I
am waiting for just ONE article in the NZ media (or politicians) that
will acknowledge this reality,
Global
Economy: No rabbits hidden in China's hat this time
Investors
will be looking to a data deluge from China this week to give the
global economy a further lift after Friday's strong U.S. jobs report.
They risk being disappointed.
5
August, 2012
Figures
for July, starting on Thursday and covering everything from trade to
bank loans and investment, are likely to show the world's
second-largest economy is, at best, stabilizing rather than
recovering briskly.
And
while Beijing has both the will and the means to provide extra fiscal
and monetary stimulus if growth flags, China-watchers rule out a
repeat of the massive expansion of credit that successfully rebooted
the economy after the global financial crash of late 2008.
That
means China, and Asian economies increasingly tied to it, can do
little to overcome the headwinds blowing in from the United States
and, especially, Europe.
"The
problems in Asia that are causing the slowdown come predominantly
from outside the region," said Rob Subbaraman, chief economist
for Asia at Nomura in Hong Kong. "Europe is a bigger than the
U.S. as an export market for most Asian countries now, and it's a big
investor in the region."
In
today's interlocking global economy, Asia's travails are rebounding
on the rest of the world. Siemens, Europe's biggest engineering
conglomerate; BASF, the world's top chemicals maker; U.S. blue chip
United Technologies; and Japan's Hitachi have all recently reported
the impact of lower Chinese demand.
REBALANCING
ACT
Asia
as a whole wants to wean itself off exports and generate more
domestic growth. China's current account surplus is just a third of
what it was in 2007. The process, though, is generally slow.
"Over
the next decade we will see domestic demand becoming a bigger engine
of growth for China, and that will change the picture quite a lot for
Asia," said Rajiv Biswas, chief Asia-Pacific economist for IHS
Global Insight in Singapore.
"But
we're not yet in a situation where the growth engine in Asia is
strong enough to cruise through a recession in Europe and stagnant
growth in the U.S.," he added.
China's
economy expanded 7.6 percent from a year earlier in the second
quarter, the slowest pace in three years. Economists expect growth to
pick up moderately in coming months since Beijing has cut interest
rates and is speeding up the approval of investment projects.
But
this year has been remarkable so far for what has not happened in
China: the ruling Communist Party has not gone flat out for growth
despite the imperative to preserve economic and financial stability
ahead of a once-in-a-decade leadership transition.
That
is because the 2008 pump-priming has swapped one sort of dangerous
imbalance for another: China's external surplus has shrunk, but the
economy has become more dependent than ever on investment, which
accounts for close to 50 percent of GDP. Personal consumption, by
contrast, is no more than 35 percent of GDP, half that of the United
States.
Beijing
wants better-balanced growth and so, to the surprise of some, it has
kept in place curbs to tamp down house prices. It has also kept local
government investment on a fairly tight leash.
Seen
in this light, the danger from this week's figures is not so much
that growth undershoots but that, if it does, Beijing presses the
panic button and puts investment spending back on the fast track.
"The
risk is that you get more stimulus but it leads to a more unbalanced
economy," Nomura's Subbaraman said.
As
such, he said he would be paying particular attention to the relative
strength of July's data on retail sales and fixed-asset investment.
Economists
have been paring their full-year growth forecasts for China to 8
percent or less. Markets would react badly to a further slowdown, but
Ting Lu, Bank of America Merrill Lynch's China economist, said even a
7 percent pace would not be bad given the weakness in the global
economy.
"We
expect China to achieve a growth soft-landing if the euro zone does
not break up," Lu, who has an 8 percent forecast, said. "We
see many risks, but the Chinese economy is still far from collapse."
SHIFTING
DOWN A GEAR
Economists
at Barclays Capital agreed that the overwhelming likelihood was
recovery rather than relapse in China over the rest of the year as
the government steps up efforts to support growth.
But
they said financial markets needed to adjust their expectations to a
China that grows at 8 percent a year and not the 10 percent average
annual rate of the past three decades.
"Unlike
post the 2008-09 crisis, China will not save the world. Political and
economic constraints in China (as well as in the other economies)
suggest there will be no silver bullet or panacea to quickly pull the
global economy out of the doldrums, and 2012 will be a difficult
year," they said in a report.
No
outside central bank watches China more closely than the Reserve Bank
of Australia, given the Australian economy's dependence on commodity
exports to the Middle Kingdom.
In
a quiet week for major central banks, the RBA is expected to leave
interest rates unchanged at a policy meeting on Tuesday.
Citi
expects some small upgrades to the RBA's economic forecasts when it
released its quarterly monetary policy statement on Friday.
In
Britain, by contrast, the Bank of England may well revise down its
forecasts for growth and inflation in 2012 and 2013 when it publishes
its latest inflation report on Wednesday, according to economists at
Investec.
