China Downgrade Irons Australian Dollar

 | May 24, 2017 04:41AM ET

A surprise sovereign downgrade of China by Moody’s sees iron ore collapse taking the Australian Dollar with it.

If ever there was a lesson about how intertwined the global economy is in the 21st century, it is the sometimes love/hate relationship between China and Australia. Both are mutually dependent on each other from a supply and demand point of view. In China’s case, they import just about everything that Australia digs out of its vast ground area to fuel their primary industries. Think coal, copper and most especially iron ore. For Australia, conversely, China is by far its largest trading partner. Consuming vast quantities of both various mineral ores as well as primary products such as meat and dairy to fuel the factory of the word. Given that China’s capital account can by no stretch of the imagination be considered open, despite the rhetoric, it can be very hard to express a trading view on the world’s 2nd largest economy. Both the onshore and offshore Chinese currencies, the CNY and the CNH, are carefully managed by the PBOC.

Given that China’s capital account can by no stretch of the imagination be considered open, despite the rhetoric, it can be very hard to express a trading view on the world’s 2nd largest economy. Both the onshore and offshore Chinese currencies, the CNY and the CNH, are carefully managed by the PBOC. The symbiotic nature of the Australian and Chinese relationship means that the Australian Dollar is a “high beta” in financial market speak to developments within the Chinese economy. In plain English, this really means that because China’s capital account is closed, the Australian Dollar (AUD) is used to reflect developments in China.

One could say that when China is booking (read importing lots of raw materials), the AUD tends to move higher. Sometimes a lot higher. When China catches a cold(imports less raw materials), the AUD catches tuberculosis. Asia, including China, was thoroughly wrong-footed today when Moody’s rating agency surprisingly downgraded China’s sovereign debt from Aa3 to A1. It was the first downgrade of China by them since 1998.

08:18 *(CN) MOODY’S CUTS CHINA SOVEREIGN RATING TO A1 FROM AA3 (one notch); revises outlook from negative to stable (first Moody’s cut since 1989) Moody’s Investors Service has today downgraded China’s long-term local currency and foreign currency issuer ratings to A1 from Aa3 and changed the outlook to stable from negative. The downgrade reflects Moody’s expectation that China’s financial strength will erode somewhat over the coming years, with economy-wide debt continuing to rise as potential growth slows. – Source TradeTheNews.com

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The markets wasted no time in China reacting to this with the Dalian Commodity Exchange Industrial Material Futures all falling.

Both the coking coal and coke futures (used in steel and power production I believe) fell -1.80% and 2.70% respectively.

However, it was the Dalian iron Ore Futures that felt the fury, plunging 6.70% in a straight line as per the chart below.