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Strategies & Market Trends : Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: regli who wrote (34011)7/22/2005 2:46:16 AM
From: mishedlo  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116555
 
One-Atom-Thick Materials Promise A 'New Industrial Revolution'

Pandora's Atomic Box
Manchester UK (SPX) Jul 21, 2005
Scientists at The University of Manchester have discovered a new class of materials which have previously only existed in science fiction films and books.

A team of British and Russian scientists led by Professor Geim have discovered a whole family of previously unknown materials, which are one atom thick and exhibit properties which scientists had never thought possible.

Not only are they ultra-thin, but depending on circumstances they can also be ultra-strong, highly-insulating or highly-conductive, offering a wide range of unique properties for space-age engineers and designers to choose from.

Professor Andre Geim said: "This discovery opens up practically infinite possibilities for applications which people have never even thought of yet. These materials are lightweight, strong and flexible, and there is a huge choice of them. This is not only about smart gadgets. Like polymers whose pervasiveness changed our everyday life forever, one-atom-thick materials could be used in a myriad of routine applications from clothing to computers."

The materials have been created by extracting individual atomic planes from conventional bulk crystals by using a technique called 'micromechanical cleavage'. Depending on a parent crystal, their one-atom-thick counterparts can be metals, semiconductors, insulators, magnets, etc. Previously, it was thought that such thin materials could not exist in principle, but the research team have, for the first time, demonstrated that they are not only possible but fairly easy to make.

They found that the atomically thin sheets they extracted were not only stable under ambient conditions but also exhibited extremely high crystal quality, which is what gives them their unique properties.

Dr Kostya Novoselov, a key investigator in this research, added: "Probably the most important part is that our discovery is not limited to just one or two new materials. It is a whole class of new materials, thousands of them. And they have a variety of properties, allowing one to choose a material most appropriate for a particular application.

"Although some of the applications are probably decades away, I expect to see ultra-fast transistors, micromechanical devices and nano-sensors based on the discovered one-atom-thick crystals already in a few years time."

The findings were published 18 July, 2005 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The paper is entitled: 'Two Dimensional Atomic Crystals'. In conclusion it reads: "We have now demonstrated the existence of 2D atomic crystals and believe that, once investigated and understood, it will be possible for them to be grown in large sizes required for industrial applications."

spacedaily.com



To: regli who wrote (34011)7/22/2005 3:22:04 AM
From: mishedlo  Respond to of 116555
 
China´s papers suggest bigger revaluation unlikely soon
Friday, July 22, 2005 2:45:48 AM
afxpress.com

China's papers suggest bigger revaluation unlikely soon BEIJING (AFX) - State-run Chinese newspapers have suggested that a bigger appreciation of the yuan will not be happening anytime soon, a day after it was revalued by two pct and its peg to the dollar was ended

"Expectations for a bigger appreciation of the yuan's value was, and will be, unrealistic," said the China Daily in an editorial

Other official newspapers echoed similar sentiments "There will be no further big movements in the exchange rate of the renminbi," the Beijing Youth Daily said in a headline

"In the short-term, (the revaluation) will have a certain affect on growth and employment but if you look at the big picture the advantages outweigh the disadvantages," it said

China's central bank yesterday scrapped the yuan's peg to the US dollar and re-pegged it to a trade-weighted basket of currencies

The currency is now valued at 8.11 yuan to the dollar, compared to the previous rate of 8.28 yuan

The People's Bank of China said the move was designed to solve a host of problems that the decade-old peg has been causing amid China's recent economic expansion

The Beijing News quoted an unnamed central bank spokesman as saying any big fluctuations would be bad news for the Chinese economy

"Big fluctuations of the renminbi exchange rate would hit the financial and economic stability of our country rather hard and would not conform with the fundamental interests of China," he said

The China Daily said the revaluation would likely attract new speculative funds into China betting on a further revaluation and said regulators needed to be vigilant in this regard

"This could complicate the rectification of the real estate sector, where a large amount of hot money is believed to be hiding. Regulators should be vigilant to this development in this regard," it said

