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Strategies & Market Trends : Rande Is . . . HOME -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kevin Shea who wrote (9402)7/11/1999 9:00:00 PM
From: Rande Is  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 57584
 
China Warned About Deflation

.c The Associated Press

BEIJING (AP) - Government economists have urged Beijing to put a stop to deflation before it drags down China's struggling economy, the official China Daily reported Sunday.

In a recent report, a research institute under the government's top economic planning agency called tackling deflation an ''overwhelmingly urgent task,'' the newspaper said.

Deflation is ''threatening to undermine economic reforms, growth and stability,'' the newspaper said quoting a report by the Macroeconomics Research Institute of the State Development Planning Commission.

The warning underscores the difficulties the communist government has experienced trying to inject growth into the slipping economy. The communist leadership has announced that reviving domestic demand will top its annual policy-setting meeting in October.

But China Daily said there was no indication what options the leadership has.

A massive deficit-financed public works spending program started last year and four interest-rate cuts in 17 months have had only limited effect. With record unemployment caused by free-market reforms, consumers are seemingly too worried about losing their jobs to spend some of the $700 billion in bank accounts.

Although the government has succeeded in talking up a bull-run on stock markets since May, economists have warned that economic fundamentals are too weak to keep stock prices high.

Deflation, inflation's flip-side, occurs when paltry demand and not enough money in circulation forces suppliers to drop prices. As of May, prices in China had been falling for 20 straight months. Under such conditions, companies may follow consumers, investing less and further dampening growth.

An unwillingness to lend by already heavily indebted state banks has been partly to blame for the slack demand, Song Guoqing, chief economist at the China Securities Executive Council, was quoted as saying in the newspaper.

Song warned that banks have little incentive to lend. The government for years treated banks as an arm of policy-making, forcing them to keep state industries afloat. Although reforms of the banking sector are under way, the new system has yet to take hold.



To: Kevin Shea who wrote (9402)7/12/1999 1:23:00 AM
From: fishweed  Respond to of 57584
 
Kevin - Thanks for your response on HSAC, I value your opinion. No I'm out completely, scalped 22 points, using Rande's formula (profitoften). Thinking of re-ntering if it pulls back far enough.

fish



To: Kevin Shea who wrote (9402)7/12/1999 10:00:00 AM
From: Kevin Shea  Respond to of 57584
 
HSAC big sell off....best to wait for any planned reentries