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Page added on March 23, 2015

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Chinese Economy Dangles on a Cliff

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China’s money supply had a net increase of 11 percent from 2013 to 2014, an increase that is significantly higher than the country’s economic growth. In 2014 it reached 122.84 trillion yuan (US$18.05 trillion), compared with 110.7 trillion (US$17.71 trillion) by the end of 2013. Of China’s 12.14 trillion added currency (US$1.94 trillion) in 2014, 9.78 trillion yuan (US$1.56 trillion), over 80 percent, was used for creating new loans. Not only was it 890 billion (US$142 billion) higher than that in 2013, but also broke the 2009 record of 9.59 trillion (US$1.53 trillion) by 190 billion (US$30 billion) more.

So much new money was printed. Where did it all go? The majority of the loans did not flow into the economy, but went into non-production areas, namely the financial market.

Massive Money Printing

The Research Center for China Market Value Management Ltd. brought two pieces of good news about the Chinese economy in its 2014 annual report on A-shares stock market value, published on January 24. Firstly, the total market value of A-shares reached 37.11 trillion yuan (US$5.94 trillion) last year, exceeding Japan to become the world’s second largest stock market, next to U.S. Secondly, China’s securitization ratio reached 58.3 percent (derived from 37.11 trillion yuan of A-shares divided by a total GDP of 63.65 trillion yuan), far more than the 40.1 percent in 2013, bringing China one step closer to the securitization ratio of the U.S.

That good news, however, needs a bit of scrutiny. Chinese people in the securities industry like to point to the low securitization ratio to show that the Chinese stock market still has much room for development. The goal is to catch up and exceed the securitization ratio of the United States. That kind of comparison has neglected two factors. One is that the U.S. stock market is a global stock market, with its market value being supported by global capital. China’s A-shares stock market, on the other hand, has funds mainly coming from domestic sources. Moreover, there are fake foreign investments, i.e., domestic capital went out of the country through various channels and flew back in. The second factor is that the U.S. stock market is based on a sound credit system, while China’s credit system has too many defects, including constant fraud and weak penalties. Under such circumstances, a high securitization ratio often means a bigger bubble in the stock market and stronger speculation.

Second of all, retail investors have become losing buyers again. According to the market value annual report, important shareholders and executives of 1284 companies listed in Shanghai and Shenzhen stock markets sold 221.8 billion yuan (US$35.48 billion) worth of stocks. Among them, the executives received 64.1 billion yuan (US$10.26 billion) of cash from selling their stocks, making a historical record. Such urgent selling indicates a coping strategy for when CCP leader, Xi Jinping’s anti-corruption campaign reaches state enterprises. More than ten years ago during the reform of state enterprises, many executives acquired shares through management buyout (MBO). In order to avoid losing their extorted wealth, they are trying to cash out in a hurry in every possible way.

Large Amounts Enter Debt Cycle

Tens of trillions of new money was printed after a 4 trillion yuan (US$640 billion) stimulation package in 2009. Local governments happily spent money and officials happily extorted money. Local governments have since been deeply buried under debt, but they knew too well that the central government would bail them out, which it did.

On September 21, 2014, the Chinese regime issued its Opinions of the State Council on Strengthening the Administration of Local Government Debt order. It requested local governments to report their outstanding debt at the end of 2014, classify the debts and include them in the 2015 budget, and coordinate funds to pay off first maturing debts.

In the past local officials tended to hide the actual figures of their debt because they were concerned about their performance and worried about losing their positions. According to Li Tie, an official from China’s National Development and Reform Commission, the local governments reported 18 trillion yen of debt in total. Li estimated that the number was only 30 to 40 percent of the actual number.

Once the regime announced its countermeasures for managing the debt, local governments reacted quickly and reported all kinds of numbers, leading to instant explosive escalation of the debt level. That shocked central government officials. The Chinese regime’s Ministry of Finance then issued an announcement on Jan. 29, 2015, urging local government officials to review and reduce the reported numbers to spare any future scrutiny.

