China
Hugh Hendry Sees 1920's Japan-Like Crash In China
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/19/2010 10:50 -0500Hugh Hendry, whose previous appearances have been well-logged by Zero Hedge, and who is currently raking the money thanks to long Treasury bet and his EURUSD short from when the pair was 20% higher, has never been a fan of China, and almost got into a fight with Marc Faber recently discussing the country's future prospects. In fact, Hendry uttered this memorable soundbite back in February, in which he mopped the floor with Goldman permabull Jim "BRIC" O'Neill: "I love Jim O'Neill. I love that Goldman Sachs guy. He says you either get it, or you don't. I don't get it. In the future there will be a Confucius saying: the wise man not invest in overcapacity. The flaw of the business model, at the center of it is a craving for power as opposed to profit." BusinessWeek reports that Hendry has now officially put his money where his mouth is and has bought puts on 20 companies that will profit from “a dramatic collapse” of China’s growth. With the Chinese stock market approaching 52 week lows, will Ecclectica soon become the next Paulson & Co. hedge fund iteration, even as the latter continues (allegedly) to bet on a US recovery, and thus stands to lose tens of billions if the thesis does not play out (although we are fairly confident Paulson's long stock positions are matched by even longer CDS hedges... but without additional data, we can never be sure).
Guest Post: China Home Sales Down 50% In A Month
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/17/2010 12:02 -0500China has been the investment darling for the last couple of years. As US economic woes continued to mount and the EU ran into debt problems, many an analyst continued to talk about China as if it had decoupled from the rest of the world. The Chinese government, much like the rest of the world’s industrialized nations, injected billions upon billions of stimulus into their economy, sending auto sales, home sales and stock prices soaring. Chinese citizens, with an average income of roughly $4,000 a year, piled into the aforementioned assets in droves, looking to flip property and paper in the spirit of capitalist speculators here in the US. But, like the US, the dream of profits for the citizen proles will soon come to an end.
China Roundtable with Robert Horrocks and Vitaliy Katsenelson
Submitted by Vitaliy Katsenelson on 05/13/2010 20:45 -0500When Will China's Bubble Burst?
Submitted by George Washington on 05/12/2010 13:13 -0500Has it already started?
China Goes Into Overdrive
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/11/2010 06:17 -0500By now you have undoubtedly heard both that China's economy is now officially overheating and about to blow the NO2 canister, courtesy of another dramatic pick up in credit-driven "growth" and a unmitigated liquidity explosion, and that as a result its stock market has officially entered a bear market. Here are some additional thoughts on China's economy from Citigroup.
China Hikes RRR, Faber Sees Chinese Crash In 9-12 Months
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2010 04:27 -0500![]()
The chorus of anti-Chinese sentiment is becoming troubling: after virtually every major hedge fund manager has recently voiced in support of a Chinese bubble pop, with today's most recent statement by Marc Faber just the cherry on top, could Farrell's rule #9 be relevant here and with everyone expecting the endgame, one would end up not occurring? Earlier Marc Faber said in a Bloomberg TV interview that "China’s economy will slow and possibly “crash” within a year as declines in stock and commodity prices signal the nation’s property bubble is set to burst. The market is telling you that something is not quite right. The Chinese economy is going to slow down regardless. It is more likely that we will even have a crash sometime in the next nine to 12 months." Roger's sentiment comes on the heels of the latest Chinese increase in the reserve requirement (RRR) which has had a nasty effect on Asian markets overnight (and, briefly, on US futures as well). Alas, the Chinese action is not enough, as even JP Morgan admits: "PBOC’s 50bp RRR hike underlines two messages on monetary policy: (1) More tightening in China is needed; (2) Pace of action will be moderate. BI should again signal it is in no hurry to hike."
China To Announce New 4 Trillion Yuan Stimulus?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/27/2010 11:25 -0500What do you do when your last multi-trillion stimulus is expiring and its effects no longer generate asset bubbles as you once did? Why, you launch another multi-trillion stimulus of course, although if you are the US you call it something funky like Pennies for Prosties, Benjies for Bodyrubs or something comparable. China has no problems with nomenclature so it calls it how it is: as Bloomberg observes, "China will announce in August a new stimulus package of possibly 4 trillion yuan ($586 billion), the China Business newspaper reported on its Web site, citing unidentified sources. The plan, from China’s National Development and Reform Commission, will likely cover nine industries including information technology and new energy, the report said." So much for monetary prudence. At this point all economies will spend money into overdrive until each and every economy (that can print its own currency) simply implodes into a Keynesian supernova.
