China
As ECB Frets About A Rate Hike, Bernanke Defends Easy Money Policy, Blames China
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/18/2011 08:25 -0500In yet another very unsurprising event, Ben Bernanke was speaking at the Banque de France Financial Stability Review Launch Event, where per his prepared remarks he once again defended easy money policies so critical at keeping the S&P a few thousand points above fair value over the past two years. Making it once again clear that Bernanke has no clue about how economics works, the Chairsatan was quoted as saying that "The rest of the world has an interest in the U.S. recovery that my policies are spurring." Of course by pursuing his ZLB/ZIRP policies (see, we can name drop too), the Fed is doing nothing but exporting inflation to those countries least capable of handling it, which tends to lead to such inevitable events as government overthrows and revolutions.
Will China Hit That Inflation Deer In The Global Macroeconomic Headlights Anyway, Despite The Fact They Are Slamming On The Brakes?
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 02/18/2011 08:04 -0500Inflation in China is inevitable. You cannot pack 25 years of growth into 3 years and expect not to pay the piper!
Muddy Water Replies To China MediaExpress (CCME), Reiterates Strong Sell
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/17/2011 15:07 -0500The war of words between Muddy Waters and alleged Chinese fraud company, China MediaExpress Holdings escalates as the company that exposed RINO for the fraud it is, issues its latest update on the situation. Bottom line: "We reiterate our Strong Sell rating on CCME, and stand by our conclusion that CCME management is significantly inflating its revenue and earnings in order to generate management earn-outs and inflate the stock price so insiders can sell."
China, Tired Of Manipulating Home Price Data, Suspends It
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/16/2011 12:29 -0500Once again China shows how it's done. Instead of continuing to issue it vastly manipulated national property price index, the Chinese statistics agency has simply decided to stop publishing this highly regarded (if completely irrelevant) metric. From the WSJ: "China's statistics agency said it will stop publishing the country's much-watched official index of national property prices." The reason: even armed with Moody's GIGO spreadsheets to "calculate" the data and provide "output", the country was unable to mask the surge in property prices, resulting in a build up of popular anger. Alas, this move which is nothing but an act of massive condescension, and is supposed to get unpleasant data "out of sight and out of mind", will achieve precisely the opposite, as one billion Chinese know too well just how rapidly surging Chinese inflation is first hand.
China Inflation: Getting Worse and Coming To A Wal-Mart Near You
Submitted by asiablues on 02/16/2011 08:08 -0500Lightening the weight of food in inflation calculation still rendered China's consumer inflation at +4.9% year over year. The more telling number is the producer wholesale inflation, which spiked 6.6% year-over-year in January.
December TIC Data: China Treasury, Agency Sell Off Continues; UK Buying Spree Relentless
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/15/2011 10:24 -0500There is little that can be said about the December TIC data, as all the same (troubling) trends continue. In summary, net foreign purchases of long-term U.S. securities were $76.8 billion.
Of this, net purchases by private foreign investors were $66.3 billion,
and net purchases by foreign official institutions were $10.5 billion. The bulk of purchases was Treasurys at $54.6 billion, and $10.2 billion in corporte stocks (a fourth straight monthly decline), with token purchases of both Mortgages and Corporate bonds. Net foreign acquisition of long-term securities, taking into account adjustments, is estimated to have been $41.8 billion. Yet the most notable data continues to be the interplay between the formerly largest holder of debt (soon to be third), and that locus for bond laundering- the UK. Total Chinese holdings declined by $4 billion, as a result of $9.4 billion in Short-Term debt declines, offset by Long-Term purchases. China continues to dump agency securities like there is no tomorrow, and December is the 6th month in a row in which China has seen its agency holdings decline, but that should come as no surprise to anyone: after all they made it somewhat clear they are on the verge of liquidating the bulk of their GSE holdings recently. On the other hand, the "UK", which is either the Fed's "direct bidder" bond bonzi scheme, Chinese indirect purchases, or recycled petrodollars, just can't get enough of US debt: in December UK holdings increased by $30 billion. It has gotten so bad, that at $541 billion the "UK" is now just $350 billion away from China's total holdings ($892 billion). And Japan is now just $8 billion behind China in total US debt holdings! Of course none of this matters: The Fed will soon be more than double the next two holders (China and Japan) combined, with all the interest collected on the Fed's debt to be promptly converted to Treasury "revenues."
China, Where GM Sold More Cars In 2010 Than In The US, Sees January Car Sales Plunge 10.3%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/15/2011 08:27 -0500And some bad news for the world's worst car maker (recently bankrupt), which has bet its entire "growth" platform as per the recent IPO on the one market that is so far unfamiliar with said carmaker's "quality" reputation. In January, the Shanghai-based China Passenger Car Association reported that sales of passenger cars fell 10.3 percent in January from the month before to 965,238. Per Manufacturing.net: "Chinese bought 13.7 million passenger vehicles last year, up by a third
from 2009. But that robust growth is forecast to cool this year due to
the expiration of tax incentives for some vehicle purchases and a
renewed effort by cities to bring traffic under control."Is the recent collectivist action to cool off purchasing actually going to have an adverse impact not only on GM's margins but its sales as well? Why yes. But the market will be stunned when this is publicly announced shortly.
