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"Black Monday" - All latest updates

The causes and consequences of China's market crash

China is sneezing. Will the world catch a cold?

Aug 24th 2015

IT BEGAN innocently enough, with a fall in markets in China that might, at the

outset at least, have been mistaken for the healthy clearing of froth from the

world's frothiest stockmarket. Yet the plunge that started in Asia (and which

followed a nasty drop in American markets on Friday) has continued to gather

momentum. It now looks very worrying indeed. When markets in Shanghai closed on

Monday, stocks were down 8.5% the Shanghai Composite s worst single-day fall in

eight years and, given the daily limits on how far individual stocks can fall,

very nearly the biggest possible decline. The People's Daily, the Communist

party's mouthpiece, declared the day "Black Monday". The nervousness has

radiated outward from China. The Nikkei index in Japan slipped by 4.6%.

European bourses are down 4-5%. The Dow opened down more than 1,000 points;

stocks have since regained some ground but the main indices are still down

about 4%. The Eurofirst 300 index has had its worst day since 2009. Germany s

DAX has now lost all the gains it made in 2015.

The pain extends beyond stockmarkets. Emerging-market currencies from the South

African rand to the Malaysian ringgit are tumbling. Commodities are also

sinking. Oil has hit a six-and-a-half-year low. A broader index of 22

commodities compiled by Bloomberg is at its lowest since 1999. Only safe-haven

assets such as government bonds issued by the likes of America and Germany are

having good days. Even gold is down: investors who used it as collateral for

buying shares and other assets are having to flog it to meet margin calls.

Two immediate questions arise: what has caused the jitters in markets, and how

much should investors worry? The first is the easier to answer; the sea of red

is down to China and the Fed. Start with China. The proximate cause for all

this is a chain of events that began with the surprise devaluation of the yuan

on August 11th. More than $5 trillion has been wiped off on global stock prices

since then. Today's Chinese-market meltdown seems to have been driven by

disappointing data on Friday, which suggested that China's industrial activity

is slowing sharply, and by the failure of the Chinese government to unveil bold

new market interventions today to prop up equity prices.

A weakening outlook for Chinese growth, and a slip in China's currency, have

combined to put pressure on other emerging economies and especially those whose

growth model depends on Chinese demand for industrial and other commodities.

Emerging markets have also been squeezed by the Fed, which has been preparing

the world economy to expect the first interest rate rise in nearly a decade in

September. Tighter monetary conditions in America have led to reduced capital

flows to big emerging economies, to a rising dollar, and to more difficult

conditions for firms and governments with dollar-denominated loans to repay.

The global economy is right in the middle of a significant transition, in other

words, as rich economies try to normalise policy while China tries to

rebalance. That transition is proving a difficult one for policymakers to

manage, and markets are wobbling under the strain.

How much, then, should we worry? A fall in China s stockmarket was hardly

unlikely given its dizzying climb in the first half of the year. Its tumbling

should be put in context: the Shanghai Composite is still up 43% on its level

of a year ago. The knock-on effects from market turmoil should be limited, at

least in the short run. Relatively little Chinese wealth is stored in shares.

More is held in property, the market for which has stablised in recent months.

What's more, China's government has yet to unleash its most potent

interventions; it has room to cut reserve requirements at banks, for instance.

Meanwhile, a replay of the Asian financial crisis of 1997 looks unlikely. Asian

governments are in far better shape to weather these sorts of changes in the

economic climate. Currency pegs that triggered trouble in the late 1990s have

largely been replaced by floating-rate regimes, foreign-exchange reserve piles

are larger, and financial systems are better managed and more robust. Neither

does a 2008-style meltdown appear to be on the cards. The global banking system

is much more hale than it was on the eve of financial crisis. The mispricing of

entire classes of risk-assets and the interconnectedness of vulnerable

financial institutions that fueled the panic of 2008 are both absent now.

There is nonetheless good reason for concern, if not for panic. Fundamental

questions are being raised about China, an economy which now accounts for 15%

of global GDP and around half of global growth. The government's ability to

manage market gyrations and animal spirits is very much in question, suggesting

that a descent into Japanese-style stagnation is a possibility. The odds of a

sharp Chinese slowdown will grow if China's government reacts to market turmoil

by ending the process of structural reform that is meant to facilitate a

rebalancing.

The global market rout may also represent a definitive end to the period of

rip-roaring emerging-market growth that began around 2000. Tumbling

emerging-market indexes and currencies, from Brazil to Turkey and Kazakhstan,

are further evidence, if more was needed, that the cocktail of Chinese growth,

low interest rates and soaring commodity prices that powered emerging-market

growth has been yanked away, leaving the developing world to face the hangover.

That hangover may not take the form of a broad financial crisis. A protracted

slowdown, however, would be plenty painful enough, especially if weak growth

leads to political instability.

With emerging markets faltering and Chinese rebalancing incomplete, rich

economies are left as the lone engine of economic growth. That is a worrying

prospect. Europe's recovery remains fragile and export-dependent. America's is

more robust. But while American banks are healthier and consumers less indebted

than they have been in more than a decade, the American economy also accounts

for a smaller share of global GDP than it did in the 1990s or 2000s, when the

American household was often relied upon as the global shopper of last resort.

Perhaps more importantly, rich-world governments have exceptionally little

wriggle-room to act to boost up their economies. Interest rates are still at

rock bottom, if not negative. Debt and deficits remain at levels that would

inhibit recession-busting spending policies if there were much appetite for

such spending, which there is not. In 1998, when troubles in Asia rattled

American markets, the Fed swiftly moved to slash its benchmark interest rate,

by 75 basis points. The Fed is unable to repeat that feat now, and swooning

markets are at least in part a reflection of that fact.

This gloomy outlook was there for all to see before today's market mess. Few

seem to have anticipated that it would have such serious effects so soon.