices in top urban locations also fell. 49 of the 70 cities surveyed reported declines in new home prices in July, much more than 5 in March - fueling concerns about potential deflation in the economy;
- On Tuesday, the PBoC unexpectedly cut interest rates for the second time in three months in a bid to salvage momentum. The bank cut the interest rate on annual medium-term loans (MLF) worth about $55 billion to China's largest institutions by 15 basis points to 2.50% from 2.65% previously.
- The Communist Party of China's target is 5% y/y GDP growth but analysts are beginning to doubt whether this scale is realistic, with JP Morgan recently significantly lowering its forecast for China's 2023 GDP from 6.4% to 4.8% - below the 'minimum target'.
Meanwhile, in the U.S., the retail sales report indicated a stronger-than-expected acceleration in July, strengthening the dollar and the chances of another 25-bp Fed rate hike. Even if the Federal Reserve does not do so, it is almost certain that rates will remain high for a much longer period. Yields on treasuries rose after the retail sales report and approached their highest levels since the 2007-09 crisis, the Chinese yuan weakened against the U.S. dollar, falling near its 16-year lows. Investors are looking increasingly cautiously toward emerging markets, among which China has led the way for many years.
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Open account Try demo Download mobile app Download mobile appCHNComp and HKComp contracts (gold chart) are approaching October 2022 levels. Source: xStation5
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