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BEIJING — A year ago, the Chinese billionaire Wang Jianlin declared the dominance of his vast entertainment empire, Dalian Wanda Group, boasting that his theme parks were a “pack of wolves” that would defeat the lone “tiger” of Disney’s Shanghai resort.

Now, Mr. Wang is retreating, in a sign that Wanda could be reaching the limits of its debt-fueled expansion.

Wanda said on Monday that it would sell the theme parks as part of a $9.3 billion deal that includes 76 hotels and a major chunk of 13 tourism projects. The cash from the deal, with the property developer Sunac China, would be used to pay down debt.

Wanda appears to be caught in a political and financial downdraft that has hit many big Chinese deal makers. For years, the Chinese government encouraged the global ambitions of corporate giants like Wanda. Mr. Wang muscled into Hollywood’s domain, buying the AMC Theaters chain and the struggling production company Legendary Entertainment.

Wanda battled Disney with plans for 13 theme parks across China. When Disney opened its Shanghai resort last year, drawing enormous crowds, Mr. Wang declared that “the frenzy of Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck and the era of blindly following them have passed.”

Such aggressive expansion plans are now under increased scrutiny in Beijing. Last month, a senior Chinese banking official warned that some of China’s largest and most indebted companies may pose a systemic risk to the country’s banks and to the health of the broader economy.

The deal-making ambitions have also been tempered by a backlash overseas, as politicians and policy makers express concerns over China’s influence. American lawmakers are pushing for regulators to keep a closer watch over money flowing into the United States from China.

The combination of forces at home and abroad has put global deal makers on the defensive.

Last month, the Chinese government detained Wu Xiaohui, the chairman of the Anbang Insurance Group, for undisclosed reasons. Anbang, with multibillion-dollar deals for properties like the Waldorf Astoria hotel in New York, tested regulatory limits in China and drew political censure in the United States.

HNA Group, a Chinese conglomerate with stakes in Deutsche Bank, Hilton Hotels and Ingram Micro, has been criticized for its opaque ownership structure. Last week, shares in Fosun International slid on speculation that the company had lost contact with its chairman, Guo Guangchang, who is often called the Warren E. Buffett of China. Fosun called the speculation “malicious rumors,” saying that everything was normal.

Wanda has not been immune to the pressure.

American lawmakers are concerned that Wanda’s Hollywood ambitions are part of a broader play by the Communist Party in Beijing to control how China is portrayed. This year, Wanda’s $1 billion deal to buy Dick Clark Productions fell apart for unknown reasons.

Investors’ confidence has been shaken.

Shares of Wanda Film, a unit listed in the Southern Chinese city of Shenzhen, have fallen about 11 percent in the past month. In December, Standard & Poor’s downgraded the long-term corporate credit rating for Dalian Wanda Commercial Properties and Wanda Commercial Properties, both listed in Hong Kong, citing high leverage and capital expenditures.

The deal announced on Monday would help Wanda pay off some of its debt.

Sunac would pay $4.4 billion for a 91 percent stake in each of the 13 tourism projects, all in China, and would take over the loans for the projects. Wanda also agreed to sell 76 hotels for $4.9 billion.

“Through the sale of these assets, Wanda Commercial’s debt-to-asset ratio will drop dramatically,” Mr. Wang, the Wanda chairman, told the Chinese business weekly Caixin. “All the cash will go to repaying loans.”

The move also plays into a broader shift by Wanda in recent years, to a so-called asset-light strategy that could free up more capital. Under this model, Wanda is looking to own fewer properties outright and to collect more money from management fees and other services.

In the deal with Sunac, Wanda would continue to operate all of the projects under the company’s brand name, and it would own fewer underperforming hotels.

“Wanda is selling the noncore part of its cultural tourism business,” said Deng Zhihao, a real estate economist with Fineland Assets Management Company based in Guangzhou, China. “Ultimately, what they are selling are properties that the market doesn’t like.”

Even so, the deal amounts to an about-face for Wanda. The company had made tourism central to its focus, looking to capitalize on China’s growing middle class.

But Wanda’s record with theme parks has been mixed: Only four of the 13 theme parks being sold are up and running; most are in the planning stages. Wanda opened its first theme park, an indoor one, in the Chinese city of Wuhan. But it closed after 19 months for “upgrades and renovations,” and it has yet to reopen.

