CHINA's BANKING CRISIS ARRIVES
by Chriss Street
Last
April I warned that China is About to
Suffer the Mother of all Banking Crisis, caused by wildly aggressive
expansion of bank lending. Now that vicious inflation has forced the
communist authorities to slam the brakes on the economy, short term interest
rates in China vaulted to 25% and the People’s Bank of China had to bail out
one the nation’s banks.
|
Fear that China may be on the verge of a crisis similar to the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008, caused panic across the globe sending the value of every stock, bond and commodity market on earth plunging. But after 5 years of risky lending practices, China seems doomed to suffer a grim period of economic payback.
From a distance, China’s economy seemed to be the poster child of sustainable growth. Government reports showed the consistent 9% expansion; double digit retail sales growth, $3 trillion in foreign reserves, and inflation less than 5%
|
But these statistics masked a dark side as the government instructed
banks to finance state-owned-enterprises to sell at subsidized producer and
consumer prices. Over the last two years, artificial subsidies restricted
increases in retail food prices by 24% and retail gasoline prices by 20%.
The real
secret-sauce of the “China Economic Miracle” is that although there are 3,800
banks in China, the country’s four largest state-owned banks (Industrial and
Commercial Bank, Agricultural Bank, People’s Bank of China and Construction)
control two thirds of all bank deposits and loans. Since the Chinese
government does not provide adequate social welfare programs and restricts its
citizen’s investment options to bank accounts, about 40% of Chinese all
household income is deposited in these four state-owned-banks each month.
The banks then leverage the deposits by 45 times and lend 75% to
state-owned-enterprises and 25% to real estate development at extremely low
interest rates. Although China generated huge exports as the “World’s Largest
Manufacturer” and built impressive infrastructure, the growth is one
giant Ponzi scheme where companies are highly leveraged and sell their products
below their costs.
As Lee Adler at the
Wall Street Examiner artfully
pointed out this week, China “has been undergoing a massive liquidity crunch
in recent days as the central bank there maintains a tight monetary policy that
has drained reserves from the system this year” to try “to cool
massive speculative bubbles.” He points out that the People’s Bank of
China injected $240 billion into the banking system in 2012 and then drained
only 33 billion so far this year. But with banking leverage of 45 times,
China state-owned banks would need to shrink their lending by $1.5 trillion or
25% of the nation’s annual GDP.
Lee
advises that with Chinese companies and banks highly leveraged and desperate
for cash, they are selling their foreign stock, bond and commodity assets to
raise cash to meet bank margin calls at home. He warns this selling may
send asset prices crashing around the world, triggering more margin calls and
sending prices spiraling even lower.
Wednesday,
Chairman Ben Bernanke surprised analysts when he indicated that the U.S.
Federal Reserve may “taper” its efforts to stimulate the American economy
through $85 billion in bond purchases each month. With U.S.
inflation low and unemployment still over 7%, most analysts were surprised that
Bernanke would chose to slow credit expansion. But his real motive is to
prevent the U.S. dollar from strengthening if the Chinese currency weakens from
an extended liquidity crisis. A stronger U.S. dollar would devastate
American competitiveness and cause significant job losses.
In
April, Fitch Ratings for the first time since 1999 downgraded China’s credit
rating from AA- to A+ as their debt had ballooned to 200% of GDP. Two
weeks ago, China’s Everbright Bank defaulted on a $940 million inter-bank loan
due to tight liquidity conditions. Charlene Chu, Senior Director at Fitch
Ratings commented: “We have not seen increases of credit to GDP of this
magnitude in a large country, in a short amount of time, since data has been
kept. So usually when we see expansions of this magnitude, it does lead to
banking sector problems at some point.”
China
achieved spectacular economic growth by exponentially spiking risky bank
lending, while shielding their citizens from inflationary price increases
through subsidies, paid for with more bank lending. As government tried
to shrink lending, it should not be surprising for stocks to crash, real estate
bubbles to burst, banks to default and interest rates to surge. As the
people suffer, the flames of social protest may soon ignite.
No comments:
Post a Comment