More Mixed News From China, Asia
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Apart from the results of the Indian election, there was a collection of not so positive news from Asia late last week and over the weekend.Foreign investment into China continues to fall, and there are & #160;signs of growing Chinese government unease at an oversupply situation developing in the politically and economically sensitive steel sector.At the same time Japan's machinery orders, a very sensitive indicator to production, exports and growth, have resumed falling after a brief rise earlier in the year.And, the Hong Kong and Thai economies are undergoing severe contractions, according to figures released on Friday.Last week's & #160;flow of Chinese monthly economic data for April & #160;was mostly poor to questionable: exports and imports down again for a sixth month, industrial production positive, but down from March's rebound from the depressed levels of January and February.Friday saw figures showing that & #160;foreign direct investment (FDI) fell 21% year on year in the first four months on this year. It was down 20.6% in the March quarter of this year, so no improvement.The figure fell to & #36;US27.67 billion & #160;and in April alone, FDI dropped 22.5%, from April 2008, the seventh straight monthly fall. The decline though eased month on month to 9.5% from February.The Finance Ministry figures show that & #160;the number of new foreign-funded ventures fell 34.2% over the four months to April, from the same period of 2008.So not everything is rosy in China's spluttering economy.China's steel industry is a key indicator: its health tells us just how well the economy is going and how well big companies like BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto in this country are travelling, and how well they will travel in coming months.Even though imports of iron ore are running above 57 million tonnes a month (record levels), oversupply is feared in May and June (Source).April's imports of iron ore were up a massive 33% on April of last year, when steel production was much higher.That was amplified by news that & #160;Chinese steel production fell 4% in April: the demand is just not there.The news isn't good for BHP Billiton or Rio Tinto which have much riding on a rebound in China.Nor was the prediction, reported over the weekend by Bloomberg, that the steel industry in China would lose money this year. & quot;China's steel industry may post a loss this year, Baosteel Group Corp. Chairman Xu Lejiang said at a conference in Shanghai. Xu said the Chinese steel industry is oversupplied and faces severe structural problems that have been worsened by the financial crisis, & quot; Bloomberg reported.Prices are down sharply for iron ore and coking coal, now those record levels of imports (much of it coming from purchases on the spot market), is raising the prospect for a sudden cutback in orders in a month or two's time or an almighty slump in the steel industry as a whole as oversupply overwhelms poor demand and lower pricesA report Friday in the China Securities Journal & #160;suggested that the central government had told the & #160;bank to cut lending to steel companies wanting to expand production.The government-issued & #160;order was reported to be aimed at cutting or stopping lending to steel producers & quot;still expanding production capacity without considering actual market demand & quot;, the China Securities Journal reported.The actual notice, which has not been made public, reportedly also called for banks to curb or cut off loans to mills with outdated technology.In addition, it told iron-ore importers to & quot;correctly control the volume and pace of iron-ore imports in line with the actual demand of domestic steel & #160;up 22% from the first four months of 2008, when steel output was much higher and demand stronger (though starting to weaken).And state media reported on Thursday that the China Iron and Steel Association planned to investigate surging imports after that 33% jump in iron ore imports last month. & quot;Amid the weakness in the domestic steel market, the imports in April were more than double the normal demand, & quot; the Shanghai Securities News reported, citing & #160;Shan Shanghua, secretary general of the industry group. & #160;At the end of March, the composite price index of China's steel market was 97.59 points, 31.4% lower than a year earlier.Overall, domestic steel prices have been falling continuously and are currently lower than 1994 levels.The World Steel Association & #160;forecast in April that China's apparent steel demand is likely to fall 5% this year because of the & #160;fall in & #160;exports. It would be the first fall since 1995, when a real estate bubble burst.So we now have the unlikely situation of surging imports, falling production and lower prices. & #160;That sounds like a steel crash, not a new steel boom and a repeat of 2005-2008.No wonder the government & #160;is worried.The impact of the slowdown in the economy can be seen in China's government finances.Thursday the & #160;Ministry of Finance & #160;said that & #160;revenue fell 13.6% in April, from a year earlier, to 589.72 billion Yuan (US86.47 billion; that pushed & #160;January-April & #160;revenues down almost 10%. The Ministry said the slower economy had cut taxes, fees and other changes.The Ministry said spending jumped 31.7% in April, reflecting the huge stimulus package unveiled last November.Meanwhile Thailand's gross domestic product (GDP) for the first quarter of 2009 (January-March) was estimated to have contracted by 6%, & #160;the Thai Finance Ministry said Friday. & #160;The Ministry forecast that growth for all of & #160;2009 would shrink & #160;by at least 3% year on year. The Ministry said it didn't see growth falling by more than 4%.Analysts said the political instability in February and March had had a direct impact on growth, with tourism weak.In a bit of good news, it estimated that & #160;GDP for the December & #160;quarter would be positive, indicating belief in a rebound in the latter half of the year.And figures out Friday showed that the Hong Kong economy contracted at the fastest rate since the Asian financial crisis in the first three months of this year.The government & #160;Friday forecast that & #160;gross domestic product would contract by up to 6.5% this year, after revealing that & #160;the economy had shrunk at an annual rate of 4.3% in the March quarter.Exports plunged in the quarter, aided by the sharp fall in Chinese exports. Many Chinese companies export through Hong Kong (to Taiwan in many cases).The fall in GDP was double that expected by some analysts and followed a plunge in exports and private consumption, plus signs of a deterioration in investment in the & #160;buildings, machinery and other business equipment.It was the & #160;fourth & #160;straight quarterly contraction, after a 1.9% fall in the December quarter. & #160;Year on year GDP was down 7.8% from the March quarter of 2008, after the December figure was only down 2.6% from the December, 2007 quarter's figure. & #160;Total exports dropped 22.7% in the first three months of 2009 compared with the previous year - the biggest drop since 1954.Overall investment fell & #160;12.6% and private consumption by 5.5%.Unemployment is running at a three year high of & #160;5.2%.And Indonesia's economy grew at the fastest pace in South East Asia in the March & #160;quarter as local spending arose sharply to offset the impact of the global slump.The government said GDP grew & #160;4.4% in the three months to March 31 from a year earlier, compared with a 5.2% jump in the December quarter.Bloomberg said the figure was a surprise and was slightly stronger than estimated in surveys. & #160;
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Daniel Kertcher established Platinum Pursuits in 2001 as a vehicle in which to share his knowledge of strategies to use the financial markets to grow wealth, with the aim of achieving financial freedom by making your money work for you.
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