Macro

Brief Macro: Non-Performing Loans in China and more

In this briefing:

  1. Non-Performing Loans in China
  2. Trade Talks/Huawei/National People’s Congress/Deleveraging/Stocks
  3. Monetary & Supply Side Takeaways From U.S. GDP
  4. FLASH: UK IP Buffeted by Energy Volatility in 1Q19
  5. Widodo’s Generals Take Fire / Anti-Foreign Rhetoric Takes Toll / Land Hampers Adhi’s LRT / MRT Near

1. Non-Performing Loans in China

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We have all seen the think-pieces in western media talking about China’s economic slowdown. Much of content that western audiences understandably focus on is the effect the trade war has on the downturn. However, we ran across a piece of data entirely driven by China that gives us pause. The amount of non-performing loans has only continued to increase. Yet, according to a trusted source 2 trillion RMB has been shifted off of the books in China. This tells us that China cannot do enough to get rid of NPLs.

2. Trade Talks/Huawei/National People’s Congress/Deleveraging/Stocks

China News That Matters

  • Getting closer… though Trump might just walk away
  • The most beautiful phones in the world?
  • Rubber stamps and reading between lines
  • Mission accomplished for deleveraging?
  • Sitting on a volcano

In my weekly digest China News That Matters, I will give you selected summaries, sourced from a variety of local Chinese-language and international news outlets, and highlight why I think the news is significant. These posts are meant to neither be bullish nor bearish, but help you separate the signal from the noise.

3. Monetary & Supply Side Takeaways From U.S. GDP

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  • The U.S. GDP report released earlier this week contains some interesting information on U.S. growth and inflation trends and risks for 2019. 
  • First, the economic growth strengthened in the fourth quarter as year-over-year real GDP growth firmed to 3.1%, which made 2018 the strongest year for growth since 2005. 
  • Second, our core measure of demand (C+I) also grew at 3.1%, which means swing factors played little role in this growth performance (indeed the average contribution from inventory investment of 0.4% points was mostly offset by a widening of the trade gap that subtracted 0.3% points from growth). 
  • Third, this strong growth performance accompanied by only a 0.3% point drop in the unemployment rate in 2018 suggests that potential growth in 2018 firmed to around 2½%.  The source of this faster potential growth has been rising labor force participation rather than faster productivity growth, which raises questions to its sustainability since aging of the population is likely to keep downward pressure on participation. 
  • Fourth, nominal GDP growth of 5.3%, which is the fastest since 2005, suggests that monetary policy has reflated this important indicator to a pace that was viewed as desirable when trend real growth was at 3% since this would accommodate a 2% inflation rate.  However, if nominal GDP growth remains above 5% but real GDP growth slows towards trend (of 2½% or lower if the pick up in labor force participation stalls out), we would see inflation rising above the Fed’s target.

4. FLASH: UK IP Buffeted by Energy Volatility in 1Q19

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  • The UK’s manufacturing PMI slipped to 52.0, as expected, which is much better than the Euro area. Official manufacturing data remain weaker, though.
  • A cold snap in January turned to unseasonable warmth in February, thereby raising volatility in energy utility output. Gas extraction looks likely to lean against this effect within IP, but the net effect has knocked my forecasts around nonetheless.

5. Widodo’s Generals Take Fire / Anti-Foreign Rhetoric Takes Toll / Land Hampers Adhi’s LRT / MRT Near

19 03 01%20energy%20investment

Sparring remains lively in the presidential campaign, with the Prabowo camp targeting a liability for Widodo: retired generals in the cabinet.  But Prabowo is still campaigning ineffectively and defections of allied governors shows that some in his camp consider his prospects dim.  Police controversially dropped charges against a chief hard-line Islamic figure.  Anti-foreign rhetoric, chiefly from Prabowo, threatens to tug policy discourse towards his vision of barriers, autarky and state control.  Two forthcoming regulations on the property sector aim to safeguard consumers.  A review of geothermal policies is possible.  Upstream energy investment may be improving.  The IA-Cepa may conclude on 4 March.  Adhi Karya’s Jabodebek LRT faces a thorny land problem in Bekasi, where the China-backed fast train project may have complicated matters by overpaying. 

Politics: Campaign sparring continues apace, as Gerindra Chair Prabowo Subianto criticized infrastructure projects (they enable imports to penetrate further) and reiterated that “Rp11,000 trillion in Indonesian assets reside abroad”.  Campaign officials for President Joko Widodo lambasted the remarks and recalled that both Prabowo and his running mate appeared in the ‘Panama Papers’.  Meanwhile, retired generals from the rival campaigns exchanged jabs about events of May 1998; for Prabowo, the topic contains pitfalls (Page 2).  In a rare example of violence in election campaigning, a fracas outside a rally in Yogyakarta caused three minor injuries among rival youth groups (p. 4).  Elite endorsements matter little, but Widodo has garnered overwhelming support from regional heads (p. 4).  Police controversially dropped charges on hard‑line Islamic leader Slamet Ma’arif (p. 5).  Agus Harimurti Yudhoyono (AHY) takes over Partai Demokrat’s campaigning as Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono attends to his ill spouse (p. 6). 

Surveys: A newly released poll from the Cyrus Network shows Widodo’s lead intact – but the actual data is from mid‑January, a period that other polls already covered (p. 6). 

Policy News: Coordinating Maritime Affairs Minister Lt Gen (ret) Luhut Panjaitan urged greater state investment in geothermal power (p. 7).  Protecting consumers from misleading practices by property developers will reportedly be the focus of two forth­coming regulations (p. 8).  The IA-Cepa is reportedly due for signing on 4 March (p. 9).

Produced since 2003, the Reformasi Weekly Review provides timely, relevant and independent analysis on Indonesian political and policy news.  The writer is Kevin O’Rourke, author of the book Reformasi.  For subscription info please contact: <[email protected]>.

Infrastructure: The Jakarta Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) will ramp up operations during a trial from 12-24 March, with commercial operations expected by end‑March (p. 9).  Press reports hint that the China‑financed Bandung fast train project may have overpaid for land in Bekasi, thereby complicating acquisition of nearby land needed for the Jakarta-Area Light Rail Train (LRT) project, which faces delay until April 2021 (p. 9). 

Economics: The trade minister touted FTAs (p. 11).  Upstream Regulatory Agency (SKK Migas) officials expressed optimism about investment flows into oil and gas (p. 12). 

Outlook: Although the winner is not yet clear, the loser thus far in the presidential election appears to be the international community.  Pronounced anti‑foreign rhetoric from the Prabowo camp threatens to cow policy­makers and jeopardize prudent economic management.  Excessive skepticism of international engagement would come at an awkward time: the current account deficit requires capital inflows, while protectionism would augur lower growth (p. 12). 

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