For the first half of this year, Wanda said its cultural segment, of which tourism is a component, rose 5.9 percent from a year earlier, to $4.5 billion.

“Given all the talk about how this was the centerpiece of the strategy for moving away from more traditional commercial real estate, it’s hard not to see it, to some degree, as a form of capitulation,” said Ronald Merriman, managing director of planning and advisory services for Pro Fun Management Group, a firm based in California that provides management services for theme parks and that has advised Wanda.

Mr. Merriman said Sunac had paid a steep price for “what are a handful of good but not stellar performers.”

Sunac, too, faces skepticism over its deal making. Last week, its shares fell amid investor fears that it would take a loss from its $2.2 billion investment in the beleaguered LeEco Group, which is struggling to repay creditors.

“I don’t understand this move by Sunac,” Mr. Deng said. “Where are they getting this endless flow of money?”

“Last year, they were the property developer that bought the most number of properties,” he added. “And this year, they’ve spent a lot of money to save LeEco.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/07/10/business/dealbook/wanda-sunac-hotels-china.html
 
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Excellent.
The Authorities are stepping up looking deep into the fanboys' activities.
These help our system for sustainable growth and advance to better corporate governance
Also stop or get rid of ,once and for all, the con-economists / fanboys cum writers cum finance experts who posses no more than elementary econ knowledge from going viral on the internet. They have been cheating the innocent, the ignorant, the naive and the gullible into their dubious business/underground banking ventures.

Zombie stocks’ party may be coming to an end as China set to tighten delisting rules

Stricter rules seen as providing support for China to launch long-awaited registration-based initial public offering reform


PUBLISHED : Monday, 10 July, 2017, 6:49pm
UPDATED : Monday, 10 July, 2017, 11:09pm


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laura.he@scmp.com




A Shenzhen-listed hotel operator just became the first delisted stock in Chinese markets in 2017, and more delistings are in sight.

As the authorities hint that more problematic companies will be taken off the market this year, the party might be coming to an end for the many “zombie” stocks that are often on the verge of delisting but keep rising from the dead through “decoration” of their financial statements, analysts said.

Shenzhen Century Plaza Hotel, which went public in 1994 and had been suspended from trading since 2015 due to persistent losses, was removed from the Shenzhen Stock Exchange at the end of last week. It was the first stock delisted from the Chinese market this year.

Next up is Dandong Xintai Electric. The Shenzhen exchange said last month that it will end Dandong Xintai’s listing status on the start-up board and remove the stock 30 trading sessions after July 17.

The exchange has also suspended the listing of Ingenious Ene-Carbon New Materials amid three consecutive years of losses, and warned the company would be delisted if it did not turn a profit within six months.


So far, the number of suspended companies has reached six this year, the highest since 2011.

“The regulators have obviously sped up forced removals of problematic companies from the A-share market,” said Cheng Yimin, the chief analyst for China Post Securities.

“We expect the delisting rules to tighten further this year.”

It is unusual for public companies to delist their shares – voluntarily or by force – from the Chinese stock market, which has a relatively young history compared with Western counterparts.

The regulators have obviously sped up forced removals of problematic companies from the A-share market
CHENG YIMIN, CHIEF ANALYST, CHINA POST SECURITIES

China formally laid out its delisting rules in 2001. But according to data from Wind Financial, less than 100 companies have been removed from the market since then, with the annual delisting rate averaging 0.35 per cent. Excluding mergers or acquisitions by third-party companies, the total number of delisted stocks is less than 60.

“China’s delisting rate is extremely low, compared with the New York Stock Exchange’s 6 per cent and the Nasdaq’s 8 per cent,” said Guo Jianan, an analyst for Lianxun Securities.

The main reason is a loophole in the system design, which allows some companies to avoid delisting by various means, including “decorating” their financial statements.

The motivation to do so is high. Shell companies are valuable resources in the A-share market due to the lengthy and difficult process of initial public offerings.

“Even problematic companies are reluctant to give up their listing status, as their ‘shells’ are valuable,” Guo said.

Investors also like speculating on such “junk stocks”, as they know these companies will not be expelled and have high expectations of potential debt restructuring.

