Prepare for a sharp leg down on “risk on” prices people. Unconfirmed reports that the Chinese have already left the negotiating table in Geneva. That’s was quick. image
Give it another month and it’ll be down to 10% (if that) image
Here is another variable that doesn’t get enough attention. America demands that China address its massive trade surplus. Ok, but what is it that America exports? If you look into the official data, officially the largest exports out of America in 2024 are civilian aircraft parts ($123bn) and oil ($118bn). Not included in the “official data” is the exports of weapon systems. For 2024 that totaled $319bn. Nearly triple the official top two categories. Great article on this provided below. So, China has said it is open to addressing the trade issue, but America policy won’t be selling weapon systems to China. Moreover, basically everything that China does want to be from America is disallowed under “national security”. Can’t buy Nvidia chips, as example.
TikTok is the canary in the China trade war coal mine. If the Trump team is unable to secure a deal on the social media platform then the two parties remain at a stalemate. The Chinese know how central TikTok is to a wide swath of Americans. If no deal is to be secured, as part of a much larger trade deal, then the Chinese will just burn it to the ground. Once that path is taken, the Chinese will blame the outcome on Trump. I will also repeat that the Chinese side hasn’t even begun to play hardball with Trump. Once you see headlines about “export controls” on items beyond rare earths then you will know the game has been taken to the next level. https://www.reuters.com/technology/trump-says-china-has-reached-out-tariffs-tiktok-deal-may-wait-2025-04-17/
China has zero American fucks to give. Think the Trump team will be waiting a bit longer for that inevitable “call from Beijing”. https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/chinas-xi-visit-vietnam-malaysia-cambodia-april-14-18-xinhua-reports-2025-04-11/
The US cannot win the trade war with #China. Walmart pulling forward guidance tells you everything you need to know. Price hikes on all things out of China are being passed on to either the American buyer (Walmart) or the American consumer. And I’ll also repeat again. China hasn’t even begun playing hardball. Export controls will be the point when that changes.
China Afternoon Missive One theme which has always amused me is just how many “experts” have predicted the collapse of the economy in #China. Decades of calls none of which have landed. Look around these days and it appears as though the G7 is where economic calamity is headed. European bond yields are blowing out for the second day in a row. image
The drumbeat of Chinese AI models continues in unrelenting fashion. Now we have Manus and expect to see this name and endless commentary over the come day.
China (long-ish) Morning Missive There’s a big meeting in Beijing next week and a meeting where expectations are being set for some sort of massive fiscal stimulus. There’ve even been some expecting a fiscal injection of 10% of GDP Allow me to state unequivocally that there is no “bazooka”. There never was one and there never will be. I will repeat once again, Keynes is Dead in China. It is true that the Beijing policy Mandarins will announce an expansion of the annual fiscal deficit. Last year the target was 3.0% then raised to 3.8% at mid-year. For 2025 the expectation is around 4%. A number of different categories of bond issuances will also be announced. A trillion or so Renminbi will be at the discretion of the central government. The bulk, however (+Rmb4.0tr), will address local government balance sheet and income statement issues. I will return to the latter of these two shortly. This all seems like a rather significant fiscal response. Again, it isn’t. Not on a net-net basis. To start, the focus and priority remains on addressing the bad debt throughout local governments. This is pure debt restructuring and will add zero fiscal stimulus to the economy. Then there is the one issue (income statement related) that I haven’t seen addressed anywhere in the analysis; the gaping hole in tax revenue. This is an issue for both the central and local governments. In fact, virtually all the funds which will be announced as allocations to local governments will either go to restructuring debt or as transfer payments for the direct purpose of meeting local budgetary obligations. The same holds for the elevated central government deficit spend. To clsoe the gap between expenditures and tax revenue. The figures may be large, even when combined together, but they are net-net zero stimulative to the economy. This does leave the trillion-plus in “Special Purpose Bonds”. I’m also confident that a proportion of the deficit spend will be at Beijing’s discretion. Here is where optionality comes into play. Beijing is still waiting patiently to assess the full extent of how it is the Trump administration intends to target China’s economy. A fiscal reserve of sorts, roughly a few trillion Renminbi, will be kept idle and applied as is deemed needed. Until that time, however, the focus will remain on the aggressive, systemwide deleveraging of the entire economy. Finally, not addressed is the likelihood of direct support to the Chinese household. That’s because, other than at the margins, there won’t be any. Direct to household stimulus would be completely ineffective. It would all just be recycled into bank savings. Maybe one day the credentialed class of economists will finally come to terms with their errors and adjusted their outlook on China accordingly. Unlikely at this point though.
China Morning Missive The greatest benefit from the throngs of Americans jumping on RedNote is how quickly errant tropes of #China have been blown apart. The perfect example is the “social credit score”. I can’t even begin to tell you all how many times I’ve had to explain to clients and others that this simply doesn’t exist. And yet, how many times have you seen headlines and social media commentary on Twitter or elsewhere making the claim that a Chinese social credit score runs the lives of all everyday Chinese. Between RedNote and DeepSeek, there’s been a genuine awareness that most of what the American media covers in regards of China is just articulated fabrications. image