This
is an article that should be read by everyone in New
Zealand or
Australia.
4
Reasons Why China
Is Headed For
Meltdown
26
April, 2012
Please allow me to start off with a few explanatory bits. At The Automatic Earth, we have always defined inflation in a different manner from most other sources. That is to say, we define inflation as an increase in money and credit supply (relative to available goods and services), combined with velocity of money, not as simply an increase in - some - prices.
We
see this this as significant because if inflation is defined as any
price increase, we lose sight of why prices increase, a crucial
"detail". Similarly, we don't attach much importance to CPI
numbers, since they lack the same attention to detail we find with
the definition of "inflation" as it is generally reported
and used.
That
said, I think it's high time to look at some recent Chinese data and
try to draw what - initial- conclusions we can from them. I also
think we can peer through them towards a picture of the future that
few have acknowledged to date, and perhaps even fewer wish to.
If what I'm about to say is even halfway true, the economies of countries like Australia and New Zealand, which we visited recently, as well as many others, are in for a brutal shock.
If what I'm about to say is even halfway true, the economies of countries like Australia and New Zealand, which we visited recently, as well as many others, are in for a brutal shock.
I
single out Australia and New Zealand because their economic growth,
indeed by now their entire economic performance, which has been far
better than the US and EU in the past 5 years, would be torn and
frayed to shreds if the Chinese economy would hit one or more serious
snags. And from what I see I can draw just one single conclusion: it
will. The consequences Down Under will be shattering.
Now
you may be aware of the fact that I have warned about China for
years, and have predicted a civil war there before this decade is
over (and/or China waging war abroad). Simply because the rate of
growth in the Chinese economy is not "sustainable", and
because trying to achieve that rate, China unleashed, among other
things, the by far largest human mass migration in the history of
mankind, which has seen 100's of millions of people move from rural
to industrial areas.
And
in record time too. Which causes a few problems along the way. John
Hempton at Bronte Capital touched on this - and many other topics -
in a great piece recently.
Every
economy that has moved peasants to an export-orientated manufacturing
economy has had rapid economic growth. Great Britain industrialized
at about 1 percent per annum. It was slow because all the technology
needed to be invented for the first time. During the 19th Century US
economic growth – once started – ran about twice the rate of the
UK.
They
copied the technology which was faster than inventing it. Later
economies (eg Japan, Malaysia, Thailand, Korea) went later and
faster. As a general rule the later you industrialized the faster you
went – as the ease of copying went up. In the globalized internet
age copying foreign manufacturing techniques and seeking global
markets is easier than ever – so China is growing faster than any
prior economy.
This
fast economic growth – which would happen in a more open economy –
is creating the fuel for the Chinese kleptocracy.
Not
everything scales up well; actually, not much does. China has
industrialized at break neck speed, and created a lot of
expectations, both at home and abroad, which will be very hard if not
impossible to meet. If you want to put it in starker terms, you might
say it has unleashed something akin to Pandora's Frankenstein. A
monster the entire world counts on to save them. Not a smart idea.
China's
trade surplus as a percentage of GDP is shrinking. Hence, growth will
have to come from domestic demand. The government has tried all sorts
of tricks to boost this, but it can't change people's habits
overnight. The Chinese people are savers. More so perhaps today than
ever before. There is no welfare net to catch them, and the one-child
policy has left them with too few children to fall back on. Hempton
explains:
In
most developing countries the way that people save is they have
multiple children hopefully to generate a gaggle of grandchildren all
of whom are trained to respect their elders. Given most people did
not live to old age if you did you became a treasured (and well cared
for) family member.
This
does not work in China. Longevity in China is increasing rapidly and
the one-child policy results in a grandchild potentially having four
grandparents to look after. The “four grandparent policy” means
the elderly cannot expect to be looked after in old age. Four
grandparents, one grand-kid makes abandoning the old-folk looks easy
and near certain.
Nor
can the elderly rely on a welfare state to look after them. There is
no welfare state.
So
the Chinese save. Unless they save they will starve in old age. This
has driven savings levels sometimes north of fifty percent of GDP.