Warning:
Most Chinese Companies Reporting Losses, Profit Declines
Chinese
companies are warning they will be reporting either losses or
declining profits for the first half. Corporate results are forcing
stock markets down and pointing to a contraction in the country’s
economy.
Gordon
Chang
5
August, 2012
China
Rongsheng Heavy Industries, China’s largest private shipbuilder,
lost 19% of its value when it issued a profit warning at the end of
last month. Yards in the country are in a terrible state—the
industry’s orders for new vessels in May were half of what they
were a year earlier—yet Rongsheng’s poor prospects had largely
been discounted. The company’s shares tumbled not only because it
hadn’t announced any shipbuilding orders this year but also because
the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission implicated Zhang Zhirong,
its chairman and founder, in an insider trading scheme relating to
the acquisition of Canada’s Nexen by CNOOC, a unit of one of
China’s state oil giants.
We
can perhaps dismiss Rongsheng as an aberration, but poor results at
other companies are indicative of the state of the country’s
increasingly troubled economy. Take China Cosco, for instance. The
Hong Kong-listed subsidiary of China’s largest shipping company
warned that its loss in the first six months of this year would widen
to at least 4.14 billion yuan ($648.8 million). In the same period
last year, the company was 2.76 billion yuan in the red. China Cosco
posted a loss of 2.69 billion yuan in Q1.
Other
enterprises, such as China Rare Earth, are also forecasting red ink.
Data provider CapitalVue says that almost 900 China-listed firms are
expecting losses or lower profits for the first six months of the
year. Only 600 companies predict profit increases.
The
list of companies forecasting profit declines is impressive. Air
China, the nation’s flag carrier and the world’s second-largest
airline by market value, has said profits will fall by more than 50%.
Huawei
Technologies, China’s largest manufacturer of phone equipment,
reported a 22% drop in H1 operating profit. The profits of Huawei’s
rival, ZTE, fell by 12%. ZTE’s result appears suspicious because
just two weeks before it had warned profits might fall as much as
80%. The company, when issuing its warning in the middle of last
month, blamed “postponement of tenders” by Chinese network
carriers and other reasons for a precipitous fall. Also not helping
ZTE is China Telecom paying bills slowly.
Sany
Heavy Industry, China’s biggest maker of excavators, lowered its
annual unit-sales forecast to 10% growth from 40%. The company is
apparently postponing a $2 billion share sale in the Hong Kong market
due to a poor reception. “Many people think our industry will see
a substantial decline, which I think is reasonable,” said Vice
Chairman Xiang Wenbo in the middle of last month.
And
for all the talk of China’s increasing consumption, profits are
falling in the retail sector. Suning Appliance, the country’s
largest electronics retailer, reported H1 profits were down 29.5%.
Not surprisingly, Gome Electrical Appliances, the country’s
second-largest, forecasts profits dropping by as much as 30%.
Problems
are showing up across the board, even in Beijing’s favored
businesses. The State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration
Commission announced last month that profits dropped 16.4% in H1 for
China’s biggest state-owned enterprises. The Commission said
profits declined only 13.6% in Q1, so the falloff accelerated in Q2.
“We
have seen more profit warnings than expected in the first half and
there might be more than there were in 2008,” says Mao Sheng of
Huawei Securities of Chengdu, the capital of southwestern Sichuan
province.
Why
are there so many profit warnings now? There is, according to the
Wall Street Journal’s Tom Orlik, a “hypercyclicality” in
profits caused by government-mandated “breakneck investment,”
which resulted in “excess supply.” As Sany’s Xiang Wenbo
noted, Beijing’s past stimulus efforts were “abnormal” and
“irrational.”
China
is coming off its stimulus sugar high, and so margins are under
pressure. Profits, however, are just wonderful for companies in a
few regulated industries, where Beijing essentially determines
corporate results. One company reporting an outstanding number is
Huaneng Power International. Profits were up 87.7% in the first half
because the government raised tariffs 6.5% on December 1.
Nonetheless, optimists should not take too much comfort from
Huaneng’s H1 achievement. Why? The company announced that in the
first half its output of electricity fell 1.46%.
The
fall in Huaneng’s output is an indication the Chinese economy is
tumbling. Eventually, however, Beijing’s newest round of stimulus
measures will translate into better corporate results. UBS believes
net income will rebound in Q4. That’s good news for China
investors, but by then it will be too late to make up for the first
three quarters.
And
one more point. What Chinese companies tell the public is one thing;
what they say in private is another. As Patrick Chovanec of Tsinghua
University in Beijing notes, “Of the companies that I talk to
throughout China, there isn’t a single one that is looking at an
increase in revenues or an increase in profits this year.”
