IS CHINA’S ECONOMY GETTING SNAKE BIT
By Chriss Street
China’s central bank withdrew an all-time weekly record high of $145 billion from their banking system this week. China often increases liquidity in early February prior to their Chinese New Year and then decreases liquidity after the holiday. But the extent of the reduction dwarfed the $106 billion added this New Year. T
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he People’s Bank of China has now drained a net $87 billion from the banking system since December 31st, compared with a net injection of $230 billion last year. Economists refer to this activity as “Taking the punch bowl away just when the party is getting good.” What this generally indicates is the Chinese government is being forced to strangle new lending because inflation is exploding. Given that the United States is on the verge of a recession, it appears this Year of the Snake may be about to bite China’s economy
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Outgoing Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao called for
local governments to impose restrictions to “decisively” curb housing market speculation.
He described house appreciation as “excessively fast” and ordered
municipalities to publish annual price control targets. Concern of the Chinese federal
government include:
·
Local
governments are turning to property sales to boost
their revenue. As the majority land owner, local
governments are incentivized to sell property at
inflated prices to developers financed by state owned
banks.
·
China’s
total credit is now a speculative 190% of the entire
economy.
·
Andy Xie of
Morgan Stanley points out that at the end of 2012,
there were 95.4 billion square feet of property under
construction, half residential and the rest
office/commercial. This equates to 1.5 times the
entire China GDP.
Mainstream economists assume the Chinese
government’s actions are “prudent” to continue their high economic
growth. But China’s economic statistics are not credible. The
nation reported that January exports were up 25% over last year. But
China’s biggest trading partner, Europe, is in shambles. If China had
huge growth, it did not come from exports.
What did happen in China is total “social
lending”, the broadest measure of economic liquidity, increased in January to
$399 billion from $260 billion in December. I believe the “recovery” is
being driven by local government pushing real estate speculation.
China appears to be repeating the same strategy
they followed during the 2008 to 2010 financial crisis. The country
implemented a spectacular $640 billion stimulus package to ward off an economic
slump when their export markets in the developed economies imploded. With
China’s deficit-spending stimulus focused on massive infrastructure and
property-related capital investments, the economy stabilized, but real estate
prices exploded. When property prices leveled off in 2011, bad debts at
banks skyrocketed.
Premier Wen Jiabao has stated funding
this activity had been a mistake, but China’s leadership allowed it
to happen again after the economy slowed in the 2nd quarter of last year. The
central government officially unveiled another $160 billion infrastructure
package in September, but unofficially local governments launched a similar
package estimated to total up to $2.1 trillion. Total credit for January
showed a sharp increase from the first half of last year. For 2012,
credit financing grew 20%, trust loans were up 80%, foreign exchange loans up
27% and other financing increased by 45%.
The unbalanced Chinese export-driven economy was
fragile before 2012. Now according to hedge fund mega-short expert, Jim
Chanos: “They’re on a treadmill to hell. Either they try to keep blowing
the bubble to maintain economic growth or they risk an immediate economic
crash.”
China may have a savings rate of 53% of GDP, and
$3.3 trillion in foreign exchange reserves, but the majority of these reserves
are tied up in U.S. government bonds. If China sells 10% of these bonds
to bail out their own economy, U.S. interest rates will spike and the U.S.
economy would tank. Such an event would cause a worldwide recession and
hammer China’s exports.
China’s export-reliant economy is based on
expanding worldwide trade. In Chinese “symbology”, snakes are regarded
as intelligent, but with a tendency to be somewhat unscrupulous. With the
United States already on the verge recession, China’s economy may get bit in
the Year of the Snake.
CHRISS STREET & PAUL PRESTON
Present
“The American Exceptionalism Radio Talk Show”
Streaming Live Monday through Friday at 7-10 PM
Click here to listen: http://www.ustream.tv/channel/american-eceptionalism-news
Present
“The American Exceptionalism Radio Talk Show”
Streaming Live Monday through Friday at 7-10 PM
Click here to listen: http://www.ustream.tv/channel/american-eceptionalism-news
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