
China Announces SOE Shakeup: Too Little Too Late to Matter
• globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.comWhat are SOEs? Who Benefited From Them?
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What are SOEs? Who Benefited From Them?
China's economic data for September will not be collated until early next month, but the ruling Chinese Communist party has already decided they will bring cheering news.
China's market has performed better than any other in the world, including the United States, over the past year despite recent stock market turbulence, veteran US investor Jim Rogers told Sputnik.
'Foreign Policy' claims the following excerpt is from a now deleted, censored account of someone who survived the Tianjin explosion from only blocks away.
Now a FOURTH series of explosions has hit China after it very purposefully devalued its currency a few weeks ago…
Asian shares rose on Friday thanks to gains on Wall Street, while the dollar steadied after facing pressure from a rallying yuan and U.S. data that offered no clarity on whether the Federal Reserve might raise interest rates next week.
Global stocks slipped as signs of resilience in the U.S. labor market and comments from the Bank of England rekindled concern the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates even as China's slowdown threatens global growth.
Why Did China Invite Blackrock's Larry Fink For Advice How To Manipulate Its Stock Market?
China's space programme says it plans to attempt the first landing of a lunar probe on the far side of the Moon.
China's Ministry of Finance said the government will strengthen fiscal policy, boost infrastructure spending and speed up reform of its tax system, adding to other steps to reenergize sputtering growth.
The Chinese government has spent 1.5 trillion yuan ($236 billion) trying to prop up the country's plunging stock market, according to analysis by Goldman Sachs.
Shortly after the PBoC's move to devalue the yuan, we noted with some alarm that it looked as though China may have drawn down its reserves by more than $100 billion in the space of just two weeks.
The world is worried about China's economy. Mark Schwartz, Goldman Sachs' man in Beijing, not so much.
China is burning through its huge stockpile of foreign exchange reserves at the fastest pace yet as it seeks to prop up its currency and stem a rising tide of money flowing out of the country.
The region's attention will likely remain squarely on China in the week ahead, as investors continue to grapple with the dizzying roller-coaster rides in the country's equity markets.
How do you get a bottom-up stock picker, a chart watcher and an economist to agree? Try asking them about Chinese equities.
There is a growing sense across the financial spectrum that the world is about to turn some type of economic page.
A weapon so secret China would not reveal it for years made its first public appearance in a military parade on Thursday as China marked the 70th anniversary of the end of the second world war.
China
"They don't quite get how to work with these markets, don't know what they're doing"
Chinese factories slow down significantly Wall Street plunged Tuesday after investors feared weak data from China, the world's second-largest economy, would lead to a global recession.
Witch Hunt Review
The slump that dragged the Standard & Poor's 500 Index to its worst month since 2012 is set to worsen, U.S. futures indicate, amid continuing concerns about the impact of China's slowdown on the global economy.
China has unveiled a slew of "confessions" from brokers and journalists as authorities struggled to contain the biggest stock market sell-off since 2008.
Measures being discussed before President Xi visits U.S. Potential actions would target other countries besides China
Options traders have never been so pessimistic on China's stock market, betting the government's renewed effort to prop up share prices is doomed to fail.
DALLAS: US Census Bureau research shows immigrants from China and India, many with student or work visas, have overtaken Mexicans as the largest groups coming into the US.
My father, a New York financier, used to call dubious stocks or bonds, "Chinese paper." Last week, we saw a blizzard of Chinese paper, both in China and around the world.
One narrative we've pushed quite hard this week is the idea that China's persistent FX interventions in support of the yuan are costing the PBoC dearly in terms of reserves.
Xi just changed the rules of the game in China -- and that makes things scarier for everyone