Asian savings rates have been high through all the key
industrializations (Japan, Korea, Singapore etc). However Chinese
savings rates are over double other Asian savings rates – this is
the highest savings rate in history and the main cause is the
one-child policy.
OK,
so the Chinese save. But how? They have few options, and - ironically
- all of them are money losers. The Chinese can't invest abroad. And
their stock markets are rigged. Bank deposits pay 1% or less, because
the government regulates the interest rates (and all banks). Life
insurance pays a little more, but not much.
Their best bet often is real estate (even if many apartments are left empty), simply because they hope losses will be smaller (though prices have plummeted in many areas). The reason all options are money losers is rising prices (what most call - price - inflation). Hempton:
Their best bet often is real estate (even if many apartments are left empty), simply because they hope losses will be smaller (though prices have plummeted in many areas). The reason all options are money losers is rising prices (what most call - price - inflation). Hempton:
[..]
inflation has been between 6 and 8 percent (but is now lower than
that and is falling fast). At almost all times (except during the
height of the GFC) the inflation rate has been higher – often
substantially higher – than the regulated bank deposit (or life
insurance contract) rate.
In
other words real returns for bank accounts are consistently negative
– sometimes sharply negative.
You
might ask why people save with sharply negative returns. But then you
are not facing starvation in your old age because of the “four
grandparent policy”. Moreover because of the underlying economic
growth (moving peasants into a manufacturing economy) there are
increasing quantities of these savings every year. This is the
critical point – the negative return to copious and increasing
Chinese bank deposits drives a surprising amount of the global
economy and makes sense of many things inside and outside China. And
those deposits are mostly lent to State Owned enterprises.
It
works like this: with price inflation at 6% and a bank deposit return
of 1%, Chinese banks and SOEs have access to enormous amounts of
savings - which (still) grow all the time - at de facto negative
rates. And because of restrictions placed on the banking system, a
lot of the savings are reaching the market through the shadow banking
system. To what extent Beijing itself is ruled by the kleptocracy is
hard to say; the October 2012 elections could be a harbinger of
further developments in that sphere. More from John Hempton:
The
SOEs are the center of the Chinese kleptocracy. If you manage your
way up the Communist Party of China and you play your politics really
well you may wind up senior in some State Owned Enterprise. This is
your opportunity to loot on a scale unprecedented in human history.
Us
Westerners see the skimming arrangements. If you want to sell kit
(say high-end railway control equipment) to the Chinese SOE you don't
sell it to them. You sell it to an intermediate company who on-sell
it in China. From the Western perspective you pay a few percent for
access. From the Chinese perspective – this is just a gentle form
of looting.
A
normal business – especially a State Owned dinosaur run by
bureaucrats – would collapse under this scale of looting. But here
is the key: the Chinese SOEs are financed at negative real rates. A
business – even a badly run business – can stand a lot of looting
if it is (a) large and (b) funded at negative real rates.
Those
negative real rates are only possibly because there are copious bank
deposits available at negative real rates to State controlled banks.
When
you have copious funds at a negative cost a lot of investments that
look stupid under some circumstances suddenly look sensible. US
Treasuries look just fine. Don't think the Chinese are going to stop
holding Treasuries. The Treasuries yield far more than they pay the
peasants. The Chinese make a positive arbitrage on holding low rate
US bonds.
The
reality is: the banks and SOEs - that is to say, those party members
that control them - get
paid4-5% to borrow money !!,
which they can then use to run industries that make a lot more money.
As long as the system lasts. Which it does only as long as
price-inflation numbers stay high and economic growth remains robust.
And that's where things are starting to go wrong.
China's
annual economic growth could fall below 7 percent in the second
quarter if weak activity persists in June, an influential government
adviser was quoted on Wednesday as saying. The forecast by Zheng
Xinli, a former deputy director of the Chinese communist party's
policy research office, is among the most bearish by any government
and private sector economists.