That maneuver is probably not necessary, however, as local governments long ago figured out how to make new loans to pay back old ones. That is how they continue in their corruption and at the same time keep the local banking system running.

Why would banks have to comply with the requests of local governments? Hyper competition among banks is the key. Banks rely on governments to provide two resources: First, to deposit of government funds. Government is the biggest customer of the banks and government officials can decide where to locate the government funds. The second resource is local operation permits. The ecosystem forced banks to play the local governments’ loaning game. The outcome is rapid increase in debts and the escalating threat of bankruptcy.

Capital Escape Overshadows Capital Export

China’s foreign investment underwent rapid growth since 2013. In a celebratory tone, its Ministry of Commerce boasted that the country has become a net capital exporting country and that the investment of Chinese capital around the world marked the ever-increasing importance of China’s position in the global economy. In the meantime international financial institutes were becoming more alert about the worsening problem of capital escaping from China.

Let us first examine the laurel of “net capital exporting country.” Starting in 2012, China was ranked among the top three countries that made capital investments in other countries. In 2013, direct investment from China in foreign countries demonstrated a 22.8 percent increase and hit a record high with US$ 107.84 billion. In 2014, it reached US$ 140 billion, which was US$ 20 billion more than the foreign investment in China. The regime’s Ministry of Commerce proudly proclaimed that China had become a net capital exporting country, with the U.S. being the largest capital receiver. That achievement was reported by the Chinese edition of Wall Street Journal on Jan. 22, 2015. The report, titled “Will Cheap Capital from China Flood the Global Market?”, said that Chinese capital accounted for 26 percent of global investment now and that number was 4 percent in 1995. As a comparison, the share of U.S. capital in the global investment peaked at 35 percent in 1985 and was less than 20 percent at present.

Just when the Ministry of Commerce was celebrating the fact of becoming a “net capital exporting country,” the Chinese regime’s central bank reacted rather differently, with annoyance at the continuous loss of capital. On Feb. 5, 2015, the central bank announced a decrease of the required reserve ratio, which would free monetary fluidity up to 600 billion yen (or US$ 96.4 billion).

If the Renminbi exchange rate demonstrates irreversible trend of depreciation, an avalanche of permanent exodus of foreign capital will be triggered.
— Yu Fenghui, Chinese economist

Market Watch published an analysis recently alleging that the reduction of the required reserve ratio by the People’s Bank of China has been ineffective in preventing China’s capital from escaping. As the outflow of hot money far exceeded the capital inflow, the report warned that a large-scale capital escape could soon take place in China.

Goldman Sachs finance analysts MK Tang and Maggie Wei reported on Jan. 13 that China had accumulated 2-trillion Yuan (US$ 321 billion) discrepancy in its international accounts since 2010. The report alleged that the number could be an indication for the scale of covert capital outflow. On Feb. 3, the regime’s State Administration of Foreign Exchange publicized the figure of China’s Capital and Financial Accounts in the 4th quarter of 2014. The deficit reached US$ 91.2 billion, a quarterly high since 1998. Yu Fenghui, a famous economist and finance commentator in China, said in his article “China Should Cautiously Prevent Financial Crisis Triggered by Large-Scale Capital Escape” that the recent depreciation of the Renminbi would worsen the capital escape in the first quarter of 2015. He wrote, “First of all, if the Renminbi exchange rate demonstrates irreversible trend of depreciation, an avalanche of permanent exodus of foreign capital will be triggered. Once this happens, foreign reserves would be drained and the overall financial crisis would break out. Secondly, the exodus of foreign capital could lead to a bubble burst of China’s economy.” Yu said that his greatest worries are on China’s real estate, stock market, local governments’ debt, and industrial over-capacity.

When a government repeatedly resorts to printing more money to boost its economy, it is to encourage enterprises to enlarge their production input, increase employment and consumption, and ultimately secure prosperity at the expense of inflation. In the past two years, the money that the Chinese regime injected into the market was no less than that in 2009, when the it injected 4 trillion yuan (US$ 643 billion). Instead of entering the targeted manufacturing segment, the money actually flowed into the stock and debt circuit, and eventually escaped China. Under such circumstances, it did not help at all no matter how fast China can operate its cash printing machines. Among the three sources of revenue, none lead to prosperity but all lead to the edge of a cliff.

