China Beige Book CEO explains 'the big X factor’ for China's lockdowns

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China Beige Book CEO Leland Miller joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss China’s COVID-19 policy, economic growth, and the outlook for Asian markets amid lockdowns.

Video Transcript

AKIKO FUJITA: And Asian markets tumbling overnight on reports of a COVID spike in Beijing this time. Officials in China confirmed 70 new infections over the weekend, leading to fears of strict lockdowns in the capital city. We saw the Shenzhen component tumbled 6%, while the Shanghai comp fell 5%.

For more on China's COVID outbreak, let's bring in Leland Miller. He is the CEO of China Beige Book. Leland, it's good to talk to you. It certainly feels like every day that goes by, it feels a little more dire, at least when you consider the reports coming out of China. How significant is this latest outbreak coming out of Beijing, given what we have seen play out in Shanghai?

LELAND MILLER: You know, I think the most interesting thing happening in China right now is not that the Yuan's moving and not that the economy is slowing. It's that everything that's happening right now, we knew not just days ago, but weeks ago. You know, everything was pretty clear. We knew the economy was slowing. We knew that they weren't going to stimulate in a big way. We knew that lockdowns were spreading from Shanghai to other big cities. We knew the Fed was hiking. We know there's a policy crackdown.

So it's interesting that people are seeing this weekend or this-- today, as this pivotal moment, all these things are known knowns. And so, yes, the economy is in a bit of distress. But this is nothing that people should have been expecting, considering all the warning signs that we've seen for weeks, in some ways, months now.

AKIKO FUJITA: With that said, though, Leland, it does feel like there is growing discontent within the country. I mean, you're hearing of outrage on social media, people saying they don't have enough access to food. I mean, we're, what, more than two years into this pandemic. And I wonder how much of that discontent is translating into growing opposition against President Xi.

LELAND MILLER: Well, that's a great question. I don't think anyone knows the answer. People are not happy. There's no question about that. I mean, you could see it anecdotally. And, you know, you're locked down for week after week after week and with the clock continuing to restart, if you have even one case in your neighborhood. And people are going crazy right now.

But this is only important from a markets perspective if either this creates some backlash against COVID zero, which forces the leadership to do a U-turn-- very, very unlikely-- or if this has created some sort of semblance of popular discontent, which is enough to challenge Xi at the end of the year at the party congress, which is very, very unlikely. So yes, people aren't happy. They don't like to be locked down. That's not a China thing. That's a everybody thing. But, you know, I'm not seeing this political-- this turn from a societal discontent to a political movement. There's no evidence that anything like that is happening.