"GDP
growth in the second quarter could fall below 7 percent if there is
no significant improvements in economic data for June," the
overseas edition of the People's Daily quoted Zheng Xinli, now deputy
head of the China Center for International Economic Exchanges
(CCIEE), a top government think-tank, as saying.
China's
industrial output growth usually outpaces GDP growth by 3-5
percentage points, the newspaper cited Zheng as saying. China's
industrial output rose 9.6 percent in May from a year earlier,
picking up slightly from a three-year low of 9.3 percent stuck in
April.
Problem
no. 2: falling inflation. From Zarathustra at Also Sprach Analyst:
China’s
CPI inflation continued with its downward trend in May.
The
headline consumer prices index inflation fell to 3.0% yoy in May,
lowest reading since June 2010, down from 3.4% yoy for the previous
month, and below market expectation of 3.2%. On a month-on-month
basis, CPI fell by 0.3% in May, down from a fall of 0.1% in the
previous month.
Just
as mentioned before, we are seeing sharply lower food prices in May,
which fell by 0.8% on the month in May, while on a year-on-year
basis, food prices inflation is down to 6.4%. Non-food prices
increased by 1.4% compared to a year ago, while it remained unchanged
on a month-on-month basis
Problem
no. 3: liquidity. Zarathustra again:
[..]
... while we have had no doubt about the willingness of the Chinese
government to maintain growth, we have had serious doubt about the
ability of the government to actually spur growth when necessary.
Perhaps following paragraphs will not be the thing that bulls want to
read the most. China is in a liquidity trap, just like everyone else
in the world. That’s according to Dong Tao of Credit
Suisse.
This
is not a usual thing to be heard regarding to China. After all, the
popular definition of liquidity trap is more or less that interest
rates are already close to zero such that there is no way to be
lowered, and there is indeed much room to cut interest rates across
maturities. So it seems, at first glance, to be absurd to claim that
China is in anywhere close to a liquidity trap.
But
we did talk about debt deflation. We firmly believe that this is, if
not already happening, will soon happen. In a debt deflation
scenario, debtors will be rushing to pay down debt (or else they are
defaulting), and the economy is not interested in taking on more
debt. In that scenario, cutting interest rates alone will indeed have
very little positive impact on lending. We are probably not quite
near a liquidity trap, but sooner or later, we believe we will get
there.
Dong
Tao of Credit Suisse (one of the very few sell-side China economists
that we actually care what they say) believe that China is in a
liquidity trap:
However,
we believe that a cut in the lending rate will only have limited
impact in stimulating investment. We
believe China is in a liquidity trap.
With a low interest rate environment, further cuts in interest rates
may not get much of an additional impact. Today’s problem in China
is not about funding cost or bank liquidity, but demand for loans for
real businesses.
As
companies in the real businesses struggle with surging costs,
over-capacity, and weakened demand, the incentive to conduct real
investments is low.
It would take some structural changes to jump-start the momentum of
investments in the private sector, instead of just through easing
monetary policy.
Problem
no. 4: money supply. And there we get to our definition of inflation:
as shrinking money supply and velocity of money. Ambrose
Evans-Pritchard:
Growth
of the world money supply has dropped to the lowest level since the
financial crisis of 2008-2009, heralding a severe economic slowdown
later this year unless authorities rapidly take action.
The
latest data show that the real M1 money supply – cash and overnight
deposits – for China, the eurozone, Britain and the US has been
contracting since the early Spring. Any further falls risk a
full-blown global recession. [..]
The
world money data collected by Simon Ward at Henderson
Global Investors show
that real M1 for the G7 economies and leading E7 emerging powers
peaked at 5.1pc in November and has since plunged to 1.6pc in April.
The data explain why commodity prices are falling hard, with Brent
crude down to a 16-month low of under $97 a barrel.
China's
money data are falling at the fastest pace since records began.
The gauge – six-month real M1 – gives advance warning of economic output half a year ahead. "Europe needs to start quantitative easing [QE] immediately and China must ease policy," said Mr Ward.
The gauge – six-month real M1 – gives advance warning of economic output half a year ahead. "Europe needs to start quantitative easing [QE] immediately and China must ease policy," said Mr Ward.
