China's economic data has been 'outright alarming' this week: Analyst

In This Article:

China's central bank slashes its lending and repurchase rates as economists watch with bated breath over whether the world's second-largest economy can reverse the course of its slowdown.

Exante Data Inc. Founder and CEO Jens Nordvig joins Yahoo Finance Live to break down the concerns in China's economic situation, touching upon the "extremely severe tension in [China's] real estate sector" and the levels of "incoherence in the policy framework."

"We are in a policy vacuum where there seems to be some internal disagreement about what should be the policy from here and that's creating a lag and a delay and that is making markets very, very uncomfortable," Nordvig, who is also the Founder and CEO of MarketReader, says. "And you're seeing that in the price action very clearly."

Nordvig outlines where China's economic weakness could impact foreign markets, while also turning to Japan's GDP growth and Russia's interest rate hikes amid falling value in the ruble.

This post was written by Luke Carberry Mogan.

Video Transcript

BRAD SMITH: In a surprise move, China's central bank cut two key policy rates after a broad array of data across retail sales and investments came in softer than expected on Tuesday.

As the world grows increasingly concerned about the global ramifications of China's lackluster recovery, will Beijing's latest move be enough to jump start the economy?

Jens Nordvig, Exante Data Inc. founder and CEO joins us now.

Jens, always a pleasure to speak with you as well.

So will it be enough, and is there more stimulus that you expect to come?

JENS NORDVIG: So, China's economy had a little bounce as a function of its reopening in the first quarter, right?

And then that has very, very quickly run out of steam.

And the data releases we've seen over the last week or so have been not just weak but, I would say, outright alarming, right?

They are trying to get credit to flow into the economy, and the credit numbers last week were horrible.

Overnight we had extremely weak retail sales data for Chinese standards, right?

So the reopening has clearly run out of steam and they have big challenges on their hand.

I haven't even mentioned that we have extremely severe tension in the Chinese real estate market, right?

We essentially have most of the home-builders teetering on bankruptcy.

So from that perspective, the Chinese crisis in real estate is bigger than the 2008 crisis in the United States.

Like it's a bit different because we don't have a Lehman situation, but in terms of the actual real estate situation, it's very serious.

So now they're cutting rates by 10 basis points.