Financial, Real Estate, Stock Markets Trends and Current Affairs

  • Follow us on Blogger
  • Follow us on Facebook
  • Follow us on LinkedIn
  • Follow us on Twitter
  • Follow us on Youtube
Tools
A+ R A- wide normal
Login
  • Skip to content
  • Home
  • SUBSCRIBE NOW!
  • Subscription content!
  • Who is Reggie Middleton?
  • Blog
  • Press Room
  • Research and performance
    • Pan-European sovereign debt crisis
    • Asset securitization crisis
    • The mobile computing wars.
  • Contact Us
Saturday, 16 January 2010 04:00

China's Most Expensive Export: Price Inflation

  • font size decrease font size decrease font size increase font size increase font size
  • Print
  • E-mail
  • Video
  • Image Gallery
  • Add new comment
Tweet me!

As you recall, my take on the deflation vs inflation debate is much less crystal ball-ish than many other pundits on the web. I never was very much into fortune telling or forecasting the future. From what I observed and researched, if I had to make a call that call would be stagflation.

On that note, here is an interesting note from one of my site's subscribers on how China is exporting to what is amounting to stagflation to the United States, now!

Hi Reggie, I thought it was interesting to get a price increase from China when we have deflation over here, since you just wrote a China and stagflation piece I though it maybe of interest to you.

I am in the furniture business and took more of an interest in investing through your site. My company imports furniture from various Asian countries, Costco is our largest customer. Costco had two Furniture only stores, doing $120mil in business for the both stores, they closed these stores last year , due furniture not being a growth area for them going forward (they still sell through their regular stores and .com)

At that same time this was only June last year, Chinese factories were laying workers off, said workers returned to their homes mostly in the country. Now we have factories in China raising prices on products destined for deflationary markets, not by a small amount either, 6-10%!

****

And a few days laters...

Hey Reggie,

Here comes something on this price increase issue again!, really all this is happening very fast and at high $/% increase levels.

Attached is a summation of our suppliers announcement (this is sent to Canada customers though not sure about US, though TPEB is East to West) and it indicates right off the bat “that the situation is expected to get worse - increasingly similar to conditions back in 1998 (when there was a huge surge of bookings combined with capacity cuts on Transpacific resulting in 3 week backlog and a $1500 increase per 40ft”

You will have more economic info at your hands than myself, though this is what I know.

1998 was probably (again you may know more), the begging of mass volume exporter from China, therefore not enough vessels to ship this quick jump in volume, China joined WTO in 2001 and exports started to explode.

The drop in 08 exports led to a decrease in the container ship fleet and now we have stimulated re-bound.

The shipping companies have not been pulling ships back into service, they mostly likely waiting to see what orders are like after Chinese New Year, hence we have low carrier vessel capacity.

The letter states immediate GRI (general rate increase) stating that TPEB (Trans Pacific East bound) is below the Europe rate route. These increases will impact goods that are currently in production or awaiting shipment, most goods will be already sold or quoted on, increase’s cannot be passed on immediately.

When we had went through GRI’s up to 2007, we could pass it on easily as increasing business was easily able to absorb this, then we had a crash in prices with increases now coming fast within 18 months, the up and down of prices so quickly is difficult, it is possible we can see these GRI’s removed by the 2nd qtr as Chinese new year shipments do get bottled neck due to 2-3 week shut down depending on factory, mostly though the stimulus is creating this demand which the carriers cannot deal with due to many ships being anchored.

I have not included the supplier letter since I have yet to get explicit permission from the reader yet. Below, is what I have had to say in the past on the topic.

On inflation, deflation, and stagflation:

  • Is My Warning of the Risks of a Stagflationary Environment Coming to Fore?
  • Deflation, Inflation or Stagflation - You Be the Judge!
  • Are the Effects of Unemployment About To Shoot Through the Roof?

On China:

  • It Doesn't Take a Genius to Figure Out How This Will End
  • China Macro Update
  • Believe Those China Growth Stories at Your Own Risk - Just Ask Google!He Who Bloweth the Bubble With Wet Lips Should Stand Back Lest Spittle and Saliva Spray Upon Ye Face
  • Goldman Seems to Trust the Chinese Economic Reporting a Tad Bit More Than I Do!
  • Now that the world is forced to agree with Reggie on China's growth propsects...
  • Just another Reggie Macro Rant...
  • Anecdotal thoughts for discussion
  • How quickly protectionisim erodes the gains of global commerce when thing get rough!
  • How quickly protectionisim erodes the gains of global commerce when thing get rough!

