China
Bank Of China Shares Halted On $9Bn Rights Offering Announcement, As Bank Urgently Needs To Replenish Capital
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/02/2010 08:49 -0500Those China CDS are looking ever more attractive. Earlier today, Bank of China, Asia’s third-
largest lender by market value, announced it plans to raise as much as 60
billion yuan ($8.9 billion) in a rights offer to replenish
capital. Bloomberg reports: "The lender will sell 1.1 shares for every 10 held, or as
many as 19.56 billion shares in Shanghai and 8.36 billion in
Hong Kong, a statement to the Hong Kong stock exchange showed
today." This latest equity offering in a region already drowning in capital raises was enough to halt trading in BOC shares until July 5 as the response to it would hardly be considered favorable. A sale by Bank of China would “damage market sentiment and banking shares further because we’ve already been flooded by share offerings,” Tang Yayun, a Shanghai-based analyst at Northeast Securities Co., said before the announcement. “This is a surprise given that they just completed a bond sale.” The bolded sentence is critical as it merely implies that the rot from the trillions in bad loans made to assorted house flippers, tulip sniffers, and opium den casino dwellers are finally coming home to roost. Indeed, Bank of China's capital adequacy ratio fell to 11.09 percent
as of March 31, below the minimum 11.5 percent required according to the China Banking Regulatory Commission. The next wave of the solvency crisis tsunami has now officially made landfall in China.
Guest Post: The Hungry Dragon: China's New Oil Market
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/01/2010 16:52 -0500If you ever happen to eavesdrop on a conversation between energy investors, two words are sure to crop up – China and oil. Usually, they’re used together and usually, it’s about China’s increasing presence on the global oil scene.
It’s a pretty safe bet that, as one of the world’s fastest growing economies, China needs a lot of energy. And with an oil appetite that grows by 7.5% each year, seven times faster than the U.S., the country’s reserves don’t even begin to compare to the consumption.
But fuelling the blistering pace of its economy is China’s number one priority, and it is on a mission to lock down its energy interests all around the world. The emerging powerhouse has often felt that it was the last one onto the energy playing field with a lot of catching up to do.
G-20 is Relying on China To Drive the World Economy ... But China Isn't Looking So Hot
Submitted by George Washington on 07/01/2010 12:53 -0500Credit default swaps are soaring against China ...
CEBM Warns China Exports And Imports To Decelerate In Q3 And Onward
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/01/2010 10:25 -0500As if one needed additional fears about the Chinese bubble popping, with overnight reports that various Chinese provinces are rising minimum wages to quell social unrest, following last night's surprising decline in the China PMI, here comes CEBM with a very scary outlook on China trade in general, and exports in particular. Well, if nothing else it will sure help the US push its world's worst trade deficit a little higher now that it will have much less to import. From the report: "Our CEBM China export leading indicator has already peaked, indicating that China’s exports are likely to peak soon. Our export model suggests that China’s exports may decelerate from 3Q due to weakening domestic and foreign demand." And here are some bad news for Obama's plan to double US exports in the next 5 years: "As the government has unofficially adopted normalization strategy away from the stimulus we are likely to see property, infrastructure, and manufacturing investments lose steam in the second half. The deceleration of FAI may put downward pressure on China’s imports." Have no fear - with its record budget spending, NASA will soon discover intelligent and wealth life on Mars, which will be more than glad to import all of America's financial innovation and three other things we export.
The CDS Wolfpack Is Now Coming After France... China
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/30/2010 21:11 -0500A month ago, Sarkozy was pissed that Merkel had dared to take the initiative over him and to ban naked CDS trading. Being a stubborn reactionary, this action only prolonged his inevitable decision to do the same (because politicians, being the wise Ph.D's they are, realize fully all the nuances of screwing around with the financial ecosystem). However, looking at this week's DTCC data, we have a feeling he may accelerate his decision to join the CDS-ban team. With a total of 456 million in net notional derisking, France was the top entity in which protection was sought in the past week. In a very quiet week, where the 5th most active name did not even make it past the $100 mm threshold, France was more than double the number two sovereign - Mexico (we are unclear if this is some sort of contrarian move to the Yuan reval, which Goldman was pitching as MXN positive, which means traders likely hedged by loading up on Mexican CDS). But what is probably most notable, is the sudden and dramatic appearance of China in the top 3rd position. Welcome China! And after tonight's surprise PMI miss and the resulting market drubbing, we are confident within a week or two, China will promptly become a mainstay of the top 3, and will quickly rise to the top position, where it rightfully belongs. We are also confident those perennial Eastern European underdogs, Romania and Bulgaria will shyly make an entrance in the top 10 next week.
