Well there are a few things there I would normally like to debate, but I'd like to keep this thread on topic please.
Yes, my point is that a China crash will smash the ASX, since many of our companies are fueled by demand for resources from china. The concern is 'how do we gauge how far we are from this event, so as to sell off prior'.
Watch Chinese inflation and the way the government over there disclose data, imo. Food price inflation is obviously a huge concern for the gov, as (from what I've read) food prices were the primary driver of the Tianenmen Square protests. The problem with China is that everything they produce and trade are at such low margins that they have real difficulty absorbing inflation. Once the gov start doing funny things with the numbers to understate inflation, thats when to get weary.
Good points c-unit. Regarding the house index:Watch Chinese inflation and the way the government over there disclose data, imo. Food price inflation is obviously a huge concern for the gov, as (from what I've read) food prices were the primary driver of the Tianenmen Square protests. The problem with China is that everything they produce and trade are at such low margins that they have real difficulty absorbing inflation. Once the gov start doing funny things with the numbers to understate inflation, thats when to get weary.
Was reported today that they have stopped releasing their residential house price index...
Well there are a few things there I would normally like to debate, but I'd like to keep this thread on topic please.
Yes, my point is that a China crash will smash the ASX, since many of our companies are fueled by demand for resources from china. The concern is 'how do we gauge how far we are from this event, so as to sell off prior'.
I have heard nothing of any trouble in Korea, I guess I'm not tuned in. Could you post a link to something? I suppose the issue would be 'are the economic connections between Korea and China strong'.korea has closed its door on its 8th bank as the infectious run on the banks escalates.. not that its being reported anywhere.. imho it a concern if the disease infects china a little,, imagine a billion little feet doing a run on their banks..
what the black swan event will be is hard to pick, imho it will be could be a sovereignty issue that may develop out of the current M/E flood of reform hitting home in asia. i think when that happens the need to be in a market versus the need to keep wealth will see some shakedowns like no other..
Welcome to the thread (and the forum).hello everybody. the wonders of the internet being what it is, i randomly came across this website today and found it interesting enough to join in the discussion
Chanos has long been arguing that China has moved from being dependent on manufacturing for its growth to fixed asset investment, which accounts for more than 60% of China's overall GDP. As with most property bubbles alot of this property investment is speculative driven.
Add to that, China's central bank has failed to cap this speculative bubble and instead made things worse by forcing banks to create "off balance sheet loans" that look alot like the mortgage backed securites that crashed wall st.
the thing is people like chanos have been calling the imminent collapse of China for a while now.... its probably impossible to predict when a chain of black swan events will create the perfect storm. But i think its highly likely.
Given its highly likely to occur but impossible to time, wouldn't it be best to create a trading strategy heavy in fixed guaranteed returns like govt bonds with a small but significant amount leveraged and shorting australian mining stocks? Or even better shorting some property developers directly on HKEX. You could probably do the maths to get the fixed return assets to cover the more volatile bets, so you could rollover until the **** storm finally hits?
(apologies im not actually an active financial trader so less useful in that regard)
The issue would be if it sets of a chain of events.apart from my opinion that the global financial system is already a complete mess , is this probable default such a big thing , say compared to the GFC or even the 'Asian Crisis ' ,
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