The 30,000 Foot View of China
Submitted by madhedgefundtrader on 04/25/2010 23:44 -0500sia is on its way back up to an historical weighting of 50% of world GDP/ that means china’s economy triples from here. Another $500 billion stimulus package is sitting on the shelf. Don’t count on China bailing out our $14.4 trillion economy. (FXI), (DBC), (DYY), (DBA), (PHO).
Senator Lindsey Graham Says "This Will Be The Year" China Stops Currency Manipulation, Sees 90 Votes In Support
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/22/2010 11:36 -0500Here comes protectionism: South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham has told reporters that he has 80 or 90 votes of support in the Senate (guaranteed passage) if his Bill to stop Chinese currency "manipulation" were to ever get to the Senator floor. Graham must be getting some serious voter push to get this passed asap: "I understand why the administration is reluctant to push China, but unfortunately we're running out of time. This will be the year." With the delay in the official US Treasury's stance on the Chinese manipulation stance set to expire soon, Geithner must decide if the fall out from an escalation in trade war at the highest level is worth the offsetting legislation that now seems set to pass should he chicken out once again. The end result, of course, will be the same not matter what: tariffs, duties, subsidies, and generally protectionism. How the collapse of trade helps boost the great export-oriented US boom is beyond our meager analytical skills.
IMF: No China Asset Bubble, Healthy Growth to Continue
Submitted by asiablues on 04/21/2010 19:20 -0500Olivier Blanchard, chief economist at the International Monetary Fund (IMF), talks with Bloomberg this morning about the prospects for an asset bubble in China. Blanchard, speaking from Washington, also discusses the impact of sovereign debt on global economic growth.
Gold: Euro, China and Goldman Sachs
Submitted by asiablues on 04/17/2010 15:08 -0500Although it would seem that the Goldman-linked SEC case single-handedly killed the price of gold, it was only a catalyst to a technical correction that was overdue. Furthermore, gold’s long term outlook is further solidified by a couple of new “China factors.”
China - The Mother of All Black Swans (updated)
Submitted by Vitaliy Katsenelson on 04/16/2010 16:19 -0500I presented my thesis on China and Japan at my alma mater University of Colorado at Denver at International Executive Roundtable yesterday. Here is updated version of my China presentation.
China To Adopt Floating Exchange Rate System
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/16/2010 09:37 -0500Headline for now: Dow Jones: China To Gradually Adopt Floating Exchange-Rate System Under Management
US Military Warns Of Oil Shortages By 2015 With Significant Economic And Political Impact, Especially On Weak Countries, India And China
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/14/2010 15:42 -0500A report issued by the US Joint Forces Command has a rather bleak view on US oil production, and on peak oil in general. In a foreword to the report issued by General James Mattis, he warns that "By 2012, surplus oil production capacity could entirely disappear, and as early as 2015, the shortfall in output could reach nearly 10 million barrels per day." Does this mean that oil, just like in the Bush administration, is about to become a "strategic interest", which coupled with the upcoming discoveries of non-existent weapons of mass destruction, would result in some additional geopoltical tensions particularly in the middle east? With nuclear tensions between Iran and Israel already at boiling hot levels, will Uncle Sam decide to make landfall in the Persian Gulg once again? More from the General: "While it is difficult to predict precisely what economic, political, and strategic effects such a shortfall might produce, it surely would reduce the prospects for growth in both the developing and developed worlds. Such an economic slowdown would exacerbate other unresolved tensions, push fragile and failing states further down the path toward collapse, and perhaps have serious economic impact on both China and India." Well, Mr. Chanos, there's your catalyst. We just hope that the negative carry of a five year short position is palatable to your LPs.
Richard Koo's April 2010 Update: "What Post 2008 US, Europe And China Can Learn From Japan 1990-2005"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/14/2010 10:59 -0500A few days ago we highlighted Richard Koo's most recent media appearance here. Below we provide his most recent presentation extolling the virtues of unbridled Keynesianism. Keynes' ideas may have been an operable theory when the world was not leveraged 100% debt/GDP (and 400% total debt including assorted off balance sheet items). Now, it is not. And everyone who blindly pushes for endless stimuli will find out that the endplay to Keynes' fatally flawed economic theory is sovereign default. And yes, that certainly includes the default of the country which is pring the most paper.






