The red arrow shows China’s Shanghai index in a seeming recovery mode (from late October) even as the US S&P have touched a milestone low (blue arrow) in mid November.
And to further allude that China’s Shanghai has suffered the most pain compared to the neighbors after losses tallied to 70% at its nadir.
While it is arguable that today’s recovery may simply be representative of a mere bounce, technical picture appears to indicate otherwise.
Of course since today’s global trade structure has put a lot of weight into China…
Courtesy of nationmaster.com
And as the region increasingly integrates, this probably would imply for a regional recovery.
And because China in the recent past had accounted for an important consumer for commodities, then we might also add that for China’s bottoming process to be further confirmed, we need to see an equivalent turn in commodity prices as in copper, oil and other base metals, something that has, as of the moment, been missing.
Will China lead the next phase of the market cycle?
Stay tuned.