Tagged under
  • Global Macro
  • Heard on the Street
  • Asset Securitization Crisis
  • Asia
  • Retail

Related items (by tag)

  • Newsbytes To Help You Frontrun Those Banks Frontrunning You!
  • 3+3=2 As Big US Banks Amass Trillions of Dollars Of Risk With Only $50 Of Exposure?
  • Greece Sneezes, The Euro Dies of Pneumonia! Yeah, Sounds Bombastic, Yet True!
  • Who Will Be The Next JPM? Simply Review The BoomBustBlog Archives For The Answer
  • EUROPICIDE! They've Pointed The Liquidity Pistol At Their Collective Heads, Cocked It, Now Hear The Trigger Pull...

Image Gallery

More in this category: « Believe Those China Growth Stories at Your Own Risk - Just Ask Google! Reggie Middleton on JP Morgan's "Blowout" Q4-09 Results »

Add comment


Security code
Refresh

Send
Cancel
JComments
back to top
ReggieMiddletonReggieMiddleton: UK Retail Sales Slide at Fastest Pace in 2 Years in April - Well of course. Don't these guys read the BoomBust??? http://t.co/EBqwBmeA

5 hours ago from TweetDeck

ReggieMiddletonReggieMiddleton: BOE Prints Money if Econ Worsens: No UK Double Dip If It Never Truly Left The First Recession - #MaxKesier VIDEO http://t.co/PCCZhprN

5 hours ago from TweetDeck

ReggieMiddletonReggieMiddleton: BOE to Print Money if Economy Worsens: UK Can't Be In A Double Dip Recession If It Never Truly Left The First Recession http://t.co/hvTY90qo

5 hours ago from TweetDeck

Follow me on Twitter

powered by TweetXT!

Topics

Asia Asset Securitization Crisis Banking Blogonomics Capital Markets Commercial Banks Commercial Real Estate Current Affairs Earnings Financial Engineering Financial Services Financial Shenanigans Global Macro Heard on the Street Industrial Manufacturing Insurers and Insurance Investment Banks Law & the Government Legislation Legislation, Law & the Government Media Mortgage Banking Questions from Reggie to Ask YOUR Advisor Research Residential Real Estate Risk Management Strategy technology Trading UK and Eurozone
You need Flash player 8+ and JavaScript enabled to view this video.


  • Follow us on Blogger
  • Follow us on Facebook
  • Follow us on LinkedIn
  • Follow us on Twitter
  • Follow us on Youtube

Live Spreadsheet Content

  • Online Only Subscription Content
    • Professional Level Live Spreadsheets
    • Retail Level Live Spreadsheets
    « May 2012 »
    Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun
      1 2 3 4 5 6
    7 8 9 10 11 12 13
    14 15 16 17 18 19 20
    21 22 23 24 25 26 27
    28 29 30 31      

    Latest comments

    • Why Shouldn't Practitioners Of...
      Reggie, great article. I think you mean overvalued in this sentence: "...
      22.05.12 15:59
      By JoshS
    • Shorting Federal Facebook Note...
      You rock Reggie....keep telling them whats up. Also another great site...
      22.05.12 02:43
      By marketcycles79
    • Shorting Federal Facebook Note...
      The average person does not know how money works.
      21.05.12 15:51
      By Robert McCorkle
    • 3+3=2 As Big US Banks Amass Tr...
      love u Reggie. i do believe you called the imminent jpm years ago. sta...
      18.05.12 18:59
      By sacco
    • As I Promised Last Year, Faceb...
      Here is my own take on why Facebook is a worthless pile of steaming du...
      17.05.12 13:55
      By Manuel Pfister
    RSS

    Facebook Recommendations

    • Sitemap
    • Terms & conditions
    • All Articles
    • Docs
    © Boombustblog.com

    Forgot your password?
    Forgot your username?
    Create an account
    CC SIGN IN WITH FACEBOOK