You are here

Shanghai

OpenCalais Metadata: Latitude: 
31.2
OpenCalais Metadata: Longitude: 
121.5

Q1 – Q3 2016 China Net Gold Import Hits 905 Tonnes

Q1 – Q3 2016 China Net Gold Import Hits 905 Tonnes

Submitted by Koos Jansen from BullionStar.com

Withdrawals from the vaults of the Shanghai Gold Exchange, which can be used as a proxy for Chinese wholesale gold demand, reached 1,406 tonnes in the first three quarters of 2016. Supply that went through the central bourse consisted of at least 905 tonnes imported gold, roughly 335 tonnes of domestic mine output, and 166 tonnes in scrap supply and other flows recycled through the exchange.

Core Supply & Demand Data Chinese Gold Market Q1-Q3 2016

Will The Fed Hike In June? It's All In The Hands Of China Now, Deutsche Bank Explains

Will The Fed Hike In June? It's All In The Hands Of China Now, Deutsche Bank Explains

Over the weekend, Deutsche Bank's chief credit strategist Dominic Konstam released a report in which as we documented, he explained his reasons why "the market is not ready for a June hike." This was his key point:

The operative question is whether markets are sufficiently calm for the Fed to use the June 2016 meeting to pave the way for a July hike.

 

"The Sendai Dischord" - Japan Humiliated At G-7 Meeting In Sharp Rift Over Yen Intervention

"The Sendai Dischord" - Japan Humiliated At G-7 Meeting In Sharp Rift Over Yen Intervention

At the end of February, shortly after Japan's disastrous attempt to crush the Yen at the expense of a stronger dollar when the BOJ unveiled its first episode of Negative Interest Rates, only for everything to go spectacularly wrong for Kuroda, the world's financial leaders met in Shanghai where the so-called Shanghai Accord took place when in no uncertain terms central bankers around the globe (and especially the Chinese) came down on Janet Yellen like a ton of bricks demanding that the Fed do a "dovish relent", and stop the Fed's monetary tightening talk, ease back on expectations of furth

Traders Stumped By Sudden Flash Crash In Chinese H Shares

Traders Stumped By Sudden Flash Crash In Chinese H Shares

Just around 2:14am local time (2am EDT), Asian traders were surprised to observe in the Chinese market something which until recently had been a purely development market phenomenon: a flash crash. A sudden plunge by Chinese stocks in Hong Kong had traders scrambling to find a trigger for the slump that coincided with a surge in futures volumes Bloomberg writes. 

Pages