China's Inflation Could End the Commodity Boom
Larry MacDonald
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Chinese inflation is getting out of hand and the repercussions for the global economy may not be pretty.
As reported May 12 by the Associated Press, Chinese inflation rebounded in April to 8.5% on a year-over-year basis, just shy of the 12-year high of 8.7% established earlier this year. In recognition of the inflation peril, the Chinese central bank this week boosted bank reserve requirements by 50 basis points to a record high of 16.5%, promising more hikes along with interest rate increases.
Sooner or later, China will succeed in bringing its galloping inflation problem under control. But it has built up so much momentum that stopping it will probably require a substantial contraction in the Chinese economy … just like it did in the U.S. and Canada during the 1970s. Developed economies learned the value of a price-stability target from that era; China and the emerging economies appear to still be on the learning curve in that department.
A contraction in China will likely add another squeeze on the global economy on top of the credit crunch and sky-high prices for energy and other commodities. One casualty could be the current commodity boom itself. And as substantial appreciation in the Chinese Yuan would seem to be a virtual certainty, companies benefiting from importing cheap products from China, particularly Wal-Mart, could face more of challenge.
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This article has 9 comments:
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Michael B. Smith
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2 Comments
May 13 07:01 PM-
Michael B. Smith
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2 Comments
May 13 07:10 PMSecond, if inflation were to run out of control, and the Yuan were to rise significantly, it would only drive commodity prices higher. Higher Yuan...cheaper oil; Higher Yuan...cheaper copper, etc.
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bluesmoke
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169 Comments
May 13 07:59 PM-
E.D. Hart
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154 Comments
May 13 08:06 PM-
weng ho teng
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34 Comments
May 13 09:06 PMI have already moved more money into the stock market.
My favorite pick at this time is the China internet and B2B gem MYST.OB.
That is the best China stock for the remainder of 2008.
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pepster
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10 Comments
May 14 12:00 AMMore expensive Chinese-made products in the US --> less US demand, esp. with high food and gas prices.
Less US demand --> possibly less goods manufactured in China (if Europe and/or other markets can't pick up the export slack) and by extension a drop in commodities.
I think this is the scenario the author might be trying to present, although both Michael Smith and Eric Hart make logical arguments for the opposite case.
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Buddy Fox
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18 Comments
May 14 12:54 AM-
omodes123
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24 Comments
May 14 12:57 AM-
sbenard
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237 Comments
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May 14 08:03 AM