Market-based signals
Starting with commodities, as China has been a voracious consumer of commodities, commodity prices are weak. Moreover, the cyclically sensitive copper/gold and base metal/gold ratios fell to fresh lows (bottom panel).
Stock prices are also signaling weakness. The relative performance of MSCI China to the MSCI All-Country World Index (ACWI) and Hong Kong are testing multi-year lows. In addition, the relative performance of the higher beta Chinese small caps has fallen sharply.
Inadequate rebalancing
The initiatives announced from the Third Plenum were disappointing to the markets. The WSJ article headline, “China’s Leaders Point to Economic Threats but Show No Sign of Changing Tack”, tells much of the story. In the face of a weak real estate market and growing local government debt burdens, Beijing chose few course corrections, and an inadequate level of urgency to rebalance growth to the household sector from infrastructure and manufacturing.
In spite of a widespread view that globalization is in retreat, Brad Setser found that China is still highly dependent on exports as its primary growth driver.
Investment implications
Here’s why the deceleration in China growth matters for global investors. China heads one of the three major trade blocs of Asia, Europe and the U.S. Already, the Chinese slowdown is showing up in Europe and European equities.
My analysis of global equity returns found that the relative returns of U.S. stocks are negatively correlated to Chinese stocks, but relative returns in Europe and EM ex-China are positively correlated. When China sneezes, non-U.S. economies catch colds.
As a consequence of the slowdown in the Chinese growth outlook and no fixes in sight, I am downgrading my Trend Asset Allocation from bullish to neutral. Investors should regard this shift not as a sell signal, but a take profit signal from a buy signal that went overweight equities in July 2023. We’ve had a good run, it’s time to take some chips off the table.
China is definitely in a Balance Sheet Recession. Read Richard Koo or listen to his YouTube.
Can anyone please clarify difference between “My inner trader” and “My Trend Asset Allocation Model”
I see “My Trend Asset Allocation Model” targets:
Buy: 80% SPY, 20% IEF
Neutral: 60% SPY, 40% IEF
Sell: 40% SPY, 60% IEF
whereas “My inner trader” targets:
Traded is the S&P 500
My question: is “My inner trader” suppose be a short-term trade alert on long/short direction and is “My Trend Asset Allocation Model” suppose to be long only?
You are correct. The Trend Asset Allocation Model is designed for investors with 6-18 month time horizons. My inner trader is a swing trader with a time horizon of several days up to a month.