Yes, that's what we monitor day in and day out.
The party is still in a very delicate position. Broadly speaking, you have Xi Jinping and the new division of power, but how things develop within the party is something to pay careful attention to. The current team isn't especially strong. New education campaigns within China suggest that things may not be going as well as we think. The fact that China re-established a farm management office, after its demise in 1960, isn't a good sign in terms of grain control issues. I won't go on about grain, but there's something really significant about that.
The party is sending all kinds of signals in the way it's communicating. Some think it's code, but that's not the case. You have to know how to interpret what the party says. The party can be quite honest at times, so it's simply a matter of changing your interpretive lens. If you know how to interpret the signals correctly, you realize that Xi Jinping's position isn't as solid as you might think. Within the party, a lot of people are still being shuffled around. The people who were chosen to oversee the economy aren't people who should have been chosen, under normal circumstances. They aren't the best people for the job. The official line is that the reforms will continue, but which reforms? That's a whole other question, and it gives rise to considerations on many levels.
Could there be an economic crisis? Potentially, yes.