graphrix_IHB
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Much of what I have warned about China is coming to fruition, and even Grant's Interest Rate Observer (a gold bug of all gold bugs) is warning of the demise of China, and their forced loose lending standards (Are they really that stupid? Did they not learn anything from us in our own stupidity of lending that was not forced?).
<a href="http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2009/08/is-china-japan-circa-1989.html">Is China Japan Circa 1989?</a>
<em>It must be lonely being a China bear....particularly for those dubious about its longer term prospects, as opposed to those who might simply think its stock market is a bit ahead of itself even after its recent correction.
Vitaliy Katsenelson, in an article at MorningStar, beings almost sounding a tad persecuted before he warms up to his theme. that there is more in common between Japan in the late 1980s, when it seemed poised to continue its inexorable rise and China today. And the differences for the most part favor Japan. Katsenelson first quotes Jim Grant at length, then offers his own comments.
From Morningstar (hat tip reader Michael):
<blockquote> China today is where Japan was in the late ?80s, except with the greater political instability that comes with a semi-controlled economy and the lack of a social safety net (read: jobless, hungry people don?t write angry letters, they riot)...Today China projects to the world a similar image as Japan did in the 1980s...
Lately, the Chinese economy has been impressing us with its growth...But Chinese economic structure is not is not superior to the West?s; the Chinese can just cook GDP numbers better and control their economy more effectively through forced lending and spending.
However, these short-term advantages come with long-term consequences ? there will be a steep price to pay for them; there always is. I?ve written a lot about this (here and here). Instead I?ll quote James Grant, the publisher of Grant?s Interest Rate Observer. Jim is providing the latest issue of his newsletter free...Here are a few quotes ...:
?A superb primer on the risks of China?s go-for-broke lending drive was published by Fitch Ratings on May 20. Is it not passing strange, the agency asks, that Chinese lending is accelerating even as Chinese corporate profits are shrinking? ?Ordinarily, falling corporate earnings are met with tightened lending, but in China, precisely the reverse is evident. . . .? You would expect?and Fitch does anticipate?that the borrowers of these trillions of renminbi are not so profitable as they were in the boom, and some will therefore struggle to service their debts.?
I think this chart, also excerpted from Grant?s Interest Rate Observer, tells the full story of the quality of China?s latest growth...</blockquote></em>
http://contrarianedge.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/chinese12monthslending.jpg
<em>
Yves here. Hyman Minsky fans will recognize this as his Ponzi unit paradigm. Back to Grant via Morningstar:
<blockquote>
<strong>?Since 2005, China has generated 73% of the global growth in oil consumption and 77% of the global growth in coal consumption.?</strong> [emphasis is mine]</blockquote>
Yves here, I know extended quotes in blog posts can be a bit confusing. We are now done with Jim Grant and are back to Katsenelson in a second of two linked articles:
<blockquote>Today, Chinese economic growth is the force pushing the global economy. The quality of this growth, however, is low as it is predicated on massive (forced) lending and thus unsustainable. As Chinese growth slows, China will turn from a wind into sails of global economy to its anchor. The impact will be felt in many, often unsuspected places.
It will tank the commodity markets, commodity producers and commodity exporting nations. Let's take oil, for instance. As incremental demand from China collapses, oil prices will follow, taking the Russian economy with it, as Russia is for the most part a one-trick-petrochemical-pony. According to GavKal Research China accounts for 15% of Brazil's exports (up from 1.5% a decade ago), significantly impacting the economy of that South American nation..
Demand for industrial goods will fall off the cliff. China consumed a lot of those goods - $550 billion worth annually (also according to GaveKal Research). So if Caterpillar expects to sell more of its yellow earthmovers to China, it will have put that thought on hold for awhile.....
Finally, Chinese appetite for our fine currency will diminish, driving the dollar lower against the renminbi and boosting our interest rates higher. No more 5% mortgages and 6% car loans.
