Update your email preferences or unsubscribe here |
|
| | | | | Introduction | China started 2026 with a large lending print that still undershot expectations, keeping investors focused on whether easing is reaching private demand. That matters because China sets the marginal tone for industrial commodities, and pricing often moves on expectation before hard activity confirms. Markets have reacted with uneven gains in copper and iron ore and selective strength in commodity-linked FX, signaling a tradeable impulse rather than a settled global growth trend. |
| |
| | |
| | | | | | | Elon Musk: "Tesla will become a $25 trillion company." | That would make Tesla 8x bigger than Apple today. | How is that possible? | He admits it's all thanks to this one AI breakthrough that will take AI out of our computer screens and manifest a 250x boom here in the real world. | Click here now to see Tesla's REAL master plan |
| |
| | |
| | | | | Market Movers | Chinese banks extended 4.71 trillion yuan in new yuan loans in January, a sharp jump that nonetheless missed forecasts and reinforced the view that demand remains patchy even with policy support, based on reporting on the below-consensus lending surge. The miss matters because it frames the cycle as policy-led credit creation, not a broad private borrowing rebound. For miners and metal-linked equities like BHP, RIO, FCX, and SCCO, the near-term setup can still work because state-directed credit often flows into infrastructure and upstream-heavy projects. But the market's tolerance is lower when lending growth does not translate into a cleaner private-sector pickup, especially as global rates keep funding costs elevated. | Watchpoints traders are using to map the impulse: | Loan growth versus expectations, a clean confidence read. Construction and property stabilization signals, the real commodity transmission channel. EM FX response, especially AUD, CLP, and BRL as a proxy for China-sensitive demand.
|
| |
| | |
| | | | | Commodities And EM FX | Copper has acted like the front-end ticker for the story, but the physical backdrop looks less tight than prices imply. Exchange inventories across CME, LME, and SHFE have risen above 1.1 million metric tons, even as the market trades scarcity risk, according to coverage highlighting rising stocks amid firm pricing. That divergence suggests flows and positioning are doing more work than spot fundamentals, which can amplify reversals if China demand headlines disappoint. | The global spillover channel is still meaningful. Federal Reserve research estimates that a policy-driven China credit impulse of 1% of GDP lifts global output outside China after one to two years and supports commodity prices, consistent with the idea that metals and EM FX can front-run the broader cycle, per analysis tying China credit shocks to global activity and commodities. If that transmission holds, the cleaner confirmation will be tightening physical balances, not just headline stimulus. |
| |
| | |
| | | | | Closing Insight | The trade turns durable only when private demand improves enough to validate higher metals prices with tighter inventories and stronger EM FX follow-through. |
| |
| | |
| | | | | References | Reuters. (2026, February 13). China January new loans jump but miss forecasts as weak demand persists. https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/china-january-new-loans-jump-miss-forecasts-weak-demand-persists-2026-02-13/ | Reuters. (2026, February 13). Copper is pricing scarcity at a time of plenty. https://www.reuters.com/markets/commodities/copper-is-pricing-scarcity-time-plenty-2026-02-13/ | Barcelona, W. L., Casas, C., De Soyres, F., Liu, F., & Rungcharoenkitkul, P. (2022). What happens in China does not stay in China (International Finance Discussion Papers No. 1360). Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. https://www.federalreserve.gov/econres/ifdp/files/ifdp1360.pdf |
| |
| | |
|
|
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar