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The Myth Of Decoupling


That's the trillion dollar question then - will the petrodollars and dragondollars (all in deflating US dollars) decide to prop up the USS Titanic or cut their collective losses? For several years the return form investing in the US has been flat to negative so combined with the final straw scenario unfolding now it's crunch time for the 2 US dollar hoarders - give back all those US dollar foreign currency reserves to keep the jalopy afloat or break free into a new world order removed from the us dollar.
 
For the decouplingistas

 
And the re-coupling continues:

 
Does anyone still actually believe in decoupling? Anyway, it seems the post Olympics recovery in China is a little tepid:

 
And the great decoupling continues.....not. But not to worry, the China stimulus package is coming, that'll fix everything.

 
And the great decoupling continues.....not. But not to worry, the China stimulus package is coming, that'll fix everything.

Their stimulus package is quite different from the one used in US in the sense that it used to build infrastructures and employment rather than being used to bailout insolvent firms. Since infrastructures take YEARS to build, the benefits from their package will take a pretty long while to occur. However, I don't believe it will help them to suffer a cyclic downturn before it continues its secular uptrend.
 
More fodder for the decouplers. Note the export reading fell off a cliff in November and since exports account for more than 40% of China's GDP, it suggests a significant slowing in China's growth rate.

 
More fodder for the decouplers. Note the export reading fell off a cliff in November and since exports account for more than 40% of China's GDP, it suggests a significant slowing in China's growth rate.

Imagine what happens when the average Chinese market participant stops saving their hard earned and starts consuming. Asian personal savings rates are some of the highest in the world. There is good reason for this - lack of affordable public social infrastructure and welfare benefits. But as this is built up, the incentive for domestic consumption will increase.

So you have:
1. a stimulus package based on massive cash reserves;
2. no Western reluctance for a "Big Governemental Stick' to aide the recovery; and
2. an emerging domestic economy to alleviate the current reliance on the US and Europe.

There are, off course, short-term impediments to this but from here the upside for China is more apparent than for the 'mature' Western economies that need significant consumer leverage to maintain GDP growth. So, at some stage, the myth will become reality.

However those that were early in their 'China has decoupled' calls certainly have egg on their face today (myself included).
 
Recoupling continues for the Chinese economy with GDP growing at it's slowest pace in 7 years. It is widely acknowledged that Australia went into this economic downturn in better shape that most countries but does that necessarily mean it will whether the storm better given it's leverage to the Chinese economy? From Bloomberg:

 
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