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    China's Xi vows stronger antimonopoly efforts, healthy capital market

    Xi called on Friday for a healthy development of China’s capital markets, preventing financial risks and focussing on tackling risks from non-performing assets and bubbles, Xinhua said. “Capital is an important force to promote social productive forces,” Xi was quoted as saying as he chaired a study session after a Politburo meeting. “And it has a profit-seeking nature.””If it is not regulated and retrained, it will bring immeasurable harm to economic and social development.”Xi was quoted as saying China would crack down on corrupt behaviour related to disorderly capital expansion and platform monopolies, and would strengthen supervisions.The authorities will improve economic opening, attracting more international capital to invest in China while encouraging domestic firms to go overseas, Xinhua said. The Politburo, the top decision-making body of the ruling Communist Party, pledged to step up support for the COVID-hit economy, including embattled internet platforms, and to expand economic policy adjustments. More

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    China April factory activity contracts at steeper pace as lockdowns bite

    The official manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) fell to 47.4 in April from 49.5 in March, in a second straight month of contraction, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said on Saturday. That was the lowest since February 2020.A Reuters poll had expected the PMI to ease to 48, well below the 50-point mark that separates contraction from growth on a monthly basis. The headline PMI reading, combined with an even sharper crimp in services, offered the first clues into the performance of an economy ravaged by expanding COVID curbs, such as an extended shutdown of the commercial hub, Shanghai.Factory activity shrank at its steepest pace in 26 months, a Caixin survey of private business showed, with the new export orders index diving to its lowest since June 2020, suggesting a weakening in one of the few bright spots in the economy.In a statement, the statistics bureau linked COVID disruptions to as significant decline in both demand and supply in the manufacturing sector.”Some companies face difficulties in key raw material and component supplies, finished products sales and rising inventories,” the NBS said, with matters seen improving with the pandemic under control and the adoption of supporting policies. Dozens of major Chinese cities are believed to be in full or partial lockdown, thanks to a strict COVID policy.With hundreds of millions stuck at home, consumption is taking a heavy hit, prompting more analysts to cut growth forecasts for the world’s second-largest economy.The production sub-index slipped to 44.4 in April from 49.5 a month earlier, while new orders fell to 42.6 from 48.8 in March, according to the NBS. RISING RISK OF RECESSION? Electric car maker Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) has flagged a temporary drop in production due to China’s curbs after it said last week shutdowns had cost about a month of build volume at its Shanghai factory.Some analysts are even warning of rising recession risks, saying policymakers must provide more stimulus to reach an official 2022 growth target of about 5.5%. Apart from COVID curbs and heightened risks from the Ukraine War, persistently soft consumption and a prolonged downturn in the property market are also weighing on growth, analysts say. Authorities have promised more help to shore up confidence and ward off further job losses in a politically sensitive year.China will step up policy support, the Politburo, a top decision-making body of the ruling Communist Party has said, giving some cheer to battered stock markets.However, analysts say their task will become harder unless China eases its zero-COVID policy, which it has shown few signs of doing.”While these (official) messages are positive, the key is about the specific policies and their implementation,” Zhiwei Zhang, president and chief economist of Pinpoint Asset Management said in a client note on Friday.Moreover, analysts say traditional policy tools, such as interest rate cuts and larger liquidity injections, may have limited impact if lockdowns paralyse activity.President Xi Jinping chaired a meeting of top leaders this week that announced a big infrastructure push to boost demand, reinforcing Beijing’s preference for big-ticket projects to spur growth.But such projects take time, and Beijing is seen as wary of another massive stimulus programme such as its spending of 4 trillion yuan ($605.82 billion) during the global financial crisis in 2008 and 2009 that created a mountain of debt.An abrupt U-turn to more aggressive easing could also spur more capital outflows, adding to headaches for policymakers.China’s yuan currency fell more than 4% in April, its biggest monthly drop in 28 years, while stock markets have been the second worst performers this year after sanctions-hit Russia. [CNY/] China’s gross domestic product (GDP) grew 4.8% in the first quarter from a year earlier, beating analysts’ expectations for a 4.4% gain, but March data weakened sharply, with a contraction in retail sales and the highest jobless rate since May 2020. A sub-index of construction activity, a key economic driver Beijing hoped would prop up growth this year, stood at 52.7 in April, down from 58.1 in March. Construction equipment maker Caterpillar Inc (NYSE:CAT) warned on Thursday that demand for excavators in China, one of its largest markets, could slip below pre-pandemic levels in 2022. Lockdowns have also hurt sales of companies such as General Electric (NYSE:GE) Co and 3M Co.One banker at a top-ten Chinese bank said she had seen the greatest impact among small to medium-sized enterprises.”The smaller borrowers, especially those in manufacturing are really suffering this time round, because they don’t have the cash reserves,” she said. More

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    Russia expects trade with China to reach $200 billion by 2024 – Interfax

    (Reuters) – Russia’s foreign ministry on Saturday said it expected commodity flows with China to grow and trade with Beijing to reach $200 billion by 2024, the Interfax news agency reported, as Moscow looks east in the face of growing western isolation. The ministry said Chinese companies must be wary of the risk secondary sanctions pose, but said Beijing was ready to expand its cooperation with Moscow, Interfax reported. More

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    Inflation: low expectations set the stage for further surprise

    When asked most of last year about price inflation’s sudden surge, central bankers often responded using the adjective “transitory”. Not any more.Confirming that thesis is all but dead, the European Central Bank reported on Friday that consumer prices climbed in April by 7.5 per cent. That was the sixth consecutive new high recorded in Euroland. In the US and UK inflation was 8.5 per cent and 7 per cent respectively in March.Moreover, a day previously the ECB issued a detailed mea culpa on the inaccuracy of its inflation predictions over the past two years. Its forecasts especially deviated from reality during the final quarter of 2021 when energy prices accelerated upwards. As the EU seriously considers an import ban on Russian oil, the risk for further forecast errors increases.The ECB has underestimated inflation for the first quarter by a whopping 2 percentage points. Consider its forecasts made a year ago and that tracking error more than doubles to 5 percentage points.Lex claims no high accuracy in forecasting either and, to be fair, the ECB were not alone. The Bank of England and the Federal Reserve both similarly miscalculated in their own respective forecasts. As the graph reveals, the ECB’s record on price predictions is patchy.Blame any breakdown in predictive power on the erratic behaviour of financial markets. Even before the war in Ukraine, European natural gas prices in Europe had undergone seemingly puzzling surges. Growing correlation between wholesale and consumer prices suggests increases are more quickly passed on to end users, and in turn inflation measures.Market expectations play a big role in inflation forecasting. From both surveys and financial indicators (such as interest rate movements) flow central bank predictions. It is possible that they are skewed by a decade of negligible inflation, reinforced by dovish central bank messaging. If so, inflation rates, which many believe have peaked, will continue to shoot past central bank predictions.The Lex team is interested in hearing more from readers. Please tell us what you think of central bank inflation forecasting in the comments section below. More

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    4-digit ENS domains spike in demand this week and continue soaring

    According to a Dune Analytics dashboard for ENS, the spike in sales began on April 21, and the number of eth. name registrations has since jumped from 2,721 to 21,188 by April 28. Over the last seven-day period, ENS domains’ trading volume on OpenSea climbed by 3,333% to 2,613 ETH, or $7.3 million, at the time of writing. The last 48 hours have seen the most ENS NFT trading in the secondary market with the most expensive domain so far, “008.eth,” selling for 20 ETH, or $56,125, on April 29.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More