Hong Kong
China's President Confirms Practice Of Moving Official Reserve Assets To Other Entities In China
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/04/2015 18:29 -0500Chinese President Xi Jinping recently confirmed the practice of moving the People’s Bank of China’s reserve assets to other entities in China: “some assets in foreign exchanges were transferred from the central bank to domestic banks, enterprises and individuals” This might explain where some of China’s gold hoard, that many suspect they posses but have not reported as reserves, may be located.
Frontrunning: October 2
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/02/2015 07:01 -0500- U.S., Allies Demand Russia Stop Attacks on Syria Opposition (BBG)
- Russian Airstrikes Defend Strategic Assad Regime Stronghold on Syria’s Coast (WSJ)
- Emerging Stocks Head for Weekly Advance Before U.S. Jobs Data (BBG)
- Wage Strife Clouds Car-Sales Boom (WSJ)
- Oregon town reels from classroom carnage (Reuters)
- Oregon shooter came from California, described as shy and skittish (Reuters)
Calm Before The Payrolls Storm
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/02/2015 05:47 -0500- Barclays
- Bond
- China
- Citigroup
- Copper
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Elizabeth Warren
- Equity Markets
- Eurozone
- France
- Fund Flows
- Germany
- Global Economy
- headlines
- Hong Kong
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Italy
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- KIM
- Market Sentiment
- Markit
- Monetary Policy
- Nikkei
- NYMEX
- Price Action
- RANSquawk
- Unemployment
- Volkswagen
- World Bank
With China markets closed for holiday until the middle of next week, and little in terms of global macro data overnight (the only notable central banker comment overnight came from Mario Draghi who confidently proclaimed that "economic growth is returning" which on its own is bad for risk assets), it was all about the USDJPY which has seen the usual no-volume levitation overnight, dragging both the Nikkei higher with it, and US equity futures, which as of this moment were at session highs, up 7 points. The calm may be broken, though, as soon as two hours from now when the September "most important ever until the next" payrolls report is released.
Fourth Quarter Begins With Global Stock Rally As Bad Economic News Is Again Good
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/01/2015 05:48 -0500Good news! Bad news is again great for stocks, and overnight we had just the right amount of bad news from Japan, China and Europe to send stocks surging on the first day of the final quarter.
A Desperate China Caps Card Withdrawals In Frantic Attempt To Stem Outflows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/30/2015 20:50 -0500Now that the yuan deval debacle has served to accelerate capital outflows, Beijing is set to double down on efforts to curb the degree to which capital controls are openly subverted and as WSJ reports, China is has now “put a new annual cap on overseas cash withdrawals using UnionPay.”
80% Of All New Home Buyers In Irvine Are Chinese
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/30/2015 17:41 -0500"We are seeing more globalization as Southern California has become a destination for international buyers," said Mark Hughes, chief operating officer with First Team Real Estate, covering the Southern California market. "Eighty percent of new construction in Irvine last year was sold to Chinese buyers. International buyers are driving home prices up and sometimes out of reach for many local residents."
For The "Nothing Is Happening... Everything Is Awesome" Crowd
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/30/2015 07:41 -0500It takes ignorance on an almost unbelievable level to try to claim that “nothing is happening” in the financial world right now.
Peak Japaganda: Advisers Call For More QE (But Admit Failure Of QE); China's Yuan Hits 3-Week High
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/29/2015 20:23 -0500Asian markets are bouncing modestly off a weak US session, buoyed by more unbelievable propaganda from Japan. Abe's proclamations that "deflationary mindset" has been shrugged off was met with calls for more stimulus, more debt monetization, and an admission by Etsuro Honda (Abe's closest adviser) that Japan "is not growing positively" and more QE is required despite trillions of Yen in money-printing having failed miserably, warning that raising taxes to pay for extra budget "would be suicidal." Japanese data was a disaster with factory output unexpectedly dropping 0.5% and retail trade missing. Markets are relatively stable at the open as China margin debt drop sto a 9-month low. PBOC strengthened the Yuan fix for the 3rd day in a row to its strongest in 3 weeks.
Yuan Liquidity Dries Up In Hong Kong After Dramatic PBoC Offshore FX Intervention
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/29/2015 09:35 -0500China's massive interventions in the offshore yuan spot look to have begun affecting liquidity in Hong Kong as heavy CNH buying by Chinese banks coincides with a spike in O/N HIBOR. The question now would appear to be this: how long before something snaps in mainland money markets?
Frontrunning: September 29
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/29/2015 06:50 -0500- Commodities in crisis as Asian shares tumble and shipper files for bankruptcy (Reuters)
- Global Rout Eases as S&P 500 Futures Advance With Oil, Glencore (BBG)
- Chinese Stocks Decline Most in a Month in Hong Kong on Economy (BBG)
- India cuts interest rates by more than expected (BBC)
- Glencore Rebounds as $50 Billion Plunge Is Seen as Excessive (BBG)
- How Congress May Have Saved Goldman Sachs From Itself (BBG)
US Futures Resume Tumble, Commodities Slide As Chinese "Hard-Landing" Fears Take Center Stage
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/28/2015 05:47 -0500- Barclays
- Bear Market
- Bond
- Budget Deficit
- Carl Icahn
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- Consumer Sentiment
- Copper
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Dallas Fed
- default
- Equity Markets
- Eurozone
- France
- Gilts
- Glencore
- Hong Kong
- Japan
- Michigan
- NASDAQ
- Nikkei
- NYMEX
- Personal Income
- Primary Market
- RANSquawk
- University Of Michigan
- Volatility
- Volkswagen
- Yuan
It was all about China once again, where following a report of a historic layoff in which China's second biggest coal producer Longmay Group fired an unprecedented 100,000 or 40% of its workforce, overnight we got the latest industrial profits figure which plunging -8.8% Y/Y was the biggest drop since at least 2011, and which the National Bureau of Statistics attributed to "exchange rate losses, weak stock markets, falling industrial goods prices as well as a bigger rise in costs than increases in revenue." In not so many words: a "hard-landing."
Did The PBOC Covertly Buy 1,747 Tonnes Of Gold In London?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/27/2015 16:15 -0500The Western gold space has learned a great deal about the Chinese gold market and global gold flows, though we’re always left with loose ends. For example, the issue regarding PBOC gold purchases; how much gold do they truly have and where was it bought? Does the PBOC buy 400-ounce Good Delivery (GD) bars in London and covertly transports these gold bars to its gold vaults in China mainland, or are the Good Delivery gold bars shipped to Switzerland, refined into 1 Kg 9999 gold bars, sent forward to the Chinese mainland where they’re required to be sold through the SGE gold exchange and from where they can be bought (in clear sight) by the PBOC.
Gold "Tightness": When There's No More To Sell, There's No More To Buy (At Any Price)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/26/2015 19:20 -0500"...there’s an enormous and growing disconnect between the cash and physical markets for gold. This is exactly what we would expect to precede a major market-shaking event based on a physical gold shortage."
China's "Credit Mystery" Deepens, As Moody's Warns On Shadow Financing
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/26/2015 11:15 -0500Are some Chinese banks ramping up their exposure to shadow conduits on the way to obscuring massive amounts of credit risk? Moody's says yes...
Who Calls The Shots In China
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/25/2015 16:03 -0500As documented here and elsewhere, in addition to the Pope and Putin, the third world leader US president Obama is "historically" meeting this week is China's President, and General Secretary of the Chinese Communist party, Xi Jinping. But just like everywhere else, the president is mostly a figurehead for far greater political and primarily financial interests backing him. So who calls the shots in China? The following infographc lays out the key power divisions of political, economic and financial power in China at this moment.


