Hello Chinese Stimulus Measures

 | Apr 01, 2016 05:32AM ET

Hello Chinese stimulus measures!

The recent global equity rally does look to be running out of steam at the moment. Short positions have been covered, but markets look to be lacking any major stimulus to drive significantly higher. A nasty selloff in European and US markets overnight coupled with an awful Japanese Tankan survey has seen Asian markets suffer a vicious bout of selling today. China’s PMIs were way above market consensus estimates as increasing signs of stimulus are evident in the Chinese economy. Although apart from materials companies, markets were little moved by these strong Chinese figures.

The main concern in the markets appears to be with the US. The Non-Farm Payrolls tonight are important, although few expect the headline jobs numbers to disappoint after the strong ADP numbers. The bigger potential market mover will be hourly earnings, which declined last month, and back-to-back monthly declines could cast asunder market pricing for even one rate hike this year. But the bigger US-related concern for equities is what is shaping up to be another negative earnings season, a scenario that is likely to weigh on markets globally. Consistent negative earnings seasons as we are slated to see in the US have coincided with the previous two recessions in the US.

China

Both the NBS and Caixin manufacturing indices displayed substantial pickups in March. The NBS PMI, which rarely displays much volatility, increased 1.2 points to return to expansionary above-50 territory for the first time since July 2015. This is consistent with the big jump in credit data (CNY disrupted February’s data), fixed-asset investment, fiscal spending and housing starts, all of which indicate stepped-up fiscal stimulus. And as I have argued before, I think the strength of the pickup we are seeing this year is due in no small part to the 19th Party Congress occurring next year. Many leaders are looking for promotions as five of the seven Politburo Standing Committee (PBSC) members are set to retire, creating opportunities for promotion throughout the party and government systems. The 1Q GDP growth for Chongqing, Guizhou and Guangdong are likely to especially benefit from this upswing, with respective Party Secretaries, Sun Zhengcai, Chen Min’er and Hu Chunhua, all top picks to take three of those five vacant positions.

Within the NBS PMI, the huge bounce in Output and New Orders to 52.3 and 51.4, respectively, points to solid future momentum in China’s industrial sector over the coming months. It’s also notable on the chart that every time New Orders have come close to touching the Output number that has been a very reliable indicator of government stimulus. The index of small companies in the NBS surged to 48.1 from a previous 44.4 alongside a bounce to 51.5 for large companies. However, the medium-sized company index has remained largely unchanged for the past three months, which raises some questions about who exactly is getting access to the stimulus capital.

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Initially the release did see strong buying in both Rio Tinto PLC (NYSE:RIO) and BHP Billiton Ltd (NYSE:BHP), but the general risk-off sentiment seems to be dominating trade today.