The
shrinking money supply is a global issue. It it proof that the
inevitable debt-deleveraging is continuing, or you might say has
taken off for real. Inevitable because the mountain of debt from our
recent past needs to deflate. It makes no difference what governments
and central banks try to stop this process.
China
could be hit harder than just about any other country by this. It
needs a high economic growth, of some 7% of more, or the engine will
roll off the rails. And the powerful and wealthy party members need a
high rate of price inflation to keep their kleptocratic scheme alive.
Obviously,
it doesn't look like either will be there. China depends on exports,
and they are falling, on the back of the ongoing and worsening global
crisis. Getting the Chinese people to increase their consumption
levels is of course not very likely when their prospects become less
sunny.
The
government can try to get the inflation rate up by pumping more money
into the economy, but it's hard to see any reason why the Chinese
would go out and borrow it. By and large, what they would want to
spend, they already have in savings. They're not Americans yet,
certainly not in that regard. More infrastructure investment? There
are limits there too.
So
it would look like China is caught in a trap. John Hempton again:
The
Chinese kleptocracy – and indeed several major trends in the global
economy – depend on copious quantities of savings at negative
expected rates of return by middle and lower income Chinese.
There
are two core threats to this system – one widely discussed – one
undiscussed.
Inflation
(widely discussed) is known to produce riots and demonstrations in
China – and is considered by Westerners to be bad news for the
Chinese establishment. And there are good reasons why the Chinese
riot with inflation – the poor who save because they are going to
starve – get their savings taken away from them. But ultimately the
Chinese establishment like inflation – it is what enables their
thievery to be financed.
The
more serious threat is deflation – or even inflation at rates of
1-3 percent. If inflation is too low then the SOEs – the center of
the Chinese kleptocratic establishment will not generate enough real
profit to sustain the level of looting. These businesses can be
looted at a negative real funding rate of 5 percent. A positive real
funding rate - well that is a completely different story.
The
real threat to the Chinese establishment is that the inflation rate
is falling - getting very near to the 1-3 percent range. Low Chinese
inflation rates will mean reasonable returns on savings for Chinese
lower and middle income savers. Good news for peasants perhaps.
But
that changing division of the spoils of economic progress will
destroy the Chinese establishment (an establishment that relies on a
peculiar and arguably unfair division of the spoils). The SOEs will
not be able to pay positive real returns to support that new
division of spoils. The peasants can only receive positive real
returns if the SOEs can pay them - and paying them is inconsistent
with looting.
If
the SOEs cannot pay then the banks are in deep trouble too. All
because the inflation rate is dropping. Maybe they can stop it
dropping. The Chinese establishment has a vested interest in getting
the inflation rate up in China. Because if they don't all hell will
break loose.
Unless
the Chinese can get the inflation rate up expect a revolution.
"Maybe
they can stop it dropping". Well, I don't think they can. I
don't see how. It looks like China can print money, but no-one wants
it anymore. Indeed,
former stimulus has led to overcapacity, so there's no point in
doing even more. As CCB International Securities analysts Banny Lam
and Rocky Zhang recently wrote:
"Today,
China’s manufacturing industry, and by extension the entire
economy, is suffering from massive overcapacity in both
infrastructure and industrial production causing prices to plunge,
utilization rates to fall, profits to decline and the number of bad
bank loans to rise."
It's
not possible, for obvious reasons, to pinpoint when all this will
reach critical mass. What we can say, though, is that the harder
Europe falls, the harder China will. China is not some miracle
story, it's simply just another part of the insane global credit
bubble machine we've all thought was making us rich. We know better
now, or should at at least, and the Chinese soon will too.
That
will in all likelihood lead to fierce battles between the politburo,
the party members and the Chinese triad mafia on the one hand, and
1.3 billion citizens on the other. Not a pretty prospect.
Whichever
faction takes over power in October may decide to go looking for
some Lebensraum in places like Siberia, and send 1 or 2 or 10
million of the 1300 million people they have, abroad. Not a pretty
prospect either.
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