The main question is whether the market believes Beijing will remain in control as it tackles runaway credit growth. It wants to cut credit expansion, but so far this year it has grown at unprecedented rates. Debt is building.
The majority view is that China will ride the bumps and settle at a slower rate of growth as it adjusts to a consumption-led rather than investment-led economy.
Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/business/c...-for-growth-20130628-2p2r0.html#ixzz2XbEvl9cX
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The most important effect is likely to be on demand for wealth management products. I believe that there is RMB 1-2 trillion of WMP coming due before the end of June, and most if not all of this will have to be rolled over. Already it seems that WMP rates are rising. Several friends received SMS offers on their mobiles (this happens a lot in China) for short-term WMP deposits at 6%, which is 100-200 bps higher than we have seen in the past and higher than the 5% cited in the People’s Daily article. Until recently, the average rate on WMP seems to have been around 4.3%.
So what can we conclude from the events of last week? The good news is that the new administration seems far more determined than the previous to rein in credit growth and restructure the economy. Clearly the PBoC’s refusal to provide liquidity to bail out the interbank market reflects Beijing’s tougher stance on speculative excesses. The bad news is that the credit system is so distorted and over-leveraged that any attempt to rein in credit growth creates enormous stress in the system.
Anyone else see a trend here ?
China is consuming resources in record volumes.
What are they doing ?
The USA seems to be faltering.
Could the balance of power be shifting ?,
I for one hope not because , no offense intended, I just don't trust them.
Just watched 60 minutes, it seems our economic survival depends on a pending basket case economy where they are building entire cities that are empty because no one can afford to live there, 700 million people survive on about $2 a day.
So the building stops, they have the biggest housing bubble in history.
No more building no more steel needed.............
Many have been trying to highlight this point for months if not almost a year on here. Seems most don't want to admit that the fairytale will ever end (not talking about ASF but in general).
The question is will it be a slow deflation of the bubble with reduced growth in China or another financial crisis?
The scale of the whole thing almost defies belief, if they stumble we're in for it big time and I really don't see how they can avoid it, but. then again, I don't know enough about the big picture there to be sure.
There has never been any evidence that China is making the transition from the Tiger economy to a consumption-led economy.
This is a naive economists fantasy.
I don't understand how they can build like that and not be concerned about lack of income.....anyone here would be wound up by banks in seconds flat, unless they used cash...
Different culture and values? I have been told by a few people form China that "used" apartments loose value quite quickly. Don't know if it's true or not, just word of mouth.
Just hazarding a guess, I would say that it is a combination of cash and the fact that people are happy that the property prices are going up. The return on bank deposits are quite low compared to returns in prop. Many are equating property to money (not wealth but money) not realizing that they may not be as liquid. Also prices haven't fell since the market was opened up by the government about a decade or two ago therefore it is all good.
Like here, many prop investors buying since 2008 are loosing money but they expect to make it up when the prices go up. That's what all the spruikers are telling them lol.
There has to be more to it than that, perhaps they're banking on the population move from rural to city living, they have enormous expectations there, I don't know............. it's a mystery.
I don't understand how they can build like that and not be concerned about lack of income.....anyone here would be wound up by banks in seconds flat, unless they used cash...
Given the government controls information would we ever be told the truth.
Its quite likely that it could have all imploded and Chinese people don't own them, its the banks and the government.
his concrete business has 90% receivables over 360 days..
his concrete business has 90% receivables over 360 days...In the meantime, the bank loans just keep getting rolled.
CanOz
What was that reaction, FF, and from whom?One thing I am certain of, we are in s*** regardless of whether China reduces growth or there is a financial crisis because I don't think they can continue on the current path for too long. Rudd mentioned it this week; I was very surprised at the reaction to his comments.
What was that reaction, FF, and from whom?
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