26 Aug 2025
The New Macro Regime—and Why India Gains Most
Dollar gravity breaks. What happens when EM bond yields stop dancing to the Fed—and start syncing with China? When energy buyers pay in non‑USD, and Asia houses 69 of the world’s 100 largest cities? You get a profound regime shift: less dollar dependence, more regional gravity, and a once‑in‑a‑generation opening for India.
Source: Gavekal Research
1) The Moments That Rewired the World
2001 — China joins WTO.
Global supply chains hard‑wiring begins; manufacturing scale explodes. The same year, 9/11 redirects Western attention to security while China pushes industrial learning curves.
2007–08 — The trifecta.
iPhone + App Store launch the smart ecosystem; US shale rewrites energy security; Lehman resets global finance. Tech, energy, and capital markets enter a new feedback loop that still defines competitiveness today.
List & Twist: These weren’t isolated shocks. They were on-ramps to today’s Asia-first, cost-down, scale-up cycle.
2) China’s Pivot: From Embargo to Edge
Semiconductor curbs → self-sufficiency sprint.
US export restrictions catalyzed China’s credit pivot: less property lending, more industrial policy. Result: leapfrog in autos, batteries, nuclear, shipbuilding—higher quality at lower prices.
Electrification + automation at scale.
Two decades of heavy electricity investment and industrial robots, powered by vast STEM cohorts (ex-India, the largest). The outcome is a deflationary impulse from learning curves: better products, falling real prices.
Proof point—BYD.
2008: a BYD car at $30,000. Today: a more advanced EV (London to Rome on a single charge) near $15,000. Quality ↑, price ↓, demand ↑. That revives animal spirits globally—and forces everyone else to get cheaper, faster, smarter.
3) “Anti‑Involution”: China’s New Doctrine
The problem: Deflation and destructive competition from relentless capacity additions.
The solution:
- Increase fiscal deficit
- Cut policy rates
- Reduce competition and halt capacity additions in overcrowded sectors
Three outcomes:
- Government doesn’t follow through.
- Oversupply proves sticky.
- They succeed: deflation ebbs, margins stabilize, industrial stocks rerate.
If (3) materializes, expect an industrial bull phase across China‑linked ecosystems.
4) The Dollar’s Waning Pull
Trade rerouting post Russia–Ukraine.
Russia’s trade tripled with China and India and doubled with Brazil. Capital re‑channelled into precious metals, pushing gold to rich levels versus historical metrics—structural, not just fear.
Correlation break:
EM bond yields are less tethered to US rates and increasingly track China’s cycle. The Fed constraint on EM policy is abating.
Less USD in pipes → fewer USD needed.
As more trade clears in local/third‑party currencies and cross‑border borrowing costs converge, the system needs fewer dollars to function.
5) The Asia Engine: Urbanization at Unthinkable Scale
More people live in China, India, and Pakistan than in the rest of the world—and 69/100 of the world’s largest cities sit here. Urbanization intensifies infrastructure, consumption, and intraregional trade—compounding growth in a self‑reinforcing loop.
6) India’s New Leverage
Energy beyond the dollar.
India can purchase energy in rupees or non‑USD, lowering FX friction and reducing the need to hoard USD.
Reserves → Roads.
With less USD stockpiling pressure, India can reallocate capacity to infrastructure—ports, logistics, power, transit—multiplying productivity.
Policy decoupling.
As EM yields track China more than the Fed, India’s policy correlation with the US declines—more domestically tuned rates.
Balance-sheet expansion.
Lower rates enable households and corporates to prudently lever for capex and modernization—accelerating the growth flywheel.
7) Sector Map: Who Wins
- Industrials: Potential pricing power and better capacity utilization if China curbs excess supply.
- Financials: Steeper curves support high NIMs; fiscal backstops in China, the US, and Europe reinforce risk appetite.
- Commodities & EMs: A weaker dollar historically lifts commodities and supports EM assets.
- Geopolitics: Even incremental China–India improvement would unlock trade, supply‑chain optionality, and flows.
8) The Next “Unthinkable”
- 70 years ago: France & Germany as allies seemed improbable.
- 20 years ago: China & Russia’s alignment? Unlikely.
Nations have interests—not permanent friends.
Combine cheap commodities (Russia), cost‑competitive labour (India), and affordable capital/machine tools (China) and you get a growth accelerator that could reset global manufacturing math.
Cliffhanger: Which alliance forms next—and who positions first?
9) What We Know For Sure
- The US stance is turning more predatory on trade/tech—negative for long‑term dollar hegemony.
- A weaker USD tends to boost commodities & EMs.
- Energy costs are relatively contained—tailwind for EM importers.
- Financials benefit from high NIMs with steeper curves.
- Looser fiscal (China/US/Europe) supports nominal growth and credit.
- China–India détente, even marginal, would be pro‑growth.
Conclusion: The Center of Gravity Has Moved East
We’re transitioning from a dollar‑centric world to a multipolar, regionally balanced architecture. For India, that means more policy autonomy, cheaper energy channels, less need for USD reserves, and greater freedom to build. For investors, it argues for serious attention to industrials, financials, and real assets that benefit from pricing power, capex cycles, and urbanization.
Miss this shift, and you risk missing the decade.
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