China’s slowdown bad news for Asian currencies - Raiz Invest

23-08-2021

George Lucas, Raiz Group CEO

China is in the spotlight this week. The Asian superpower’s economy is likely to continue to slow in the coming months which will be a headwind for commodity-linked currencies like Australia, Indonesia, and Malaysia over the next couple of years. Remember, I am not saying China will cease growing, but that the growth rate will not be as high as in the past, and that this will have knock-on effects.

Looking closer, the latest activity data out of China emphasises just how much the country’s economy has continued to slow. This includes sluggish refining activity and retail sales numbers released earlier this month. While some of the latest loss of momentum in China is probably due to fresh virus-related restrictions, sectors less impacted by COVID-19 have slowed too.

Adding to the China picture are tighter credit conditions from authorities that continue to bite and suggest the economy will continue to slow, even if the virus-related weakness eventually unwinds.

A sustained slowdown in China will contribute to further underperformance on the part of China’s stock market. While this should not stop the global rally in stock markets, it may have an impact on the prices of commodities, particularly industrial metals such as iron ore, coal and copper.

Looping back to currencies, the slowdown’s impact on commodities is likely to weigh on the currencies of economies where commodity exports are particularly important. Hence, I expect the Australian dollar, Indonesian rupiah and Malaysian ringgit to continue to remain weak against the US dollar.

The caveat to all this: we didn’t see surging appreciation in these currencies on the back of strong price rise in commodities, so we may will not see massive weakness if commodity prices keep falling.

 

Thailand GDP surges 7.5% year on year

Elsewhere in Asia, Thailand’s economy grew 7.5% year on year in the three months to June, its first expansion in six quarters. The surprise 0.4% quarter-on-quarter rise in Q2 GDP is unlikely to be repeated this quarter considering the surge in virus infections and slow vaccine rollout in Thailand.

The growth in large part reflects a rebound from last year’s sharp decline, and the tourism sector in Thailand is still on its knees, meaning any recovery further ahead will probably be slow.

 

Australia’s wage price index ticks up

In Australia, the subdued 0.4% quarter-on-quarter rise in the wage price index in Q2 underlines that the tight labour market hasn’t been generating significant wage pressures.

On this front, the lockdowns did not cause employment to decline in July, and the unemployment rate continues to fall as people report that they are not looking for a job. The jobless rate dipped from 4.9 per cent in June to 4.6 per cent in July. There’s not much point job hunting in a lockdown.

 

US Federal Reserve hints at asset purchase tapering

In the US, it now looks more likely than not that tapering of bond purchases by the US Federal Reserve will begin later in 2021, rather than early in 2022, as most had previously thought.

The final decision on whether that will happen is unlikely to be taken before September after the prospect was reinforced by the release last week of minutes from the US Fed’s July meeting.

 


 

Don’t have the Raiz App?

Download it for free in the App store or the Webapp below:

download-raiz-app
Click to download the Raiz app

 

Important Information

If you have read all or any part of our email, website, or communication then you need to know that this is factual information and general advice only. This means it does not consider any person’s particular financial objectives, financial situation, or financial needs. If you are an investor, you should consult a licensed adviser before acting on any information to fully understand the benefits and risk associated with the product. This is your call but that is what you should do.

You may be surprised to learn that RAIZ Invest Australia Limited (ABN 26 604 402 815) (Raiz), an authorised representative AFSL 434776 prepared this information.

We are not allowed, and have not prepared this information to offer financial product advice or a recommendation in relation to any investments or securities. If we did give you personal advice, which we did not, then the use of the Raiz App would be a lot more expensive than the current pricing – sorry but true. You therefore should not rely on this information to make investment decisions, because it was not about you for once, and unfortunately, we cannot advise you on who or what you can rely on – again sorry.

A Product Disclosure Statement (PDS) for Raiz Invest and/or Raiz Invest Super is available on the Raiz Invest website and App. A person must read and consider the PDS before deciding whether, or not, to acquire and/or continue to hold interests in the financial product. We know and ASIC research shows that you probably won’t, but we want you to, and we encourage you to read the PDS so you know exactly what the product does, its risks and costs. If you don’t read the PDS, it’s a bit like flying blind. Probably not a good idea.

The risks and fees for investing are fully set out in the PDS and include the risks that would ordinarily apply to investing. You should note, as illustrated by the global financial crisis of 2008, that sometimes  not even professionals in the financial services sector understand the ordinary risks of investing – because by their nature many risks are unknown – but you still need to give it a go and try to understand the risks set out in the PDS.

Any returns shown or implied are not forecasts and are not reliable guides or predictors of future performance. Those of you who cannot afford financial advice may be considering ignoring this statement, but please don’t, it is so true.

Under no circumstance is the information to be used by, or presented to, a person for the purposes of deciding about investing in Raiz Invest or Raiz Invest Super.

This information may be based on assumptions or market conditions which change without notice and have not been independently verified. Basically, this says nothing stays the same for long in financial markets (or even in life for that matter) and we are sorry. We try, but we can’t promise that the information is accurate, or stays accurate.

Any opinions or information expressed are subject to change without notice; that’s just the way we roll.

The bundll and superbundll products are provided by FlexiCards Australia Pty Ltd ABN 31 099 651 877 Australian credit licence number 247415. Bundll, snooze and superbundll are trademarks of Flexirent Capital Pty Ltd, a subsidiary of FlexiGroup Limited. Lots of names, which basically you aren’t allowed to reproduce without their permission and we need to include here.

Mastercard is a registered trademark and the circles design is a trademark of Mastercard International Incorporated.

Home loans are subject to approval from the lending institution and Raiz Home Ownership makes no warranties as to the success of an application until all relevant information has been provided.

Raiz Home Ownership Pty Ltd (ABN 14 645 876 937), an Australian Credit Representative number 528594 under Australian Credit Licence number 387025. Raiz Home Ownership Pty Ltd is 100% owned by Raiz Invest Australia Limited (ABN 26 604 402 815).


Bitnami