It said that now the move had been made, the focus should be on helping domestic enterprises cope with the change

"The state banks that are struggling for better financial health and are preparing for stock market debuts need special attention," it said

It also urged China's trade partners to ease their pressure for more changes to the currency now that an initial appreciation had been made

"China's trade partners should refrain from pressuring China to make changes that will damage the country's economy," it said

China's trade partners, led by the United States, had long criticized the yuan for being undervalued, claiming it gave China's exports an unfair trade advantage



To: regli who wrote (34011)7/22/2005 3:31:41 AM
From: mishedlo  Respond to of 116555
 
Global: No Bottlenecks without a Bottle
Stephen Roach (New York)
morganstanley.com

The more I ponder the inflation story, the more I become convinced that we need to come up with a new approach. In two earlier essays, I addressed the shifting composition of inflation (see “Inflation Phobia” July 15, 2005) and the cross-border convergence of pricing (see “Inflation Convergence, July 18, 2005). In what follows, I explore some important shifts in the macro relationships that have long been at the heart of the inflation process. What emerges from this trilogy is a strong conviction that increasingly powerful forces of globalization have fundamentally altered the inflation outlook. Barring a setback to globalization or a major policy blunder, low inflation could well be here to stay for the foreseeable future.

Globalization is all about the cross-border integration of economies, markets, trade and financial capital flows, and information. Ultimately, it also entails increased mobility of the factors of production -- capital, labor, and technology -- thereby forcing us to think about the production process and the dissemination of services in an increasingly global context. That means the pricing of goods and services must also be examined in the same broader framework -- in essence, determined by the market-clearing balance between globalized supply and demand curves. The rapid expansion of global trade in recent years underscores the need to accept this analytical leap of faith in assessing inflation risk. By our calculations, global exports will exceed 28% of world GDP in 2005 -- easily a record and more than ten percentage points above the 17% share that prevailed as recently as 1986. As global trade continues to power ahead, the forces of globalization -- and their impacts on real economic and financial market activity -- can only intensify as a result.

It’s easy to be awestruck by the anecdotes of globalization; look no further than Tom Friedman’s latest best-seller, The World Is Flat (Farrar, Strauss and Giroux, 2005). As macro practitioners, however, we need to dig deeper. In particular, it is critical to assess whether cross-border integration has had a major impact on time-honored macro relationships that drive economic growth, employment, income generation, and inflation. I am very sympathetic to that possibility. I first explored such an outcome in the context of shifting global trends in employment and labor income generation (see my 5 October 2003 essay, The Global Labor Arbitrage). More recently, I have generalized this framework to include the cross-border arbitrage of saving and pricing (see my 6 June 2005 essay, The New Macro of Globalization). Some fascinating new research just published by the Bank for International Settlements adds further evidence to this debate. In particular, it sheds considerable light on how globalization is challenging the macro relationships that have long been at the heart of our understanding of the inflation process (see especially Chapter II of the 75th Annual Report of the BIS, June 2005). The BIS research provides a goldmine of evidence in the laboratory of globalization.

Three findings by the BIS strike me as especially noteworthy in revealing the impacts of globalization on inflation (see accompanying table): First is the link between exchange rates and import prices. Currency depreciation has long been perceived as an inflationary development. Unless foreign exporters are willing to compromise their profit margins, it makes sense for them to maintain price targets in home-currency terms -- thereby allowing external pricing to fluctuate with shifts in foreign exchange rates. While that’s still the case to some extent, BIS researchers have found that this relationship has become far less robust as globalization has taken hold. They compare this relationship over two periods -- the modern-day globalization era of 1990 to 2004 and the “pre-globalization” era of 1971-89. An examination of trends in six major developed countries -- the US, Japan, Germany, France, the UK, and Italy -- finds that the sensitivity (elasticity) of import prices to a one percentage point change in the nominal effective exchange rate has diminished sharply between the two periods. In the US, for example, the exchange-rate-import-price elasticity over the most recent 15 years was more than 60% below the elasticity of the preceding 20 years. Declines of varying magnitudes were also evident in the other five countries -- led by France and followed in descending order by Japan, the UK, Italy, and Germany.