Another reason may be that a listed state-owned enterprise usually involves many “interest groups”, including employees, creditors and sometimes even local governments, said analysts from China Galaxy Securities in a recent research report.

“Some local governments will strive to protect the listing status of certain companies at all costs,” the report said.

Cheng said that the existence of these “zombie” stocks “have twisted the valuations of A shares and siphoned away capital from quality companies”.

It has also “led to wild speculation” in a market dominated by retail investors.

However, regulators have launched a comprehensive crackdown on speculative stock investments this year and suggested they would strengthen supervision of companies that did not comply with listing requirements.

“More zombie stocks could be forced out of the market this year,” said Xun Yugen, an analyst for Haitong Securities.

He said stricter delisting rules will provide support for the regulators’ plan to launch a United States-style registration-based initial public offering reform, which would reduce the government’s role and let the market decide which companies listed.

The current approval-based IPO system relies on strict financial requirements and stringent reviews by the regulators.

The new registration-based system would impose a lower threshold and simplifies the listing process.

“Before the regulators launch the IPO reform, they need to clear up the market first,” Xun said, citing Taiwan’s moves in 1988, which launched a tougher delisting mechanism before introducing its registration-based IPO system.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as:
New listing rules set to end ‘zombie’ stocks

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China vehicle sales rebound in June amid price cuts
July 11, 2017, 04:17:00 AM EDT By Reuters

http://www.nasdaq.com/article/china-vehicle-sales-rebound-in-june-amid-price-cuts-20170711-00125

2017-07-11T090155Z_1_QU5_RTRLXPP_2_LYNXPACKAGER.JPG.ashx


Reuters
* China June vehicle sales rebound from declines in April,
May
* Rebound attributed in part to rampant discounting
* China new-energy vehicle sales +33 percent y/y in June
* CAAM reiterates forecast for slower sales growth this year

(Adds comments, latest data on NEV sales)
By Fang Cheng and Norihiko Shirouzu


BEIJING, July 11 (Reuters) - China's vehicle sales rebounded
in June, the country's top industry association said, shaking
off weakness seen in the previous two months as carmakers
grappled with a rollback in tax incentives that drove strong
growth last year.
Total vehicle sales hit 2.17 million in June, up 4.5 percent
from a year earlier, while sales for the first half of the year
rose 3.8 percent to 13.4 million vehicles, the China Association
of Automobile Manufacturers (CAAM) said on Tuesday.
The rise in sales, which industry insiders said was helped
by hefty discounting, lends a sheen to the world's largest auto
market, but growth overall is struggling to keep pace with 2016
when the market grew at its fastest pace in three years.
Overall vehicle demand in China would likely grow just 1-4
percent this year, mainly because consumers made purchases last
year to benefit from lower tax rates, said Yale Zhang, head of
Shanghai-based consultancy Automotive Foresight.
In January, CAAM predicted sales would rise 5 percent this
year, slowing from 13.7 percent in 2016, citing the rollback of
a tax incentive for small-engine cars and economic pressures. It
stuck with that forecast on Tuesday.
June's rise, however, marks an improvement from April and
May, when vehicle sales fell 2.2 percent and 0.1 percent,
respectively, registering two straight months of declines for
the first time since 2015. [nL3N1J929O]
Peter Fleet, Ford Motor Co's <F.N> Asia-Pacific chief, told
Reuters average vehicle transaction prices in China had fallen
about 4 percent in the first half of this year against 2016. "We
continue to see negative industry pricing in China," he said.
Ford is among the foreign brands strong in the small sedan
segment that have seen China sales slow this year, others being
General Motors Co <GM.N> and Volkswagen AG <VOWG_p.DE>.
Buyers in China have shied away since the purchase tax on
vehicles with engines of 1.6 litres or below rose to 7.5
percent, from 5 percent, at the start of the year.
However, there is one bright spot: sales of new-energy
vehicles (NEVs) - all-electric battery vehicles and plug-in
electric hybrids - that saw a 33 percent bump in June to 59,000
units, the latest CAAM data shows.
In the first half of this year, sales volume of such NEVs
totalled 195,000 vehicles, up 14.4 percent.
China is the world's largest market for green energy
vehicles, with the government aggressively promoting the
segment, including spending billions in subsidies, in a bid to
fight intense urban air pollution. [nL3N1IZ2Q4]

(Reporting By Cheng Fang and Norihiko Shirouzu in Beijing;
Editing by Adam Jourdan and Himani Sarkar

Getting the house in order!

