Chart usGOLD   Chart usSILVER  
 
Food for thought
As scarce as the truth is, the supply has always been in excess of the demand
Josh Billings  
Search for :
LATEST NEWS  :
MINING STOCKS  :
Subscribe
Write Us
Add to Google
Search on Ebay :
PRECIOUS METALS (US $)
Gold 1394.046.44
Silver 22.570.08
Platinum 1457.500.00
Palladium 738.303.30
WORLD MARKETS
DOWJONES 15295-6
NASDAQ 3459-4
NIKKEI 14866382
ASX 5041-101
CAC 40 3967-84
DAX 8352-179
HUI 2592
XAU 97-3
CURRENCIES (€)
AUS $ 1.3359
CAN $ 1.3346
US $ 1.2918
GBP (£) 0.8566
Sw Fr 1.2537
YEN 132.0600
CURRENCIES ($)
AUS $ 1.0342
CAN $ 1.0331
Euro 0.7742
GBP (£) 0.6632
Sw Fr 0.9706
YEN 102.2400
RATIOS & INDEXES
Gold / Silver61.77
Gold / Oil14.51
Dowjones / Gold10.97
COMMODITIES
Copper 3.310.01
WTI Oil 96.05-0.11
Nat. Gas 4.270.01
Market Indices
Metal Prices
RSS
Precious Metals
Graph Generator
Statistics by Country
Statistics by Metals
Advertise on 24hGold
Projects on Google Earth
In the same category 
Surprise Rate Cut in China; What's it Mean?
Published : June 07th, 2012
578 words - Reading time : 1 - 2 minutes
( 1 vote, 5/5 ) Print article
 
    Comments    
Tweet

 

 

 

 

China surprised economists today with a surprise cut in interest rates by a quarter point, the first cut in rates since 2008.

 

Just a couple of months ago, few analysts had forecast that Beijing would cut rates, believing that China was on track for a “soft landing”. But after growth slowed to 8.1 per cent in the first quarter, recent data showed the economy was on track for a sharp deceleration.

With the cut, China’s benchmark one-year lending rate will now be 6.31 per cent, while the one-year deposit rate will be 3.25 per cent.

The People’s Bank of China, which raised interest rates three times last year, had previously characterised its monetary stance this year as “fine tuning”, arguing that nothing dramatic was needed to support the economy. The rate cut marks a definite change.

The question now is whether businesses and households will respond to the lower rates by borrowing more. Banks have reported weak loan demand over the past two months.

In an important move alongside the rate cut, the Chinese central bank said it would allow banks to set deposit rates 10 percent above the benchmark level and to set lending rates 20 per cent below the benchmark.

This is a step towards interest rate liberalisation – that is, letting banks decide for themselves, based on market conditions, the level at which they set rates. Analysts believe this is crucial to putting the economy on a more stable footing by ensuring that households earn a fair return on their bank savings, thus encouraging more income to be used for consumption.

What's it Mean?

The simple explanation is China is slowing far more than the soft-landing crowd expects.

China wants to stimulate growth but it has already exhausted every economically viable infrastructure project. All that is left is malinvestment opportunities. Moreover, new projects will add to delays in much-needed rebalancing efforts both within China and externally.

China will publish industrial output and sales data this weekend. PMI reports suggest the data will not be very good although there has been a huge discrepancy lately between "official" reports and PMI reports.

Look for the "official" reports to reflect the slowdown shown in the PMI, and perhaps much worse.

Should China march ahead with massive numbers of new infrastructure projects, more state-owned-enterprise bad debts will undoubtedly pile up and once again private citizens will pay the price for the cleanup.

Hard Landing Coming Up

On May 12, in
Screeching Halt in China; Weak Trade Data; Imports and Exports Fall Way Short of Expectations; Credit Crunch Underway; Feeble Forecasts From Pimco, Others I stated China bulls are in for a multi-year shock because rebalancing from an economy overly dependent on exports is going to be far more painful, and last much longer than most think. Data is coming in much weaker than expected, but I propose this is only the very beginning.

I am sticking with 3.5% average growth for the rest of the decade, an idea proposed by Michael Pettis in a bet with The Economist. For details, please see
12 Predictions by Michael Pettis on China; Non-Food Commodity Prices Will Collapse Over Next Three to Four Years; Nails in the Hard Landing Coffin?

Perfect Demographic Storm

For more on China, please consider
China's Population Poised to Crash in Perfect Demographic Storm

Also consider
"Curbs Needed to Avoid China Property Chaos" Says China's Premier; Chinese Economy Already in Hard Landing? Regardless, It's Too Late to Prevent Chaos

 

 

Data and Statistics for these countries : China | All
Gold and Silver Prices for these countries : China | All
Tweet
Rate :Average note :5 (1 vote)View Top rated
Previous article by
Mish
All articles by
Mish
Next article by
Mish
Receive by mail the latest articles by this author  
Latest comment posted for this article
Be the first to comment
Add your comment
TOP ARTICLES
MOST READ
TOP RATED
MOST COMMENTED
Editor's picks
RSS feed24hGold Mobile
Gold Data CenterGold & Silver Converter
Gold coins on eBaySilver coins on eBay
Technical AnalysisFundamental Analysis

Mish

Mike Shedlock / Mish is a registered investment advisor representative for SitkaPacific Capital Management. He writes a global economics blog which has commentary 5-7 times a week. He also writes for the Daily Reckoning, Whiskey & Gunpowder, and has over 80 magazine and book cover credits. Visit http://www.sitkapacific.com
Mish ArchiveWebsiteSubscribe to his services
Most recent articles by Mish
5/23/2013
5/23/2013
5/23/2013
5/23/2013
5/23/2013
All Articles
Comment this article
You must be logged in to comment an article8000 characters max.
 
Sign in
User : Password : Login
Sign In Forgot password?
 
Receive 24hGold's Daily Market Briefing in your inbox. Go here to subscribe or unsubscribe.
Disclaimer