As
China Sneezes, Will the World Catch Cold?
Slow
growth could help China’s economy, but hurt mining, supply chain
and investors
Vikram
Mansharamani
17
September, 2012
Over
the past three years, there’s been a remarkable transformation in
global perceptions about the sustainability of Chinese growth. As
Europe faltered and the US fought a massively oversupplied housing
market, China managed to sail through difficult global economic
conditions and seemingly avoided the difficulties that ensnared much
of the West. In 2010, the world was convinced that Chinese economic
growth would save the world. China had grown to become the world's
second largest economy and many extrapolated this trend to the day
that China would be larger than the United States. Few questioned
this belief, and investors titled their portfolios towards assets
that would fare well in a world of strong continued Chinese growth.
The
sustainability of China's high growth rates is now being questioned,
and with good reason. Headline GDP growth was 7.6 percent in the most
recent quarter, the sixth straight quarter of slowing growth. Chinese
officials at the highest levels regularly comment today about
measures to support continued growth. Benchmark interest rates were
cut in June and July, and while real estate markets have recently
demonstrated some resilience, prices remain – on average – below
last year's levels and inventories are noticeably high. Recent
earnings reports from multinational corporations continue to confirm
the official data: China is slowing, with significant implications.
The
credit-fueled investment boom is ending, with serious ramifications
for the supply-chain to China. The short of it is that China has
simply built too much stuff, and while it will eventually need the
currently empty malls, buildings and infrastructure – one can even
add entire cities to this list! – demand for the raw materials used
to build them will plunge. Given that approximately 75 percent or so
of recent Chinese GDP growth has come from capital investing,
building less stuff in China has the potential to cut growth rates to
the low- or mid-single-digit range.
Figure
1. Big consumer: Investors fear that China’s purchases of raw
materials will plunge. Enlarge Image
While
the list of casualties may be quite long, three of Wall Street’s
favorite investments appear particularly vulnerable; two other
expected “casualties” may actually stumble through without much
pain.
As
a result of its building boom, China has had a domineering influence
on the market for industrial commodities. The magnitude of Chinese
demand on selected industrial commodities is noteworthy: more than 60
percent of global demand for cement and iron ore, more than 40
percent for steel and aluminum in 2011. Inspired by strong growth in
demand for their products over the past several years, many mining
companies have embarked on multiyear expansion projects – with an
underlying assumption of continued growth in Chinese demand.
Reduced
demand from China combined with expanded supply will lower prices.
Consider iron ore, selling for ~$50/ton in 2007. In 2011, it was
trading for ~$200/ton at one point and was recently quoted ~$110/ton.
If the Chinese building boom busts, demand for iron ore, a key input
in steel-making, will surely plunge. Iron ore could revisit the
~$50/ton price point, if not lower. In general, however, it’s
conceivable that India and other emerging markets could pick up the
slack capacity of what are fundamentally scarce resources in the
long-run – more than 5 years).
Australia,
in particular, is in the cross-hairs of a slowdown in Chinese
investment spending as it’s a major supplier of key industrial
commodities – bauxite, alumina, gold iron ore, lead, zinc, uranium,
aluminum, brown coal and more. Years of strong growth from China have
also led to a continued influx of immigrants participating in the
booming mining business, resulting in inflationary pressures in both
labor and housing markets. Many of the Australian mines have expanded
to meet an expectation of continued Chinese demand growth.
Figure
2. Trouble ahead? The Australian dollar appears vulnerable against
declines in raw-materials prices, left, and the mining industry,
right.
The
risk of commodity weakness infecting Australia's banking and housing
finance system is quite high because most mortgages are kept on the
books of banks. Investors should exercise caution when investing in
Australian assets -- be they equities, debt, or even the Australian
dollar (Figure 2). As a relatively high-yielding option in a
low-yield world, Australian sovereign debt has benefited from strong
inflows of yield-hungry capital. Mid-single digit yields,
sufficiently attractive to date, may not appear adequate in the face
of currency declines exceeding the yield.
A
material slowdown in China will affect other emerging markets despite
arguments about decoupling. Even if one believes that the real
economies of the emerging markets have decoupled due to domestic
consumption drivers – though in China, for instance, consumption
accounts for about a third of GDP (versus more than 50 percent in
both India and Korea) – it’s clear that the financial markets
remain interconnected. In fact, if anything, the emergence of
exchange-traded funds and other pooled investing products has created
greater financial interconnections than ever before.
Further,
the mere fact that India, China, Russia, Thailand and other
developing countries are pooled into a single asset class known as
"emerging markets" connects them via portfolio managers
that view them as linked. If Russia were to fall by 20 percent, for
instance, and all other markets were flat, emerging-markets managers
would find themselves overweight non-Russia markets. Indiscriminate
selling might follow as portfolio managers rebalanced, generating the
financial contagion all desperately sought to avoid.
In
addition, approximately 25 percent of the S&P 500's earnings is
directly derived from emerging markets, with a large amount (perhaps
around 20 percent), coming indirectly from emerging markets.
Unfortunately, this means that multinational corporations may soon
find that earnings are harder to grow than previously expected.
A
credit-fueled investment boom is ending, with serious ramifications
for the supply-chain to China.
While
it is not impossible, it seems unlikely that the world is about to
descend into a multi-decade debt-deflation spiral. Some areas may
not be so vulnerable.
Paradoxically,
China probably won’t be a severe casualty of a massive deceleration
in investment spending. Social stability is on the top of Chinese
leaders’ minds, particularly as the country goes through a
leadership transition. They will deploy all resources at their
disposal to prevent social unrest that might emerge from slower
economic growth. And even if the country grows GDP at roughly 3 to 5
percent per annum over the next decade, that’s impressive growth
that will result in a significantly larger middle class: Consumption
as a percentage of GDP is destined to rise, creating winners amidst
the wreckage and placing the Chinese economy on a more resilient
foundation.
Several
commodities are not as affected by the China factor as industrial
commodities, specifically agricultural and energy commodities. The
middle classes of India and China are growing rapidly, even if GDP
rates slow in these countries, and accompanying this growth is demand
for animal protein and transportation fuels. Families, accustomed to
adding some chicken or pork on top of their rice for dinner, are
unlikely to cut back to just rice. Likewise, the demand shock to
energy is growing as individuals go from riding bikes to mopeds, to
motorcycles and cars. Such demand trends are unlikely to reverse.
Hence, the globe can anticipate higher prices for food and fuel
commodities for the foreseeable future.
Last
year, most analysts expected the Chinese economy to eclipse the US
economy within 10 years. The combination of a rapid Chinese slowdown
and a US renaissance driven by American agriculture and natural gas,
i.e, food and fuel, may in fact push the crossover date out by years,
if not decades – making analyst credibility perhaps the most
visible of casualties.
Vikram
Mansharamani is a lecturer at Yale University and the author of
Boombustology: Spotting Financial Bubbles Before They Burst. Follow
him on Twitter @mansharamani
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