China-U.S.Trade War Not Over Yet; USD/CNY Forecast Revised Down

 | Feb 08, 2019 07:15AM ET

The Chinese economy is weakening on several fronts and not just because of the US-China trade war. In response, the government is looking for ways to boost consumption. Tax cuts may not be enough to avoid a softening in the labour market.

At the end of January 2019 there were two major events in China that caught our attention. The first was the trade negotiations with the U.S., which ended without a major breakthrough. The second was the announcement of a Targeted Medium Term Liquidity (TMLF) by the People’s Bank of China.

Under this facility, the central bank will lend to commercial banks at a lower interest rate, provided the commercial banks increase lending to smaller private firms. These two events highlight that the Chinese economy continues to face uncertainty from the trade war, and the government will continue to support the economy through this period.

Chinese vice premier and lead trade negotiator Liu He returned from Washington with some progress made, but without a final deal with the U.S. Negotiators have agreed some concessions on agricultural exports, but not resolved the key issues around intellectual property rights, the transfer of technology, and the role of state-owned enterprises. We think this makes it unlikely the trade war will end by 1 March 2019.

h3 The Chinese government relies on infrastructure again/h3