Chart Of The Day: Shanghai Composite Slips Into A Bear Market

 | Jun 27, 2018 00:01

The single theme dominating the equity market narrative right now is US President Donald Trump's escalating trade war and its two central adversaries, the US and China. Despite repeated selloffs, US stock indices and the dollar both remain in uptrends.

The same can't be said for Chinese equities, however. As of this morning, the Shanghai Composite has officially entered a bear market, after share prices on the index fell 20 percent from their January high. The Chinese yuan has also slipped, down 5 percent versus the USD.

While the Fed has been raising rates and even boosted its outlook for an additional, fourth hike this year, China's central bank, the People’s Bank of China, shocked investors by leaving rates on hold. China is afraid of a credit crunch, which would mean liquidity was drying up, stopping all investment. This rate decision followed the recent triple blow to China’s economic growth when industrial production, retail sales and infrastructure investments all came in at multi-year to record lows.

In contrast, the US economy continues to expand. Unemployment is at its lowest level since 2000, and measured wage growth is keeping inflation relatively contained. At the same time, consumer confidence remains high.

It seems the US is better positioned to withstand an accelerating trade war. This is what's emboldened President Donald Trump’s stance versus China.

While China’s economy has been slowing, the US expansion continues apace. At this juncture, Chinese officials are wondering whether they've embarked on a war they have even a slim chance of winning.