Thursday, February 5, 2009

the country’s economy is bottoming. Is it, however?

From Paul Kedrosky:

"
The China Bottoming Thing

Lots of people persist in pointing to improvements in China’s PMI as reason that the country’s economy is bottoming. Is it, however? As Michael Pettis points out, it’s tough to support the idea that China is bouncing back “surprisingly fast” if you actually look at the credit data in-country.

Surprisingly fast? I’ll take that bet. Aside from the normal excitement we all get from the right kinds of stimuli, part of the recent optimism seems to reflect the huge upsurge in bank lending I reported last week – with loans in January rising by RMB 1.3 trillion. Nearly one-quarter of that was provided just by ICBC.

Read the whole thing.

Me:

"Lots of people persist in pointing to improvements in China’s PMI as reason that the country’s economy is bottoming. Is it, however?"

Since some notoriety comes from correctly predicting the bottom or top of economic events, you're always going to have people venturing opinions on this subject. The problem is that, although it makes sense to call bottoms and tops with some regularity, you don't want to do it enough to make it appear that you're guessing, which you are.

And:

Paul Kedrosky 89p

Yup, no question that there is an incentive for people to do precisely
that. Doesn't make it any less irritating or banal.
This comment has 1 hidden reply. Show it!
I should say more.

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