Massive Downward Revision Of China Leading Economic Index Refutes China "Recovery" Myth
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/29/2010 00:10 -0500The debate of China's double dip may have just been sealed after the "Conference Board corrected its
April gauge for the outlook of China’s economy, saying its
leading index for the country rose the least since November,
rather than registering the biggest gain in 14 months. The gauge compiled by the New York-based research group
rose 0.3 percent, less than the 1.7 percent gain reported on
June 15." Ignoring for a second the fact that such massive swings in amplitude imply either a malicious data misrepresentation intent or weapons grade stupidity, the second derivative in Chinese growth has now peaked, just at the time when the country for whatever optically political reason decided to unpeg its currency. We are now looking forward to the official rescinding of that decision, and a resumption of the peg. Of course, the fine gentlemen at the Conference Board, have come up with some trivial excuse, namely that the previous release contained a “calculation
error” for total floor space on which construction began, but it is now too late - the discrediting is beyond terminal. And anyone who believes this same agency for its monthly "consumer confidence" reading should ask themselves repeatedly if the CB did not, by mistake or just by following guidelines from above, drop the minus sign.
China's Trade Balance By Country, And Why The FX Action Is Less Of A Deal Than The Media Will Have You Believe
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/21/2010 11:31 -0500
As every kitchen sink appears to have a definitive opinion on the impact on the CNY rebalance, we would like to step back for a second and present a historical chart of the country's trade balances not only in total, but by individual country. As the chart shows, and as David Rosenberg also highlights, providing a blanket summary as to the impact of a CNY revaluation is a rather foolhardy thing: while China may enjoy a positive trade surplus with the US and EU, it certainly has a trade deficit with some other key producer countries, namely Korea ($61 billion LTM), Japan ($47 billion), Taiwan ($79 billion), and Australia ($27 billion). So while it could be argued that the US and EU's manufacturing sectors benefit from a stronger Yuan, what happens to the exports of the traditional Chinese partners? Absent the PBoC going full tilt and scaling up its imports across the board, there will be some very unhappy traditional Chinese trade counterparts. Although in this age, when even presumably smart economists beckon to "Spend now, save tomorrow", why bother with something as simple as the Capital to Current account equality. China should buy up everything, and use reverse money or something to then reinvest the reverse proceeds from all the exports into sovereign bonds... or something.
China's CNY Move Is Bearish For Treasuries
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/21/2010 09:33 -0500We pointed out previously that the one certain mid- to long-term impact of China's revaluation decision, aside from stimulating the US manufacturing export economy (don't laugh), will be to trim Chinese interest for bonds. This is due to a direct effect of fewer Chinese dollars being recycled into USTs now that less USD reserves will be accumulated, but also due to an indirect effect of stimulating demand for risky assets, pushing USTs off the plate of investors. For a much more in depth perspective, we provide the views of MS Rates strategists Jim Caron and Igor Cashyn.
In Advance Of G-20 Meeting, China Announces Dollar Peg To End
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/19/2010 11:08 -0500In a statement posted on the PBOC's website late last night, the Chinese central bank has announced it will seek a flexible yuan, ending a two-year peg to the dollar. The news comes a week before the G-20 meeting at which the CNY exchange rate was set to be a key issue of debate. On the other hand, as the PBoC noted, With the BOP account moving closer to equilibrium, the basis for large-scale appreciation of the RMB exchange rate does not exist." As such, a large initial move is unlikely to occur, and the bulk of the volatility will likely strike at traded CNY forwards. Either way, this is sure to play major havoc with already extremely volatile EUR, CHF, GBP and JPY pairs.