China to maintain tight rein on capital outflows despite gains in forex reserves

Beijing unlikely to change its view that controls on capital are key to maintaining economic stability, analysts say


PUBLISHED : Monday, 10 July, 2017, 1:04pm
UPDATED : Monday, 10 July, 2017, 11:15pm

COMMENTS:


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Frank Tang

The hawkish stance of the US Federal Reserve and huge financial risks at home will reinforce the belief in Beijing that strict controls on capital flows are necessary to ensure economic stability, they said.

China imposed draconian measures to manage outbound payments and investments after its foreign exchange reserves fell by nearly US$1 trillion over a period of two and a half years from their June 2014 peak. Many overseas deals were halted and reserves stopped shrinking as a result.

China’s forex reserves rose to an eight-month high of US$3.06 trillion in June, up US$3 billion from a month earlier, the State Administration of Foreign Exchange said on Friday. The run of five monthly increases is the longest since the Chinese currency reversed its 10-year appreciation against US dollar in the summer of 2014.

China’s forex reserves hit a seven-month high

But the gains won’t be enough to persuade Beijing to change policy course.

“Exchange rates and capital flows are currently two major external risks,” said Liu Jian, a senior analyst with the Bank of Communications in Shanghai. “There is also a need for financial security.”

The government recently told a number of state-owned banks to check their risk exposure to China’s biggest deal makers, including Wanda and HNA Group, in a sign of Beijing’s uneasiness about aggressive and leveraged deals, according to emails seen by the South China Morning Post.

China ‘drawing up rules to control overseas investment’

While the government has successfully defended the Chinese currency against weakening below 7 yuan to the US dollar, and kept its reserves from falling below US$3 trillion, it has increased its scrutiny of outbound “irrational investment” deals in the property and entertainment sectors.

“Outflows are now the biggest concern for Chinese policymakers,” said Iris Pang, a Greater China economist with ING in Hong Kong. Pang said that even investments in belt and road initiative countries are subject to strict vetting.

Opinion: China’s overseas acquisition spree has mysteriously cooled

Chinese investment in 45 belt and road countries fell 11.4 per cent year on year in the first five months, while overall outbound investment dropped 53 per cent in the same period.

The relatively small increase in forex reserves – US$58.6 billion in the past five months – can also be attributed to an appreciation of non-US dollar assets in China’s portfolio thanks to a weakening of the US dollar.

Any further declines in the US dollar, which is currently at an eight-month low, are likely to be limited given the talks on downsizing the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet.

While China’s central bank said recently it would not follow the Fed step for step on issues such as interest rate rises, “pressure may come back in the fourth quarter,” Guotai Junan Securities analyst Wei Feng wrote in a note.

China to ‘gradually’ unwind capital account controls as currency outflow concerns ease, analysts say

Beijing has made several moves to attract capital inflows, long-term financial investors and foreign direct investment in particular, to offset the persistent deficit in its capital account.

Last week it launched Bond Connect, which allows international investors to access China’s US$9 trillion bond market, after some of its A-shares were eventually included into MSCI’s emerging market index last month.

Hong Kong’s Bond Connect sees US$1b worth of trading on first day

“With the opening up of financial markets, cross-border capital flows and forex markets will become balanced, and this will further stabilise forex reserves,” the SAFE said in its online statement.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as:
Beijing to keep grip on outflows

http://www.scmp.com/news/china/mone...ain-tight-rein-capital-outflows-despite-gains

Mon Jul 3, 2017 | 7:04am EDT
Brisk trade marks start of China, Hong Kong Bond Connect scheme

r


Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam speaks at the opening ceremony of Bond Connect at Hong Kong Exchanges in Hong Kong, China July 3, 2017. REUTERS/Bobby Yip



By Umesh Desai and Andrew Galbraith | HONG KONG/SHANGHAI

China and Hong Kong launched a long-awaited Bond Connect scheme on Monday that links China's $9 trillion bond market with overseas investors, the latest step in Beijing's efforts to liberalize and strengthen the country's capital markets.

Global investors were active, purchasing 4.9 billion yuan ($721.4 million) of bonds through the program on Monday. But traders and foreign investors warned against reading too much into first-day trading numbers.