Epoch Times



11 Comments on "Chinese Economy Dangles on a Cliff"

  1. Plantagenet on Mon, 23rd Mar 2015 6:32 pm 

    Sounds like China is now doing exactly what the US has been doing for the last 6 years.

    So far QE is working pretty good in the US—-its not surprising that the EU and now China would seek to copy the USA.

  2. dave thompson on Mon, 23rd Mar 2015 6:56 pm 

    Yes I agree Planta, China is now in collapse along with the rest of the world in the age of limits and oil oversupply demand destruction.

  3. Makati1 on Mon, 23rd Mar 2015 7:48 pm 

    Epochtimes: “Freedom of the press and humanity are the foundation of The Epoch Times; our beginnings hailed from a great need to provide uncensored news to a people immersed in propaganda and censorship in China.”

    Another US gov owned propaganda piece with a hypocritical purpose. Propaganda is what is called ‘news’ in America. There is nothing else these days. Maybe China needs to open a news outlet in the US to “… provide uncensored news to a people immersed in propaganda and censorship…”?

    Keep in mind that it is ‘Bash Russia, China and Venezuela’ time in the West. No good news will be allowed to circulate in the West that might make any of them look good.

    As for China’s financial collapse, only fools would want it to happen as it means a great depression in the West and at least a recession in the rest of the world. Be careful what you wish for.

    I’ll wait and see what happens. The Chinese government is NOT the Western governments. China can do by decree what the West cannot. China has resources that the West does not. The Chinese leadership know that. So do the Chinese people. Over half have internet access. They are not ignorant of world events. At least not as ignorant as Americans seem to be.

  4. Perk Earl on Mon, 23rd Mar 2015 8:05 pm 

    For anyone frequenting this and other peak oil websites in recent years, there have been a plethora of imminent doom articles about China. However not one of those predictions of disaster have come to fruition, so I’m of the opinion we need to bide our time waiting for conclusive proof.

  5. Bandits on Mon, 23rd Mar 2015 8:20 pm 

    Yes I’m quickly losing patience with my expectations of fiscal doom, descending like a cloak of impenetrable fog. First the USA then Japan the EU and China printing their guts out.

    The ability of the world to absorb the money printing is astounding. I really don’t know why everyone doesn’t do it, it appears to be the perfect solution to continue BAU indefinitely. It’s a good way to ensure the human race consumes every biological atom the Earth has to offer…..exponential function be damned.

  6. penury on Mon, 23rd Mar 2015 8:40 pm 

    I understand China is doomed because they are printing too much money. NEWS FLASH: All the major nations of the world are doomed, because they are printing too much money. We can continue to pretend that all is well, and that our economy is better than the others but, the truth is we are all going down together. Today is the best it will ever be. tomorrow will be worse and everyday we will slide further into dis repair, true unemployment,and more people sinking into poverty. Hardly noticable to most until it is your turn to enter poverty. And you will, so will I and so will the rest of the 99 per cent. The good times are over, growth is done relax and enjoy the ride, it looks like a long way down.

  7. Perk Earl on Mon, 23rd Mar 2015 8:53 pm 

    Bandits, I think something that is going on that doesn’t get talked about is an idea I have called, ‘Currency Balancing’. A process in which all world central banks are debasing their currencies RELATIVE to one another. In other words debasing a currency is only a problem if the others don’t play along.

    Most of what we hear is about ‘Currency Wars’, but I think that is being misinterpreted, when in fact they are working in concert with one another to continually rebalance their currencies RELATIVE to one another.

    The only other major factor involved is the value of gold and silver. Much has been speculated about the possible manipulation of their value down to enable central banks to continue with ‘Currency Balancing’ without the negative effects of rising precious metal prices.