China 1 Month Interbank Rate At Multi Year Highs, More Than Doubles In One Month
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/18/2010 13:47 -0500
With everyone focused on the dead and buried Spanish interbank market (no, no STD is the healthiest bank in the world, for realz) is the real liquidity threat elsewhere... about half a world away to be precise? As the chart below shows, since June, the Chinese 1 Month Repo Rate has exploded and is not looking back.After trading in the 1.5% area for years, in the past 3 weeks, this has nearly tripled, and today traded at a 52-week (and close to all time) high of 3.8%. While for many Chinese banks, flush to the gills with money due to a tapering in consumer lending, this is not an issue, we are fairly confident there are various banks that will be impaired by this spike. And it certainly did not occur in a vacuum - there a distinct, and extremely levered, correlation between the CNY fixing and the 30 Day Repo. Should China go ahead and reval the renminbi, must we expect a complete lock up of the Chinese lending market? Perhaps with the Shanghai Composite hitting a fresh 52 week low today, at least someone is paying attention.
Remember The Whole "China Is A Currency Manipulator" Brouhaha? It's Back
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/14/2010 20:25 -0500
One of the parallel news lines that was buried in last week's oil spill, was the pick up in Chinese currency manipulation rhetoric (with the Treasury now two months behind its April 15 deadline on determining if China is an FX manipulator, indicating just how terrified of an adverse response Geithner truly is), particularly that by Chuck Shumer, whose most recent proposal is not to vote China off the face of the manipulative planet (yet all China does is peg its currency to the dollar, which is kept at its level by US Fed monetary policy - does that mean that the Fed is a currency manipulator too?), but to effectively change the entire concept of "currency manipulation" and rebrand it to "currency misalignment" thus reducing the risk of political fallout. Couple this with several complaints received by the Dept of Commerce from domestic manufacturers alleging Chinese subsidies, and the Chinese FX relations, now that global liquidity is assumed to be once again "under control", may once again deteriorate rapidly. Attached is a succinct summary from Goldman's Alec Phillips which present the key issues in the upcoming weeks over the China currency manipulation situation. While most of the observations are not unexpected, the following bears pointing out: " Last week the Senate approved an amendment that would require the Treasury to report quarterly on foreign holdings of US debt and to determine whether any country’s holdings posed a national security risk. This proposal appears aimed mainly at curbing federal spending rather than influencing international purchases of US Treasury debt, and it seems unlikely to have major ramifications. Still, there is irony in the prospect of Congress requiring an additional politically sensitive periodic report from the Treasury, as it awaits the first one on foreign exchange.
On China's Overhyped Export Boom And The Upcoming Deflation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/09/2010 15:38 -0500Today's early market exuberance (which did nothing but provide various FX arb opportunities during the day), was largely attributed to the news that China's export economy is surging. Alas, even a brief read between the lines indicates that this should have been fully priced in. The reason is very simple, as our friend Thermidor explains.
China Sovereign Wealth Funds Announces 10% MTM Loss For May
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/08/2010 11:55 -0500The China Investment Corporation, also known as China's sovereign wealth fund, and the entity that allocates China's nearly $3 trillion in foreign assets, which in February filed it first ever 13-F statement disclosing just under $10 billion in holdings, has announced a 10% Mark-To-Market loss in the month of May according to RanSquawk. We are trying to get confirmation whether this is equivalent to a $1 billion loss on equity investments - we will get you more as we get it. In the meantime, here is the snapshot of CIC we conducted in February. With the recent 10% plunge, the fund has now wiped out all of its 2009 gains, which were announced at 11%!
Europe Tremors Resume: Spain Bund Spreads At All Time Wides, China Exporters Ditch Euro As CHF Surges
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/04/2010 06:51 -0500Another horrendous day shaping up for Europe. Spanish Bund spreads have surged to all time highs just south of 200 bps, Hungary confirms that it was not exaggerating comments about chances of (not) avoiding Greek situation, pushing its CDS even wider, the EURCHF has dropped to under 1.40 and the SNB has not intervened yet, while the EURUSD is down to 4 year lows below 1.21. The nail in the euro coffin is a report by Reuters that a growing number of Chinese exporters turn down euro payment, flatly refuting anything SAFE may be saying officially.
Goldman's Jim "BRIC" O'Neill Capitulates On China
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/02/2010 08:56 -0500"If I stick with my principles, of using what you develop to keep you objective, it seems pretty clear to me that the cycle of Chinese momentum has peaked….there you go, I feel relief…from now on, I suspect we are going to see more and more evidence of this. It will scare many, please the China bubble blowers, but to those of you that think in sensible terms, this is actually good news. China over eased, they have “ over rebounded” and need to get back within a 8-12pct range as measured by our proprietary GDP indicator, the GSCA." Jim O'Neill