January China Commercial Banks Loan Growth, M2 Below Expectations
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/15/2011 07:43 -0500Inasmuch as one can trust any data coming from centrally-planned governments, following last night below consensus CPI reading, China continues to telegraph that monetary growth is once again under control (at least for the time being): in January commercial banks extended CNY 1.04 trillion in Loans, up from CNY 480.7 billion in December, which however was well below the consensus of CNY 1.2 trillion. Outstanding CNY loans grew by 18.5% yoy in January, down from 19.9% yoy in December (market consensus: 18.7% yoy). Additionally, the just as "credible" Chinese M2 printed at 17.2% growth yoy, down from 19.7% in December (19.% consensus). The M/M seasonally adjusted annual growth fell to 1.5%, down from 14.5% in December.
China CPI Comes At 4.9%, Below Consensus Of 5.4%, In Line With Zero Hedge "Pervasive Data Manipulation" Expectations
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/14/2011 21:09 -0500The consensus expectation for Chinese CPI was 5.4%. Zero Hedge's expectation based on just announced manipulated CPI data was 4.9%. Guess who was correct... In the meantime, Chinese food prices are not increasing by 5% every ten days, or over 400% annualized. Or at least, they are not doing so on rice (most likely fake) paper.
China Lowers Weighting Of Surging Food Prices In CPI
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/14/2011 19:19 -0500As we speculated earlier, China has just lowered the weighting of food in its CPI. The reason: the nearly 5% surge in food prices in the past 10 days. Turns out the US can still learn a thing or two about data manipulation from the Chinese...
China Investment Corp Hikes Stake In Morgan Stanley To Just Under 10%, Becomes Second Largest Holder
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/14/2011 12:26 -0500Unless we are reading this just released 13G from the China Investment Corporation wrong, Morgan Stanley has just gotten a new second largest holder of its stock. According to the 13G, CIC now owns 150,782,379 shares, or 9.97% of the outstanding stock, compared to 34,719,468 as of August 9, 2010, which in turn was a sneaky decline of 1.6 million shares from the prior period. Instead of buying our bonds, are the Chinese now looking at purchasing our banks directly? The attached chart shows how MS' holdings looked just before this 13G filing. CIC is now the top 2 holder of MS stock, just behind State Street with 163.7 million shares.
Sol Sanders -- Follow the Money No. 53: Rolling the dice in China
Submitted by rcwhalen on 02/14/2011 11:01 -0500When scientists get further along with epigenetics, they may discover the Chinese have two unique DNA: a gambling gene, and another for hospitality. The first, of course, explains why Macau is odds-on favorite for replacing Vegas as No. 1 world gambling champion. The second suggests why few escape the lure of a Chinese campaign to win visitors’ hearts and minds.
Graham Summers’ FREE Weekly Market Forecast (China Cracking Edition)
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 02/14/2011 10:08 -0500China, as an investment, is important for three reasons. They are:
1) The Chinese economy is believed to be leading the world into recovery
2) The Chinese stock market has lead the S&P 500 for years
3) The Chinese/ US monetary relationship
I’ve covered #’s 1 & 3 several times before and I’ll providing an update of my analysis in tomorrow’s edition of Gains Pains & Capital. So today we’re focusing on #2.
China SAFE Denies It Faces Half A Trillion In GSE Losses
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/11/2011 09:26 -0500We were wondering how long it would take for China's State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) to come out with a report refuting yesterday's statement by Lu Zhengwei that China should immediately proceed to start selling its GSE concurrent with today's announcement by the administration that the "Fannie, Freddie model is dead", as well as the supposed upcoming end of QE2 (don't worry, it won't end) which would send fixed income prices much lower. The answer: less than 24 hours... although not really. Dow Jones reports: "China's foreign exchange regulator on Friday denied a media report that
said it could face losses of up to $450 billion on its holdings of
securities issued by U.S. housing-mortgage giants Fannie Mae (FNMA) and
Freddie Mac (FMCC). The State Administration of Foreign Exchange's statement didn't specify which report it was denying, but it appeared to be referring to a report on Thursday by Chinese newspaper International Finance News, which said a forthcoming plan from the Obama Administration to gradually phase out the two government-controlled companies could lead to the losses. SAFE said the report was "groundless," and that is has been receiving regular payments of interest and principle on the bonds it holds from the two companies." Well, duh. The alternative is a technical bankruptcy of the US. What, however, was not denied anywhere is that China may and will commence selling GSE notes soon. Especially since as we reported yesterday, it had already been selling out of its GSE holdings for the past two years. And if they start offloading GSEs, what happens to USTs? Although with the Fed now holding over $1.13 trillion in debt, or over 10% more than China, the answer to that question is increasingly irrelevant.
PBoC Raises RRR For Some Small And Medium Banks As China Aggressively Returning Bernanke's Inflation Back To Sender
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/10/2011 18:12 -0500The Chinese New Year interest rate hike, as expected was just the beginning. China has just announced it is hiking the Reserve Requirement Ratio for select small and medium banks. This is merely an escalation in what is now becoming an open trade/monetary war between China and the US, which will be lost... by both.






