What happens in the US and Chinese economy will boomerang each other. Mutual assured destruction, financial style. There's no real winner here.
Chinese economy is growing at a slower pace not since the late eighties.
China's economy has grown at its slowest pace in three years as investment slowed and demand fell in key markets such as the US and Europe.
Gross domestic product rose by 7.6% in the second quarter, compared with the same period a year ago. That is down from 8.1% in the previous three months.
In March, Beijing cut its growth target for the whole of 2012 to 7.5%.
China accounts for about a fifth of the world's total economic output and any slowdown may hamper a global recovery.
At the same time, many of Asia's biggest and emerging economies are becoming increasingly reliant on China as a trading partner.
"China has been a big factor for the slowdown in Asia this year," said Tai Hui from Standard Chartered Bank in Singapore.
He added that if China's growth does not pick up in the second half of the year then "that's going to mean a very difficult second half for a lot of the manufacturers in this region".
People are dumping yuan for the dollar.
China sees capital outflows in July
August 15, 2012
China posted monthly capital outflows in July, for the second time this year, as shrinking external demand weighed on its export growth and a slowing domestic economy also dampened global investors' appetite for yuan assets. China's central bank and commercial banks sold a net 3.8 billion yuan in foreign exchange last month, following a net purchase of 49.1 billion yuan in June and 23.4 billion yuan in May, according to Reuters calculations based on data published by the central bank on Tuesday.
That marks the second monthly capital outflow this year after the first net sales of 60.6 billion yuan in foreign exchange in April. China has suffered from sporadic capital outflows since late last year, as a darkening global economic backdrop has dented investor enthusiasm for emerging markets and caused some to begin scaling back exposure to currencies other than the US dollar.
"The capital outflows show investors' concern on the outlook of China's economy," said Li Huiyong, economist at Shenyin & Wanguo Securities in Shanghai. Analysts cited a narrowing trade surplus and declining foreign direct investment as the major reasons behind net forex sales last month, adding that China may see a slowing overall capital inflow for the full year.
China's trade surplus decreased to $25.1 billion in July from $31.7 billion in June and foreign investment inflows dropped 3 percent in the first half of 2012, marking the longest period of decline since the depth of global financial crisis. The monthly foreign exchange purchase averaged 42.7 billion yuan in the first seven months, down from 329.7 billion yuan during the same period of 2011.
Apart from slowing foreign exchange purchases, China also registered the first capital and financial account deficit since 1998 in the second quarter. Some analysts also said that the shrinking capital inflows may press the central bank to cut banks' reserve requirement to inject new money into the banking system. The inflow of foreign capital is a basic component of money supply in the financial system, and a fall in its level implies a need to expand domestic credit creation by easing monetary policy in order to keep money supply growth steady.
"The capital outflows will definitely put pressure on the banking system liquidity and will prompt the central bank to quicken its pace of cutting reserve requirement ratio," said Du Zhengzheng, an analyst at Guokai Securities in Beijing. Rising expectations on yuan to weaken further in the coming months also reduced willingness for individuals and enterprises to hold yuan assets, analysts say.


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i had fun reading those post of we can say tsikot's financial analyst a lot interesting...kahit sabi ni wifey boring daw