Why China Will Trigger Our Next Stock Market Selloff

Our E-Wave cycle forecast model has been steadfastly calling for a stock market correction, and perhaps a sharp one.

In fact, stocks are overdue for a pullback.

And now I’m seeing fundamental confirmation that a correction is dead ahead, and it’s from an unlikely indicator: China’s deleveraging.

Recently, I wrote about China’s runaway debt binge. And I told you how Beijing has reined in credit growth while it cracks down on China’s “shadow banking” system. Well it’s working, which is good for the long-run health of China’s economy, but bad for global stocks, as I’ll explain in just a minute.

First the facts. Shadow-banking assets in China surged 21% last year alone to the equivalent of $9.3 trillion, equal to 87% of China’s entire economy!

There’s no question such fast-paced growth in credit – much of it loosely regulated at best – represents a clear and present danger to China’s economy.

So about nine months ago, the authorities in Beijing correctly began cracking down on excess credit growth, by gradually raising short-term lending rates. And it’s paying off.

In April, total credit growth slowed to 14.4% year-over-year, down from 16.6% a year ago.

Although the Red Dragon’s economy has slowed a bit as a result, its growth still stirs envy in the rest of the world, clocking in at 6.9% last quarter, with retail sales “slowing” to 10.7% year-over-year and corporate-profit growth of “just” 24% in March!

But here’s why China’s credit slowdown spells trouble for global stocks …

 

As you can see in the chart above, credit growth in China has a very tight correlation with the health of global stocks. When China’s credit growth turns negative, stocks tend to struggle.

In the past, we’ve seen steep market corrections lining up perfectly with periods of negative credit growth in China … most notably in the 2008 bear market, again in 2011, and again in 2015. Well guess what?

China’s credit growth just turned negative again for the first time since early 2014. And the last time this happened, the Dow dropped 8.5% in mid-2014, then suffered back-to-back corrections of 16% and 14% in 2015 and early 2016!

So far, stocks have been defying gravity – as well as my own expectations for a correction – by notching new record highs recently, led mainly by the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 Index.

The S&P 500 got in on the action this week by hitting a new record high above 2,400 for the first time. Even the small-cap Russell 2000 scaled a new peak.

But mark my words, this rally is running on fumes and a sharp correction could begin at any time. China’s credit growth turning negative could be just the catalyst to trigger this sell-off at long last.

I’m aiming to take advantage of this correction for Real Wealth Report subscribers with timely trade recommendations designed to profit when the stock market rolls over. For more details, click here.

Good investing,

Mike Burnick

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Comments 2

  1. bobromakahlua May 24, 2017

    I am already a subscriber. How can I get a copy of Marajuana Fever?

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  2. Warren Hopkins May 17, 2017

    If we don’t get the Federal Reserve under control this country is doomed. By keeping the interest rates so low they took large amounts of money from the older citizens who then had to spend their assets instead of their interest income to survive. The government needed to lower interest rates to pay for more debt or the debt they had already borrowed. There is good debt and there is bad debt. The kind of debt the government takes on is bad debt. As a result is gets larger and larger and we go deeper and deeper into the hole. Debt if properly used can make money that is good debt. It can also be called an investment. Investments can be good or bad. Most of the debt of governments, at all levels, is bad. Government at all levels needs to be held accountable. We the voters have done a poor job of holding them accountable. That is because we as a group are to stupid to do our job. So the solution is to spend more money. Free college educations for all will solve the problem? No one with any sense has explained how that works out? One thing I know is we need to do follow the money. That will help us understand why people are so willing to spend money helping politicians get elected. Elections are usually bought. That should tell us all what is going on!

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