In this briefing:
- US Dollar Demand – Fading Appetite
- The Internet: Hacks, Clicks, and Money
- China’s Pharmaceutical and TCM Industry
- ECB, BoJ Suck Wind – EA Threatened with Japanisation
- India Monthly Report: Jan’19 – Feb’19
1. US Dollar Demand – Fading Appetite
In 2011 the world experienced the best year of demand expansion – in US dollar terms – in any year since the financial crisis, until 2018 that is. But you would hardly realise that that was the case by reading the newswires, the stories there since early 2018 have been about ‘synchronised slowdown’ and, in particular, the demand downdraft from China. The reality is that developed countries (the US, EU, UK and Japan) plus developing Asia (China, India and the Asean-4) produced US$4.1trn of ‘new’ GDP demand in 2011 and in 2018 was on course to produce US$4.1trn in new dollar demand.
2. The Internet: Hacks, Clicks, and Money
There is this thing called the internet that can be pretty cool sometimes. In all seriousness though, the internet is a driving force for making money and spending money. Last week we took a long look at mobile phones and continuing a deep dive on technology today we take look at the internet in China. This will not be a total encyclopedia but a snap shot of some key features.
3. China’s Pharmaceutical and TCM Industry
Chinese healthcare is fascinating in that one minute you can visit a doctor practicing the latest modern medicine and then stop at the corner store for traditional Chinese medicines specializing in random herbs and fungi. The dichotomy is a truly Chinese experience. However, China is increasingly a manufacturing and therefore export destination for both modern and traditional Chinese medicines (TCM).
4. ECB, BoJ Suck Wind – EA Threatened with Japanisation
By Charles Dumas, Chief Economist
- Monetary stimulus fails export-dependent savings glut countries
- Japan now accepts huge budget deficits and negative interest rates
- EA needs broad structural reform to avoid Japan’s deep malaise
5. India Monthly Report: Jan’19 – Feb’19
Indian indices were the least performing among the select global indices with S&P BSE Sensex and Nifty 50 generating returns of 0.01% and negative 0.73% in domestic terms respectively. In Dollar terms they fell by 2.18% and 2.89% respectively. Indian Rupee witnessed deprecation of 2.18% during the period and fell from 69.40 USD/ INR to 70.95 USD/ INR. Among the select indices, Hang Seng was the best performer with dollar returns of 10.89% and among the select currencies, South African Rand was the best performing with an appreciation of 7.88%.
Performance of Select Indices during Jan’19 | ||
Index | Returns in Domestic Currency | Returns in USD |
S&P BSE SENSEX | 0.01% | -2.18% |
NIFTY 50 | -0.73% | -2.89% |
Nikkei 225 | 6.19% | 6.84% |
Dow Jones Industrial Average | 7.08% | 7.08% |
HANG SENG | 11.19% | 10.89% |
FTSE 100 | 3.49% | 7.06% |
Among the Sectoral indices, Nifty Pharma was the best performing with returns of 4.91% in dollar terms and Nifty Realty was the worst performing with falling by 17.41%
Performance of Indian Sectoral Indices during Jan’19 | INR Returns | USD Returns |
NIFTY PHARMA | 7.25% | 4.91% |
NIFTY IT | 0.67% | -1.52% |
NIFTY FMCG | -0.35% | -2.53% |
NIFTY FIN SERVICE | -0.64% | -2.81% |
NIFTY PVT BANK | -1.97% | -4.11% |
NIFTY BANK | -2.10% | -4.24% |
NIFTY AUTO | -3.55% | -5.66% |
NIFTY METAL | -3.77% | -5.87% |
NIFTY MEDIA | -7.00% | -9.03% |
NIFTY PSU BANK | -10.50% | -12.45% |
NIFTY REALTY | -15.57% | -17.41% |
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