Why
China's Growth Model Is Not Sustainable
4
August, 2012
China,
which was once touted to be the global growth engine, is witnessing a
significant economic downturn. The slowdown is not necessarily bad
news for China, which grew at an average rate of 9.3% from 1989 until
2012. A sustained period of high growth leads to excesses in the
economy and a subsequent slowdown helps in cleaning up the excesses.
However,
the focus of this article is not on the current slowdown. This
article investigates if the existing growth model for China is
sustainable in the long term. Based on my research, I concluded that
the current GDP growth strategy is unsustainable. Discussed below are
some of the major reasons for this conclusion.
To
take the story forward, presented are two charts. The first chart
showcases China's new loans, while the second chart gives the GDP and
GDP growth.
During
2000-08, average GDP growth for China was 10.4%. In terms of GDP by
value, the GDP increased by 21.5 trillion Yuan (from 9.9 to 31.4
trillion Yuan). For the same period, 20.3 trillion Yuan of new loans
were issued. The impact of debt on GDP growth was significant, with
one Yuan of debt leading to an incremental impact of 1.05 Yuan on the
GDP.
During
2009-11, average GDP growth was slightly lower at 9.6%. In terms of
GDP by value, the GDP increased by 15.8 trillion Yuan (from 31.4 to
47.2 trillion Yuan). For this period, 25.7 trillion of new loans were
issued. The impact of one Yuan of debt on incremental GDP growth was
just 0.61 Yuan.
New
loans are having a diminishing impact on GDP growth is the conclusion
one can draw from the above data. This is important to understand, as
China is trying to ease monetary policies again to boost growth.
Given the kind of impact new loans are having on GDP growth, the
policy action is bound to fail.
Instead
of being productive, easy monetary policies and excess liquidity can
manifest itself in the form of asset bubbles or consumer inflation.
The real estate bubble in several cities in China serves as a good
example of the point I am trying to make.
Talking
about liquidity, China's M2 as a percentage of GDP for 2011 was 181%.
The United States (with expansionary monetary policies) had a M2 as
percent of GDP at 64% for 2011. Very clearly, the strategy of
propping GDP growth through easy money is not sustainable with a
skyrocketing M2. GDP growth is likely to collapse when inflation
forces policymakers to tighten liquidity.
Further,
rapid credit growth (significantly above GDP growth) always leads to
a relatively high percentage of non-performing loans. There is a high
probability of meaningful write-downs in the banking system in the
foreseeable future. Credit growth can collapse as a result of this
leading to further economic downturn.
In
analyzing the sustainability of the current growth model, it is also
important to look at the components contributing to GDP growth after
the financial crisis. The chart gives the exports and industry value
added as a percent of GDP.
After
peaking out in 2006, exports and industry value added are on a
gradual downtrend. With expectations of a prolonged phase of sluggish
economic growth in the developed economies, exports as a percent of
GDP will continue to decline. The same holds true for industry value
added.
Therefore,
exports contribution to GDP growth will continue to decline and needs
to be offset by domestic consumption.
A
comparison with other investment driven economies shows that China's
gross capital formation as a percent of GDP is in uncharted
territories and at unsustainable levels.
China
already faces overcapacity in the manufacturing sector and adding
further capacity will not benefit growth. Further, infrastructure
development also needs to take place in a planned way. Constructing
houses and roads can lead to a glut with actual urbanization
happening at a relatively slower pace.
Given
these factors, maintaining growth of above 8% would be a big
challenge for China in the medium term. More importantly, consumption
as a percentage of GDP is still below 30% and needs to increase over
time.
Having
talked about the concerns, I would like to add that China will
continue to grow over the long term. The United States, during its
rise as an economic power witnessed rough phases and even a
depression. Similarly, in my opinion, China is in a period of
economic consolidation after nearly 30 years of robust GDP growth.
How
good or bad China does from here depends largely on the policymakers.
It would be a mistake to intervene in the free economy and try to
prop up growth. Instead, policymakers should allow the Chinese
economy to slow down and get rid of its excesses.
From
an investment perspective, depressed market and economic conditions
gives an opportunity to investors to participate in the long-term
growth story. Investors can consider exposure to the iShares
FTSE/Xinhua China 25 Index (FXI),
which gives investors an opportunity to have some large Chinese
corporates in their portfolio.
At
the same time, investors need to avoid currencies and equities of
major commodity producers in the near term. China consumes over 45%
of the world's iron, coal and steel. It also consumes nearly 40% of
world copper. Over the long term, I remain bullish on industrial
commodities.
In
conclusion, there is no one formula or strategy to rebalance the
Chinese economy. The best way would be to allow the economy to
rebalance itself going through some pain in the medium term. It
remains to be seen if policymakers in China are keen to prolong the
pain.
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