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Disappointing News for some: No hard landing for China, says HSBC chief Stuart Gulliver

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No hard landing for China, says HSBC chief Stuart Gulliver
NYSE Oct. 18, 2015


"The fears for China's economy are overplayed", Gulliver said at a conference in London on Friday, according to the text of his speech.

October 16 HSBC Chief Executive Stuart Gulliver said recent moves by Britain's new government reflected a more positive mood towards the financial sector, as the bank continues to weigh where it should be headquartered.

Mr. Gulliver said the bank's board has had two of four planned meetings to formally discuss the decision, which could see HSBC return its headquarters to Hong Kong after more than two decades in London.

"It depends on how long it takes for the board to get comfortable with the decision", Gulliver said. He also predicted that gross domestic product would rise to about 7% in 2015 in line with the target set by the Chinese government.

Official figures next Monday are expected to show the Chinese economy expanded at an annual pace of 6.8pc in the third quarter, or the slowest pace since 2009.

"China should and will continue to ease controls in a steady and measured manner", he said. "[But] the fluctuations and stock market volatility have little or no bearing on the long-term trends around China", he said.

Gulliver has been expanding asset management and insurance in Asia and focusing on regions including China's Pearl River Delta to strengthen the position of Europe's largest lender, reported Bloomberg.

According to analysts at Citigroup, HSBC has risk-weighted assets of about $290bn (£187.8bn, €255.5bn) across the globe, which it would like to reduce before it could redeploy as much $230bn to support Asia and other growth areas of business. Shares of the bank have dropped about 14% this year so far.


No hard landing for China, says HSBC chief Stuart Gulliver
 
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No hard landing for China, says HSBC chief Stuart Gulliver
NYSE Oct. 18, 2015


"The fears for China's economy are overplayed", Gulliver said at a conference in London on Friday, according to the text of his speech.

October 16 HSBC Chief Executive Stuart Gulliver said recent moves by Britain's new government reflected a more positive mood towards the financial sector, as the bank continues to weigh where it should be headquartered.

Mr. Gulliver said the bank's board has had two of four planned meetings to formally discuss the decision, which could see HSBC return its headquarters to Hong Kong after more than two decades in London.

"It depends on how long it takes for the board to get comfortable with the decision", Gulliver said. He also predicted that gross domestic product would rise to about 7% in 2015 in line with the target set by the Chinese government.

Official figures next Monday are expected to show the Chinese economy expanded at an annual pace of 6.8pc in the third quarter, or the slowest pace since 2009.

"China should and will continue to ease controls in a steady and measured manner", he said. "[But] the fluctuations and stock market volatility have little or no bearing on the long-term trends around China", he said.

Gulliver has been expanding asset management and insurance in Asia and focusing on regions including China's Pearl River Delta to strengthen the position of Europe's largest lender, reported Bloomberg.

According to analysts at Citigroup, HSBC has risk-weighted assets of about $290bn (£187.8bn, €255.5bn) across the globe, which it would like to reduce before it could redeploy as much $230bn to support Asia and other growth areas of business. Shares of the bank have dropped about 14% this year so far.


No hard landing for China, says HSBC chief Stuart Gulliver


For the rest of us, this is indeed a wonderful news!
 
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Difficulties won't stop reform, Li says
October 19, 2015

6c0b840a2e38178e8f5004.jpg
Chinese Premier Li Keqiang presides over a symposium with representatives from financial enterprises in Beijing, capital of China, Oct 16, 2015.[Photo/Xinhua]


China's financial system is under control and reforms will not stop despite temporary government intervention, Premier Li Keqiang told the heads of financial institutions at a meeting on Friday.

The government will not stop credit lines for businesses during temporary difficulties if their market outlook is good, according to a circular issued on Sunday, indicating a further loosening of liquidity, although it said the government will stick to prudent monetary policy.

It said the government pledged to ensure reasonably sufficient liquidity and a reasonable expansion of credit loans, as well as to push forward the internationalization and liberalization of the renminbi, with other financial reforms.

"There are doubts about whether financial reforms will stop after the unusual turbulence in the stock market, and the answer is no. ... Financial reforms and opening-up must be carried out continuously and steadfastly to improve China's overall global competitiveness," Li said at the meeting with leaders of State-backed banks and city banks, who complained about rising bad debt and the lack of ways to handle bad loans.

China's stock market tumbled by more than 40 percent this summer, prompting the government to step in with multiple intervention measures. Speculation afterward said that these measures have struck a blow to market-oriented financial reforms.

"Without the measures, there could be more ripple effects in sectors other than the stock market. In addition, a stable financial system is the precondition of future reforms," Li said.

"But having said that, we still have to follow a market-oriented path. We have to restore market functioning under the premise of financial stability, although there are sure to be ups and downs in the market."

Li said the meeting was to "solicit suggestions and listen to the complaints from leaders of financial institutions", as the government is preparing policies after the release of quarterly economic data.

China plans to issue yuan-dominated sovereign bonds in London this week, the first offshore sales of renminbi outside China, as the country is seeking a greater role for its currency in global trade and finance.

China posted a cooler-than-expected producer price index in September, indicating further deflationary pressures.

Overall, the still weak PPI highlights the severe overcapacity problem and sluggish domestic investment demand," Reuters quoted economists at Nomura Securities as saying.

"Given the lackluster growth outlook, we continue to expect moderate fiscal stimulus from the central government and continued monetary easing."
 
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@TaiShang brother why do you have to wreck their dreams? :enjoy:

:partay:

***

China's industrial output up 5.7% in September
| October 19, 2015, Monday |
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ONLINE EDITION

China's value-added industrial output expanded 5.7 percent year on year in September, down from 6.1 percent in August, the National Bureau of Statistics said on Monday.

Year-on-year growth in the first three quarters stood at 6.2 percent, slightly down from 6.3 percent in the first eight months.

Manufacturing output expanded 6.7 percent, down from 6.8 percent in August. Mining output growth slowed to 1.2 percent from the 4 percent in August. Meanwhile, the output of the electricity, heating, gas and water sectors increased 0.7 percent, down from 1.2 percent last month, the bureau said.

The figures also showed that industrial output in China's western areas rose 8 percent in September year on year, followed by 7.8 percent in central regions and and 6 percent in eastern regions. Industrial output in the northeastern areas dropped 1.8 percent.

China uses value-added industrial output to measure the final value of industrial production, or the value of gross industrial output minus intermediate input, such as raw materials and labor costs.

The NBS data only tracks the output of large Chinese companies with annual primary business revenues of more than 20 million yuan (US$3.15 million).
 
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Seriously any positive report from HSBC of China is just self bloating. Not to be taken seriously for others.
 
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What's with the stories Li Keqiang is getting increasingly sidelined by Xi Jinping's people? ie some new national comittee on righteous distribution or whatever it was called. And People's Daily taking a jab at the "Li Keqiang index"?

Also, according to some banks' reports, growth is like in 5-6%-ish level now, quite a bit below from the official 6.9% posted today.
 
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