China: Will exports continue to downplay the trade war impact? - ING

Prakash Sakpal, Economist at ING, suggests that in the forthcoming week, we'll get all the activity data for November of Chinese economy starting with trade data over the weekend and is going to gauge maximum investor’s attention.

Key Quotes

“The tariffs on more than half of China’s exports to the US went into effect in September, and so while overseas orders for Chinese goods have been shrinking since June, there has been no let-up in export shipments which have maintained their double-digit pace of growth throughout October, as the graph below shows.”

“The strength seen in recent months could be front-loading before higher tariffs strike at the beginning of 2019 as the consensus estimates 10% annual export growth, which will put monthly exports at an all-time high of $237 billion.”

“The rest of the China data including inflation, retail sales, fixed asset investment, industrial production, and bank lending should tell us about the effectiveness of domestic policies which have been trying to cushion the economy from the effect of the trade war.”

 

EUR/USD: Value of puts (bearish bets) hits 6-month low ahead of Eurozone GDP and US NFP release

Risk reversals on the EUR, a gauge of calls to puts on the common currency, rose to six-month highs on Thursday, indicating investors are trimming bea
Mehr darüber lesen Previous

Australia: Incredibly busy week - Westpac

Sean Callow, research analyst at Westpac, points out that Australia had an incredibly busy week with Q3 GDP being the key economic release and it surg
Mehr darüber lesen Next