Identifying bubbles is a lot easier than timing them. An astute observer could have seen the Japanese bubble developing in 1986, 1987 and 1988, but he would have been "wrong" until 1989....</blockquote>
Yves again. The other reason to take this gloomy appraisal seriously is that in the Great Depression, it was the big exporter (the US) that faced the most difficult adjustment. Overconsuming indebted countries in Europe simply defaulted.</em>
<a href="http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2009/08/is-china-japan-circa-1989.html">Is China Japan Circa 1989?</a>
<em>It must be lonely being a China bear....particularly for those dubious about its longer term prospects, as opposed to those who might simply think its stock market is a bit ahead of itself even after its recent correction.
Vitaliy Katsenelson, in an article at MorningStar, beings almost sounding a tad persecuted before he warms up to his theme. that there is more in common between Japan in the late 1980s, when it seemed poised to continue its inexorable rise and China today. And the differences for the most part favor Japan. Katsenelson first quotes Jim Grant at length, then offers his own comments.
From Morningstar (hat tip reader Michael):
<blockquote> China today is where Japan was in the late ?80s, except with the greater political instability that comes with a semi-controlled economy and the lack of a social safety net (read: jobless, hungry people don?t write angry letters, they riot)...Today China projects to the world a similar image as Japan did in the 1980s...
Lately, the Chinese economy has been impressing us with its growth...But Chinese economic structure is not is not superior to the West?s; the Chinese can just cook GDP numbers better and control their economy more effectively through forced lending and spending.
However, these short-term advantages come with long-term consequences ? there will be a steep price to pay for them; there always is. I?ve written a lot about this (here and here). Instead I?ll quote James Grant, the publisher of Grant?s Interest Rate Observer. Jim is providing the latest issue of his newsletter free...Here are a few quotes ...:
?A superb primer on the risks of China?s go-for-broke lending drive was published by Fitch Ratings on May 20. Is it not passing strange, the agency asks, that Chinese lending is accelerating even as Chinese corporate profits are shrinking? ?Ordinarily, falling corporate earnings are met with tightened lending, but in China, precisely the reverse is evident. . . .? You would expect?and Fitch does anticipate?that the borrowers of these trillions of renminbi are not so profitable as they were in the boom, and some will therefore struggle to service their debts.?
I think this chart, also excerpted from Grant?s Interest Rate Observer, tells the full story of the quality of China?s latest growth...</blockquote></em>
http://contrarianedge.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/chinese12monthslending.jpg
<em>
Yves here. Hyman Minsky fans will recognize this as his Ponzi unit paradigm. Back to Grant via Morningstar:
<blockquote>
<strong>?Since 2005, China has generated 73% of the global growth in oil consumption and 77% of the global growth in coal consumption.?</strong> [emphasis is mine]</blockquote>
Yves here, I know extended quotes in blog posts can be a bit confusing. We are now done with Jim Grant and are back to Katsenelson in a second of two linked articles:
<blockquote>Today, Chinese economic growth is the force pushing the global economy. The quality of this growth, however, is low as it is predicated on massive (forced) lending and thus unsustainable. As Chinese growth slows, China will turn from a wind into sails of global economy to its anchor. The impact will be felt in many, often unsuspected places.
It will tank the commodity markets, commodity producers and commodity exporting nations. Let's take oil, for instance. As incremental demand from China collapses, oil prices will follow, taking the Russian economy with it, as Russia is for the most part a one-trick-petrochemical-pony. According to GavKal Research China accounts for 15% of Brazil's exports (up from 1.5% a decade ago), significantly impacting the economy of that South American nation..
Demand for industrial goods will fall off the cliff. China consumed a lot of those goods - $550 billion worth annually (also according to GaveKal Research). So if Caterpillar expects to sell more of its yellow earthmovers to China, it will have put that thought on hold for awhile.....
Finally, Chinese appetite for our fine currency will diminish, driving the dollar lower against the renminbi and boosting our interest rates higher. No more 5% mortgages and 6% car loans.
Identifying bubbles is a lot easier than timing them. An astute observer could have seen the Japanese bubble developing in 1986, 1987 and 1988, but he would have been "wrong" until 1989....</blockquote>
Yves again. The other reason to take this gloomy appraisal seriously is that in the Great Depression, it was the big exporter (the US) that faced the most difficult adjustment. Overconsuming indebted countries in Europe simply defaulted.</em>