Second, the BIS also finds that that the pass-through of import prices into the domestic price structure has been seriously curtailed as globalization has taken root. With the exception of Italy, all of the six countries examined have experienced a dramatic decline in the sensitivity between fluctuations in import prices and domestic prices in the past 15 years. I suspect this underscores the increased power of the global price-setting mechanism: Even if import prices rise due to currency fluctuations or market conditions in foreign economies, the lack of pricing leverage in a world with a hugely-expanded global supply curve now constrains domestic producers from passing through these higher external costs. In all six countries, this constraint has been evident in the form of reduced elasticities as globalization has taken off over the 1990 to 2004 period.

Third, there is also solid evidence of sharply diminished linkages between inflation and the broadest gauges of market pressures. This shows up in the form of reduced sensitivities between fluctuations in core inflation and changes in the so-called output gap -- the difference between actual and “potential,” or full-employment GDP. The UK experience is an exception to this trend, but sharp reductions in this elasticity were evident between the globalization and pre-globalization periods for Japan, France, Italy, the US, and Germany. Not surprisingly, this result fits well with equally-impressive declines in the linkages between unit labor costs and core inflation that I noted in the second installment of this trilogy (see my 19 July dispatch, “Inflation Convergence). If the broadly-based output gap has lost its potency in driving fluctuations in inflation, it stands to reason that a similar result can be expected from the linkage between inflation and the cost pressures that arise from cyclical fluctuations in the labor-market piece of the output gap.

Don’t get me wrong -- this is not ironclad evidence that globalization has repealed the macro rules of inflation. However, there can be no mistaking the evidence of a sharp reduction of the linkages between price setting and several of its key determinants -- namely, currencies, import prices, output gaps, and labor costs. It’s the timing of these diminished linkages that brings globalization into the story. For six major developed economies, the elasticities and correlations have declined during the same period when globalization has burst forth with extraordinary scope and speed. Maybe that’s just a coincidence. After all, there could certainly be other powerful forces at work. Central bankers would like you to believe that they deserve credit for their success as inflation fighters. In addition, the explosion of the Internet points to a new technology of price setting. These developments can hardly be dismissed as inconsequential events on the inflation front. But, in my view, they are dwarfed by the far more powerful market-driven forces of globalization. I do not think it is a coincidence that global inflation convergence has occurred at the same time when the roles of currencies, import prices, and labor costs have all diminished in importance in shaping inflation. Nor do I think it is a coincidence that these developments have all occurred during a period when global trade has soared repeatedly to new records as a share of world GDP.

At work, in my view, is the globalization of disinflation. Our old closed-economy models have been rendered increasingly obsolete by the emergence of far more powerful cross-border influences on pricing. As a result, in making inflation calls, we now need to pay less attention to country-specific shifts in unemployment and capacity utilization rates. Instead, we need to focus more on the global balance between supply and demand that shape the far more open models of globalization. In that broader context, the outlook for inflation remains very constructive, in my view. After all, it’s hard to have bottlenecks without a bottle.



To: regli who wrote (34011)7/22/2005 3:40:10 AM
From: mishedlo  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 116555
 
China: Booming Inner Mongolia
Andy Xie (Hong Kong)
Summary and Investment Conclusion

Morgan Stanley organized an investor trip to Inner Mongolia to visit companies in the coal-mining and dairy industries last week. Both are experiencing rapid growth at present. The main concern for investors is the direction of the price of coal.

The economy of Inner Mongolia is booming, mainly on rapid growth in the coal industry. Coal production rose 21.7% per annum during 1999-2004 and by 33.9% in the first five months of 2005 over the same period of last year.

Signs of a coal shortage have disappeared across the country as transportation bottlenecks have eased and coal production has risen rapidly. Coal prices could come under pressure in the coming months.
....
....

morganstanley.com



To: regli who wrote (34011)7/22/2005 12:50:40 PM
From: mishedlo  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116555
 
Additional Thoughts on the RMB Repeg
globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Mish