China+ Publications
Below is a list of our China+ Publications for the last 6 months. If you are looking for reports older than 6 months please email info@pantheonmacro.com, or contact your account rep
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- China’s headline consumer inflation rose in July, but this was due to weather-related food inflation.
- Domestic demand still looks sluggish, based on core consumer inflation.
- A jump in auto trade-in subsidy applications, despite overall falling sales, offers a ray of hope for H2.
Duncan WrigleyChina+
In one line: China's July exports disappoint market expectations
Kelvin Lam (Senior China+ Economist)China+
In one line: China’s foreign reserves rise on positive currency and asset valuation effects
Kelvin Lam (Senior China+ Economist)China+
In one line: China's July export growth falls short of expectations amid slowing momentum
Kelvin Lam (Senior China+ Economist)China+
Korea’s export rebound disappoints markets, likely due to deeper-than-expected fall in car shipments to the US
Kelvin Lam (Senior China+ Economist)China+
Korea’s manufacturing activity continues to grow in July, but at a slower pace
Kelvin Lam (Senior China+ Economist)China+
Caixin PMI shows shrinking manufacturing activity for the first time in 9 months on extreme weather
Kelvin Lam (Senior China+ Economist)China+
In one line: Adverse weather shrinks China’s manufacturing activity; Korea’s WDA export growth slowdown likely temporary
Kelvin Lam (Senior China+ Economist)China+
- Chinese export growth surprised the market to the downside, as monthly momentum faded in July.
- Export recovery was dual-track, driven by high-tech demand, while low-tech shipments remain dull.
- Bond-selling by Chinese banks indicates short-term market intervention, probably under PBoC guidance.
Kelvin Lam (Senior China+ Economist)China+
Japan's wages surge appears driven by bonuses
Duncan WrigleyChina+
- Japan’s June wage rise beat market expectations, in both nominal and real terms.
- The rise was largely driven by a spike in special cash payments, rather than regular pay.
- Governor Ueda will, however, cite the wage uptick as justifying last week’s BoJ’s policy rate hike.
Duncan WrigleyChina+
- Weak Korean export rebound was disappointing; working-day adjusted growth actually eased sharply.
- Deeper dive in US shipment growth was the driver, coupled with a double-digit plunge in car exports.
- Firming KRW and easing cost burden give BoK more room to cut rates, but unlikely to hasten the timeline.
Kelvin Lam (Senior China+ Economist)China+
- China’s new urbanisation action plan, announced last week, has largely flown under the radar...
- ...But, if properly implemented, it should go a long way to rebalancing China’s economy...
- ...By unleashing the full domestic demand potential embedded in the unfinished urbanisation project.
Duncan WrigleyChina+
- Both July manufacturing PMIs indicate declining activity, especially the dip in the Caixin PMI.
- Extreme weather is only partly to blame; domestic demand is weak, as the growth model is revamped.
- China will keep adjusting incremental stimulus until growth is back on track at the “about 5%” target.
Kelvin Lam (Senior China+ Economist)China+
China's official PMIs point to stagnating manufacturing activity
Duncan WrigleyChina+
BoJ raises the policy rate ahead of market expectations
Duncan WrigleyChina+
BoJ raises the policy rate ahead of market expectations
China's official PMIs point to stagnating manufacturing activity & slump in construction demand
Duncan WrigleyChina+
Politburo calls for incremental policy measures, but no bazooka
Duncan WrigleyChina+
- The BoJ yesterday announced a policy rate hike, despite cutting its inflation forecast for this year.
- Governor Ueda said the Bank will continue to raise rates if growth and inflation match its expectations.
- The real motivation for the rate increase is probably to minimise the risk of a steep JPY reversal.
Duncan WrigleyChina+
- China’s industrial profit growth edged up in June, thanks to better upstream sector profits.
- But two-thirds of industries saw profit growth ease, echoing the weak domestic demand in Q2 GDP.
- More stimulus will be deployed to support growth and put profit’s recovery on a more sustainable path.
Kelvin Lam (Senior China+ Economist)China+