"Chinese institutions will have to meet their 'supportive obligations'," to ensure the successful launch of the program, said a Shanghai-based trader. "Let's wait to see one-week or one-month volume."

Monday's aggregate trading volume was 7.05 billion yuan, the China Foreign Exchange Trade System said on its website.

HSBC Holdings (HSBA.L) and an asset management unit of Bank of China were the among the first to complete trades using the scheme.

The launch of the connection was timed to coincide with the 20th anniversary of Hong Kong's handover to Chinese rule and initial trading will only be "northbound", meaning foreign investors will be able to buy and sell Chinese bonds.

No launch date has been set for the southbound channel. Demand for such a channel was limited, Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Ltd (HKEx) chief executive Charles Li said.

Credit Suisse Private Banking reiterated on Monday that it is negative on onshore bonds and expects yields to rise further this year.

In line with broader foreign access rules, overseas investors including pension funds, central banks and sovereign wealth funds will be eligible to trade sovereign and local government bonds, policy bank bonds and corporate debt on the Bond Connect.

The connection will increase the supply of yuan-denominated assets that can be held by global investors as Beijing steps up the internationalization of its currency. In a note on Monday, Goldman Sachs said it holds the view that more than $1 trillion of global fixed income investments could be allocated to domestic Chinese bonds in the next decade.

Such inflows could help to support the yuan's value in the long run.



INTERNATIONALIZATION CONCERNS

However, some market watchers said a strong launch could hamper the currency's internationalization.

"A successful Bond Connect operation will actually be counterproductive to renminbi internationalization in the short-term. This is because it will lead to more renminbi flowing back to China and, thus, further erode the CNH pool," said Chi Lo, senior economist at BNP Paribas Asset Management.

Chinese regulators formally approved the Bond Connect scheme in May. International investors have been allowed direct access to China's interbank bond market since last year and some market participants have questioned the need for an additional trading scheme.

ALSO IN BUSINESS NEWS
Reluctance by overseas investors to enter the market amid fears over the stability of the Chinese yuan, and over potential delays to Beijing's reforms of the capital markets has kept overseas holdings to less than 2 percent. This is below the international norm of about 10 percent, BNP Paribas said.

Media reports said 20 market makers for the Bond Connect scheme had been approved, including 14 Chinese and six overseas institutions.

BNP Paribas said it had received approval as a market maker and had also executed its first trade under the scheme. Citigroup and Standard Chartered also confirmed to Reuters that they had been approved as official dealers.

The scheme will also see deals coming through the primary market. China Development Bank [CHDB.UL] said it planned to issue up to 20 billion yuan ($2.95 billion) of one-year, three-year and 10-year fixed-rate bonds for tender on Monday. HSBC said it is one of the underwriters.

Hong Kong's new leader, Carrie Lam, attended the debut ceremony and said the connect scheme marked "another new chapter in the development of mutual capital markets access between the mainland and Hong Kong."

The bond program follows the launch of the Hong Kong and Shanghai Stock Connect scheme in November 2014 and the Hong Kong and Shenzhen stock program in December 2016. Those two schemes allow both northbound and southbound trade.

(Reporting by Umesh Desai, Donny Kwok and Andrew Galbraith; Editing by Anne Marie Roantree and Richard Borsuk)

https://www.reuters.com/article/uk-hongkong-bondconnect-hsbc-idUSKBN19O032

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China June exports beat forecasts with 11.3% gain

Published: July 13, 2017 12:39 a.m. ET

BEIJING--China's exports grew for a fourth straight month in June, as external demand for goods from the world's second-largest economy continued to strengthen.

Exports rose 11.3% in June from a year earlier, following growth of 8.7% in May, the General Administration of Customs said Thursday.

Economists polled by The Wall Street Journal had forecast a rise of 9%.

Imports in June rose 17.2% from a year earlier, compared with a 14.8% expansion in May. The rise was larger than the poll's forecast for a 12.4% gain.

The trade surplus widened in June to $42.77 billion from $40.81 billion a month earlier, falling short of a median forecast for a $44.2 billion surplus.

China's trade data is closely watched as a barometer of strength in global trade, though exports have become a less-important growth driver for the Chinese economy in recent years.

