China's banks are an accident waiting to happen to every one of us Fitch
Ratings has been warning for some time that China's lenders are wading into
dangerous water


By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
Published: 5:38PM BST 28 Jun 2009

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 [image: A growing number of experts are casting doubt on China's ability to
pull the global economy from recession] A growing number of experts are
casting doubt on China's ability to pull the global economy from recession

China's banks are veering out of control. The half-reformed economy of the
People's Republic cannot absorb the $1,000bn (£600bn) blitz of new lending
issued since December.

Money is leaking instead into Shanghai's stock casino, or being used to keep
bankrupt builders on life support. It is doing very little to help lift the
world economy out of slump.
 Fitch Ratings has been warning for some time that China's lenders are
wading into dangerous waters, but its latest report is even grimmer than
bears had suspected.

"With much of the world immersed in crisis, China appears to be one of the
few countries where the financial system continues to function largely
without a glitch, but Fitch is growing increasingly wary," it said.

"Future losses on stimulus could turn out to be larger than expected, and it
is unclear what share the central and/or local governments ultimately will
be willing or able to bear."

Note the phrase "able to bear". Fitch's "macro-prudential risk" indicator
for China threatens to jump from category 1 (safe) to category 3 (Iceland,
et al). This is a surprise to me but Michael Pettis from Beijing University
says China's public debt may be as high as 50pc-70pc of GDP when "correctly
counted".

The regime is so hellbent on meeting its growth target of 8pc that it has
given banks an implicit guarantee for what Fitch calls a "massive lending
spree".

Bank exposure to corporate debt has reached $4,200bn. It is rising at a 30pc
rate, even as profits contract at a 35pc rate.

Fitch traces the 2009 bubble to the central bank's decision to cut interest
on reserves to 0.72pc. Bankers responded to this "margin squeeze" by ramping
up the volume of lending instead. Over half the new debt is short-term.
Roll-over risk is rocketing. China's monetary stimulus since November is
arguably more extreme than the post-Lehman printing of the US Federal
Reserve, though less obvious to the untrained eye.

Under the Taylor Rule, US policy remains tight (for the US). China's policy
is loose (for China). New loans doubled in May from a year earlier, almost
entirely to companies.

China's Banking Regulatory Commission fired a warning shot last week. "The
top priority at the moment is to stop explosive lending. Banks should
carefully monitor the process of credit approval and allocation, and make
sure that loans flow into the real economy," it said.

Unfortunately, 40pc of the "real economy" consists of exports, mostly to the
US and Europe, the consequence of a mercantilist export model that has
qcrashed and burned. Chinese exports were down 26pc in May.

World trade may be stabilizing at last after contracting at faster rate than
during the early Great Depression. But it will not rebound fast in a world
where the US savings rate has risen to a 15-year high of 6.9pc. A trade
policy based on the assumption that debtors in the Anglosphere and Europe's
Club Med can ruin themselves for ever is absurd.

Andy Xie, a Sino-bear and commentator for *Caijing*, said Western analysts
are in for a rude shock if they think that China's surging demand for raw
materials implies genuine recovery.

Commodity speculators have been using cheap credit to play the arbitrage
spread between futures and spot on the oil markets. They have even found
ways to trade lumber to iron ore by sheer scale of leverage. "They've made
everything open to speculation," he said.

Mr Xie thinks the spring recovery is an inventory spike, to be followed a
double-dip downturn into next year as stimulus wears off.

Reformers know what must be done to boost consumption. China needs a welfare
revolution. But creating a social security net takes time, and right now
Beijing is facing a social crisis as 20m jobless workers retreat to the
rural hinterland.

So the regime is resorting to hazardous methods to keep excess factories
humming: issuing a "Buy China" decree: using a plethora of export subsidies;
holding down the price of coke, bauxite, zinc and other resources to lower
production costs (prompting a complaint from America and Europe); and
suppressing the yuan, again.

Protectionism is a risky game for a country that lives off global trade and
runs a surplus near 10pc of GDP. Mr Pettis said he fears China is nearing
its "Smoot-Hawley moment", repeating the US tariff blunder of 1930 that
brought the world crashing down on Washington's head.

Two facts stand out about China's green shoots. While the Shanghai composite
index is up 70pc since November, Chinese imports are down 25pc from a year
ago. China is still draining real stimulus from the global economy.

If the world's biggest surplus state ($400bn) is too structurally deformed
to help offset the demand shock as Western debtors retrench, we are trapped
in a long deflation slump.

__________________________________
Rick Johnson
http://www.westernjournalism.com/
http://paul-reveres-riders.ning.com/
"Armis Exposcere Pacem"


 


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