China Running On Fumes. What Happens When World Economies Synchronize.

China wants 7% growth, no matter the cost. While China was able to pull it off in the past though massive infrastructure spending, real estate bubble, massive stimulus, jaw dropping growth in bank assets and shadow banking, I am afraid the party is coming to an end. As per Bloomberg report below…..

Gross domestic product grew a seasonally adjusted 1.5 percent from the previous three months, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey ahead of data released tomorrow, down from 1.8 percent in the fourth quarter. That indicates a sharper deceleration than a median projection for 7.3 percent growth from a year earlier, from 7.7 percent. 

I can only imagine what will happen to their GDP growth when any of the above mentioned bubbles blow up, let alone all of them. Yet, there is a bigger story behind the scenes. It appears, from my vantage point, that most important world economies have synchronized. The US, China, Japan and the EU now move in tandem. This becomes even more apparent when you take our mathematical and timing work into consideration.

As suggested earlier, our mathematical/timing work shows a very clear bear market and a severe US Recession between 2013-2017. When we look at the most important world economies, we find them in a very similar cyclical composition OR right on a verge of a massive slowdown. While globalization played an important role in such synchronization, I continue to believe that FED stimulus and subsequent worldwide speculative bubbles (in all asset classes) are much bigger culprits. If you would be interested in learning when the bear market of 2014-2017 will start (to the day) and it’s internal composition, please Click Here.  

China Bank Assets Change

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China Running On Fumes. What Happens When World Economies Synchronize.  Google

Bloomberg Writes: China GDP Gauge Seen Showing Deeper Slowdown

China’s loss of economic momentum in the first quarter was deeper than the most widely-cited data will show, according to analyst forecasts for a gauge that’s gaining increasing recognition.

Gross domestic product grew a seasonally adjusted 1.5 percent from the previous three months, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey ahead of data released tomorrow, down from 1.8 percent in the fourth quarter. That indicates a sharper deceleration than a median projection for 7.3 percent growth from a year earlier, from 7.7 percent.

Investors are focused on the scale of a slowdown that prompted Premier Li Keqiang to provide what some analysts dubbed a “mini-stimulus” of spending and tax relief. While the indicator suffers from flaws including the government’s failure to give details of methodology, it provides an extra tool to analyze an economy that bond-fund manager Bill Gross calls the “mystery meat” of emerging markets.

“The quarter-on-quarter data will show growth momentum has actually bottomed out in the first quarter,” said Chen Xingdong, Beijing-based chief China economist at BNP Paribas SA, who previously worked at the World Bank. The measure “has clearly captured the changes in growth momentum,” Chen said.

Data today from the People’s Bank of China showed the nation’s broadest measure of new credit fell 19 percent from a year earlier and money supply grew at the slowest pace on record, underscoring risks of a deeper slowdown as the government tries to curb financial dangers. The Shanghai Composite Index of stocks fell 1.4 percent.

Growth Concerns

While yuan forwards declined yesterday to the lowest level in eight months on concern growth is faltering, economists are picking a rebound this quarter, forecasting quarter-on-quarter expansion of 1.8 percent, according to a separate Bloomberg monthly survey in March. The State Council on April 2 outlined spending on railways and housing, along with tax relief, with annual expansion at risk of missing the 7.5 percent goal.

Bloomberg’s survey of estimates for the first quarter-on-quarter GDP data in 2011 garnered only one forecast, from Goldman Sachs Group Inc. In contrast, the latest poll had 17.

“More and more private-sector economists are giving estimates and paying attention to it,” said Andrew Polk, an economist in Beijing with The Conference Board, a New York-based research group.

At the same time, the indicator has limitations, Polk said. While most countries revise GDP numbers as more information becomes available, the National Bureau of Statistics does so without disclosing why or how, he said.

Lu Ting, head of Greater China economics at Bank of America Corp. in Hong Kong, said “frequent major revisions” and seasonal-adjustment difficulties curtail the data’s reliability.

Extra Tool

Still, amid a range of concerns about Chinese numbers — from inflated trade figures in 2013 to provincial GDP totals that add up to more than the national tally — the extra gauge is another tool for “measuring the dynamism in the economy,” said BNP’s Chen.

International companies are still betting on China for growth. Hennes & Mauritz AB, Europe’s second-biggest clothing retailer, is expanding into the nation’s smaller cities and Daimler AG said this month that the maker of Mercedes-Benz cars will add 100 dealerships for a network of 400 outlets in the nation by the end of this year.

Financial Strains

The outlook may partly depend on how officials cope with financial strains after the onshore yuan bond market had its first default, by Shanghai Chaori Solar Energy Science & Technology Co.

China has yet to give annualized figures for sequential quarterly growth, which would result in figures that are more volatile than year-on-year numbers. Data compiled by Bloomberg based on the government’s figures showed annualized growth last year of 6.1 percent in the first quarter, followed by 7.4 percent, 9.1 percent and 7.4 percent.

“It looks much less attractive for the government than year-on-year, which is stable and almost always above 7.5 percent,” said Tom Orlik, a Beijing-based economist with Bloomberg LP and author of the 2011 book “Understanding China’s Economic Indicators.”