In yuan terms, China's exports grew 17.3% on year in June, while imports jumped 23.1%. The trade surplus widened to 294.3 billion yuan ($43.4 billion) in June from 281.56 billion yuan in May.

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/china-june-exports-beat-forecasts-with-113-gain-2017-07-13
 
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In yuan terms, China's exports grew 17.3% on year in June, while imports jumped 23.1%. The trade surplus widened to 294.3 billion yuan ($43.4 billion) in June from 281.56 billion yuan in May.

The trade surplus widened in June to $42.77 billion from $40.81 billion a month earlier, falling short of a median forecast for a $44.2 billion surplus.

Why is the trade surplus data different in literally the same article?
 
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The article literally lays out the difference to you in layman terms.

No it does not.

It just first gives the figures in dollar terms, then gives a trade surplus of 42.77 billion dollars.

Then it presents data in yuan terms. But the yuan surplus is calculated to be 43.4 billion dollars, when the actual figure should be the same, since you literally converted the yuan terms into dollars.
 
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No it does not.

It just first gives the figures in dollar terms, then gives a trade surplus of 42.77 billion dollars.

Then it presents data in yuan terms. But the yuan surplus is calculated to be 43.4 billion dollars, when the actual figure should be the same, since you literally converted the yuan terms into dollars.

you are genius, why asking? :azn:
 
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Why is the trade surplus data different in literally the same article?

Different exchange rates were used to arrive at the dollar figures.

42.77 when the figure was calculated in end-of-June yuan vs dollar rate.
43.4 when the article was written(July 13, 2017)

i.e. the yuan has risen against the dollar since June 30.
 
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Different exchange rates were used to arrive at the dollar figures.

42.77 when the figure was calculated in end-of-June yuan vs dollar rate.
43.4 when the article was written(July 13, 2017)

i.e. the yuan has risen against the dollar since June 30.
Why the heck are you answering him. It's so obvious yet he is irritatingly asking that. Normal humans will look at the main message of the post, Indians look at the conversion rate. They can't see the big picture.
 
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Why the heck are you answering him. It's so obvious yet he is irritatingly asking that. Normal humans will look at the main message of the post, Indians look at the conversion rate. They can't see the big picture.

The main message was received. In fact I knew about this even before this post here was made.

Different exchange rates were used to arrive at the dollar figures.

42.77 when the figure was calculated in end-of-June yuan vs dollar rate.
43.4 when the article was written(July 13, 2017)

i.e. the yuan has risen against the dollar since June 30.


Yeah I suspected exchange rate issues.
 
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China's trade data just breezed past expectations

  • Jul. 13, 2017, 12:31 AM
  • 900
  • Chinese trade data shot the lights out in June with exports and imports breezing past expectations.

    Here’s the chart showing the nation’s trade performance of the past five years. The year-on-year growth for both imports and exports are both looking healthy, reflecting not only higher commodity prices and demand but also improved economic conditions abroad.

    China trade data June 2017 BIAUS
    china-trade-data-june-2017.jpg

    According to China’s Custom’s Bureau, exports jumped by 11.3% from a year earlier in US dollar-denominated terms, topping the 8.7% level that had been forecast by economists.

    It was also an improvement on the 8.7% level reported a month earlier.

    On the other side of the ledger, import growth also impressed, lifting 17.2% year-on-year. That was above the 13.1% increase expected and accelerated on the 14.8% rate of May.

    In volume terms, imports of iron ore grew from a month earlier, lifting to 94.43 million tons from 91.52 million tons in May. Over the half imports swelled to 539 million tons, up 9.3% from a year earlier.

    While iron ore demand increased imports of crude oil fell, coming in at 35.69 million tons from 37.2 million tons in May. Between January to June, imports grew by 13.8% year-on-year to 212 million tons.

    Completing a hat-trick of beats, the national trade surplus grew from $40.81 billion to $42.77 billion, marginally topping the $42.44 billion level expected.

    Read the original article on Business Insider Australia. Copyright 2017. Follow Business Insider Australia on Twitter.
    http://www.businessinsider.com/chinas-trade-data-expectations-2017-7
 
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No it does not.
I had just pointed the finger where it does. Let me do it again.
In yuan terms
Just because you don't understand what you are talking about, doesn't mean it didn't.
It just first gives the figures in dollar terms, then gives a trade surplus of 42.77 billion dollars.

