In this briefing:
- LNG Producers Outperform as More LNG from the US Is Coming into the Market
- Migrant Workers and Employment
- EM Active Fund Performance: Difficult 2018, but Long-Term Outperformance Remains
- China’s Household Consumption in a Slowing Economy
- China’s December GDP
1. LNG Producers Outperform as More LNG from the US Is Coming into the Market
On the back of a growing LNG global trade volume, LNG producers have outperformed the US market and their E&P peers including the oil majors over the last two years. As global LNG production reaches a record 316m tonnes in 2018, a 9.6% increase year on year, new capacity additions set to come online in the next three years will be dominated by the US. This insight will examine how the recent entry of US LNG in the market is transforming the LNG industry and which emerging players are driving the change.
Exhibit 1: LNG Producers Outperform the US Market
2. Migrant Workers and Employment
Recently, we have profiled a spat of news items focusing on China’s employment numbers and efforts to better handle migrant workers. On Monday, some updated data on employment numbers and migrant workers was released. Much of the focus on Monday was on GDP, but there are some gems among the employment data that can shed light on the China’s employment numbers and the impact it could have on the wider economy.
3. EM Active Fund Performance: Difficult 2018, but Long-Term Outperformance Remains
2018 was a year to forget for many active GEM managers. Absolute returns were the worst since 2011 and, relative to the I-Shares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF, active funds registered their first average underperformance since 2008. Here we share some of the key data points on active fund performance for 2018 and over the longer term.
4. China’s Household Consumption in a Slowing Economy
Now that we know China’s GDP posted the lowest growth rate in decades in December 2018, a lot of attention has turned to stimulus. A key outlier of stimulus is getting consumers to spend, so today we take a look at consumer spending and household consumption overall. Yet, first we need to take a look at disposable income and just where it is coming from.
5. China’s December GDP
China’s quarterly numbers are in and China’s economic growth decreased to 6.4%. We are reviewing the most recent numbers and examining some inconsistencies.We believe there are pronounced weak spots in China’s GDP growth and expect to see that downward pressure in the Chinese economy going forward.
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