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Wednesday, 26 June 2013

Chinese sovereign risk

This is something New Zealanders SHOULD be paying attention to. Not the comments about Australian banks

Chinese Sovereign Risk Spikes Most Since Lehman



25 June, 2013


With the nation's short-term funding markets in crisis mode - no matter how much they are jawboned about temporary seasonal factors- it seems yet another indicator of stress is flashing the red warning signal. China's sovereign CDS has spiked by the most since Lehman in the last 3 days - up 55% to 140bps. This is the highest spread (risk) in 18 months and looks eerily similar to the period around the US liquidity market freeze. Hedging individual Chinese bank counterparty risk is hard (given illiquidty) and so it would seem traders are proxying general risk of failure via the nation's sovereign risk (and stocks which also languish at post-Lehman lows). On a related note, Aussie banks have seen their credit risk rise 50% in the last month as they suffer domestically and from the China contagion.


China's 5Y CDS spiked to 18 month highs...



as CDS is tracking 1-month SHIBOR extremely closely...



and the more liquid derivative play on this weakness - Aussie Bank CDS (pressure by domestic and Chinese issues)...



Charts: Bloomberg



China Acts to Calm Markets; Stock Market Rebounds From 6% Plunge After Central Bank Pledges More Liquidity; Wet Nurse Action




24 June, 2013


In the past few week, China intraday lending rates as measured by SHIBOR got as high as 25% (See China Cash Crunch: 1-Day Interest Rate Spikes to Record High 25%).


With rates spiking, global stock markets plunged.


On Monday China insisted banks had significant liquidity sending a message that banks need to manage their own risks.


A translated message by the 
People's Bank of China on liquidity states "Commercial banks should concentrate storage for taxes and statutory reserve deposit and other factors impact on liquidity in advance to arrange sufficient positions to maintain adequate levels of reserve ratio, to ensure the normal settlement" while warning "expansion of credit and other assets too fast may lead to liquidity risk".


That message sent the Shanghai stock market index down about 6% as shown in the following chart.

Shanghai Composite Intraday Chart 


The horizontal line represents a split shift when the stock market is open.
$SSEC Shanghai Daily Chart


Since the beginning of June, the Shanghai stock index is down about 15%. Since the February high of 2443, the market is down nearly 20%. Intraday, the market was down over 25% from the year's high.


Mid-day, Tuesday, the China central bank decided it could take no more, and that's when the market rally took place, erasing nearly all of the 6% intraday drop shown in the first chart.

China Acts to Calm Markets 

The Financial Times reports 
China in fresh effort to calm shaken markets
 China has pledged to backstop banks suffering from cash shortfalls, giving rattled investors hope the country’s money squeeze could be nearing an end.

The statement by the People’s Bank of China on Tuesday was the clearest attempt yet by the government to calm the turmoil that has shaken global markets over the past week and fuelled concerns that the world’s second-biggest economy could be on the verge of a credit crisis.

“If banks have temporary shortages in their planned funding, the central bank will give them liquidity support,” it said in the statement. “If institutions have problems in managing their liquidity, the central bank will apply appropriate measures under the circumstances to maintain the overall stability of money markets.”

In its latest statement, the central bank said money markets were already on the mend after interbank rates spiked to double digits last week. It noted that the overnight bond repurchase rate had fallen to 5.83 per cent, more than half what they were last week, though still about twice as high as normal.

“Several strong banks have already started to play an important role in providing funds to the market and stabilising interest rates,” it said.

A commentary earlier on Tuesday in the People’s Daily, official newspaper of the Communist party, called on authorities to continue an unyielding stance.

“The central bank is not a wet nurse to the stock market. If it saves the stock market, it will in fact be harming it,” the paper wrote.


Wet Nurse Action


The central bank efforts to provide liquidity are highly unlikely to work. The structural problems are immense:
  1. China's shadow banking system is a mess
  2. Property bubbles are immense
  3. Infrastructure malinvestment is unprecedented
  4. Rolling over of loans of State Owned Enterprises (SOEs) is going to be very problematic with any increase in interest rates

For further reading, please see ...


In theory the central bank could paper over this mess with massive amounts of liquidity, but in practice, such action will either further fuel China's immense structural problems, or more likely, the credit bubble in China has gotten as big as it is going to get, no matter what the Central bank does.

The world is not remotely prepared for a major slowdown in China. Yet, China's credit bubble has popped, and growth going forward will plunge as China rebalances.



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