Then it presents data in yuan terms. But the yuan surplus is calculated to be 43.4 billion dollars, when the actual figure should be the same, since you literally converted the yuan terms into dollars.

Let's first think logically about your assumptions here. Why would the author state the same value in Dollar, then convert it to Yuan, only to convert it right back to the same value into Dollar again? Why would he repeat the same figures in a second paragraph for "in Yuan terms" instead of just appending the converted values in parantheses behind the other value as he actually did for the "in Yuan terms" figures, but not for any other conversion?
Your "fix" is leaving a completely redundant statement and a redundant complexity in the sentence structure. That should be a clue that maybe your "fix" is incomplete putting in question how much you really understood it or actually broke something meaning you didn't. Yes please, do not take anything at face value. But dont break and berate people about things you never understood.

The problem is that you didn't actually comprehend even the words you are there just parroting. You couldn't grasp what it was even all about and your reflection of the article, shows that, as both your interpretation and conclusion are completely off the table. Its hard to believe you now claiming to have considered exchange rates playing the role they do, as your missconception would not even provide any basis for that and youd never had proposed that silly "correction" in first place. Yes, they have given the figures "in Dollar terms" and then figures "in Yuan terms", but no thats doesn't mean what you think and nothing you said therefore "should be" is true. It's simply not a direct conversion of the already provided figures. Its the result of distinct accounting and two sets of distinct figures.

Here let me lay out the obvious, in stupid enough for kids, as I know words just invite pointless winding around them and somehow stubbornly imply you had not been completly wrong about trivial basics and had in fact figured as much:

Exchange rates
Yesterday: 1¥=$1
Today: 1¥=$2

Surplus measured in Yuan:
Yesterday: ¥1
Today: ¥2
Growth: ¥1 ($2)

Surplus measured in Dollar:
Yesterday: $1
Today: $4
Growth: $3 (¥1.5)

You see why the ¥1 growth is absolutely not just a conversion of $3? You see why the $2 should absolutely not be $3? Now replace the exchange rates with ¥6,8993=$1 and ¥6,8811=$1 (if you cant figure out where I got these from even now, this topic is way over you head) and fill in the real numbers from the article and ask your calculator about the numbers you thought wrong. No, it does not need or miss to factor in the change of the exchange rates, to get "right" numbers. Neither of these is "wrong" or lacking or unconvential. I refer back to "breaking whats working". Its just another way to account the numbers and daily business (and nicely illustrates the importance of the context statements and figures are usually pulled out from). One literally pointed out for reader who default to their native system, the other the default, redundant to say or at least the only logical assumption to make given that statement. In Chinas reports the default is both, not either or. That's where the different figures come from in first place. U.S. papers just rightly prefer to quote the report accounting with Dollars for it suits them more, but under the line there are effectively two different reported Dollar values for what you thought could only be one and there is nothing wrong with it. Not maybe. Not suspectedly. Absolutely.
 
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China's GDP expands 6.9 percent in first half of 2017

2017-07-17 10:13

Xinhua Editor: Gu Liping

China's gross domestic product expanded 6.9 percent year on year in the first half of this year to about 38.15 trillion yuan (5.62 trillion U.S. dollars), the National Bureau of Statistics said Monday.

Read more:

China's retail sales up 10.4 pct in H1:enjoy:

China's retail sales of consumer goods grew 10.4 percent year on year in the first half of 2017, the National Bureau of Statistics said Monday.

China's fixed-asset investment up 8.6 pct in H1

China's fixed-asset investment grew 8.6 percent year on year in the first six months of this year, down 0.6 percentage points from that recorded during the first quarter, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said on Monday.

China's property development investment continues slower growth

Growth of China's property development investment continued to decelerate in the first half of the year as the market showed signs of cooling down, official data showed Monday.

Investment in property development expanded 8.5 percent year on year for January-June, down from 8.8 percent during the first five months, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

China industrial output expands 6.9 pct in H1:enjoy:

China's value-added industrial output, an important economic indicator, expanded 6.9 percent year on year in the first half of this year, compared with the 6.8-percent increase for the first quarter, official data showed Monday.

http://www.ecns.cn/business/2017/07-17/265638.shtml
 
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