    If you notice, just recently gold and silver have been going up in price, but that rise also happens to have coincided with the elimination in the price fixing method for gold and silver in which banks would set the price at different daily trading intervals.

    I’m wondering if the wheels could come off now precious metal prices are not being manipulated. We’ll see.

  8. Davy on Tue, 24th Mar 2015 6:04 am 

    Does it matter if there is some China bend and bash in this article? I ask those who are China admirers and practice China glorifications is China a part of BAU or separate? I hear you guys bash the US but then when there are any articles critical of the China or Russia, Ohh, well you tell me that is propaganda with false facts. Well, be big boys and glean the facts and discard the exaggerations and distortions. I hear you guys routinely bash BAU but then you won’t bash China so I guess you guys think BAU and China are not the same. You can’t have your cake and eat it. If you like China and admire it and believe it will prosper and rise to superpower status eclipsing the decaying west than not only do you believe in BAUtopianism you admire BAU. If you admire China you admire BAU.

    China is killing the world in overconsumption dangerously coupled with overpopulation what is good about that? This article covers some serious defects with the Chinese economic system. China wants to be a US economy and a typical Asian export dragon at the same time. You can’t have it both ways. China is doing anything and everything to stimulate growth with faltering export markets and volatile foreign exchange markets. China is digging its hole deeper and deeper and not looking back.

    China’s credit creation is off the charts even by Fed standards the difference it is internal but credit is credit. China has kicked the bad debt can down the road. Chinese markets and business practices are full of smoke and mirror games. There are multiple examples of a shadow banking system rehypothecating collateral, manufacturing economic statistics, and outright theft. Both the west and China are playing Ponzi economic games.

    All major powers are all joined at the hip unable to decouple or change the brittle fragile global system. China would love to break away from the US but the US is a major export market. Not only major but critical. A few percentage points in reduced growth for China is a serious issues. China is debt laden with digital cash, physical malinvestment, and heavy industry overcapacity. China has a economic system supporting growth by overdevelopment in ghost cities, highways to nowhere, and housing bubble.

    There is no way China can have a happy ending with this situation not with a global system at limits of growth and diminishing returns. So tell me now China lovers or should I use your terms “flag waivers” I mention this because I am routinely labeled a flag waiver why can’t you admit you are? Is China a real BAU country or some mythic Asian Phoenix that will rise up and decouple form a dying BAU? NO. China is in a bumpy descent now like the rest of the global system. Agendist be real and honest please. Be big boys and admit to the China flag waiving. Admit your flag waiving is discounting a clear decline in Chinese growth and economic health along with global BAU.

  9. paulo1 on Tue, 24th Mar 2015 8:45 am 

    re: “second factor is that the U.S. stock market is based on a sound credit system,”

    Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha

  10. marko on Tue, 24th Mar 2015 9:20 am 

    Print baby print

  11. MKohnen on Tue, 24th Mar 2015 4:04 pm 

    I crack up at the thought that the “game players” are going to collapse because of the rules of the game!

    In other words, that debt will collapse this or that country. Or currency reserve status will destroy such-and-such an economy. It’s ridiculous when used in reference to any of the major players.

    I liken it to the game of Monopoly, but the rules are being written by the winning players as they play. Most of the large players become dependent on each other to a point that the game will end if one of them goes out. The ultimate winner will have to admit that “it’s only Monopoly money” and then try to survive in the real world. As a result, all the major winning players want the game to go on. So if existing rules would force an end to the game, they simply change the rules. How many times have we seen this happen? Often you will hear the cornucopians state, “All you doomers said that if such-and-such happened there would be economic collapse. Well, such-and-such did happen, and the economic numbers are still good!” Of course they are! The game players simply changed the rules when they thought the game was threatened. So all this crap about China will economically collapse, or the US will crash, or Russia is doomed because of debt or poor economic performance is all a load of farmer’s gold.

    The only thing that really affects the game are resources. And once the resources become scarce, then the game changes no matter how they rewrite the rules. And when the game players can’t get the resources any more, the game is over for all, even the supposed “winner” who will be sitting on a huge stack of useless Monopoly money.

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