CanOz
Home runs feel good, but base hits pay bills!
- Joined
- 11 July 2006
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CanOz said:You hear everyone talk about the amazing growth rate in China. But when your here and you look around, you sense that it’s not sustainable at this rate. The majority of growth they say is from fixed asset investment. You can see this too, in the new apartments going up everywhere. The other thing that you can see is how empty the apartments are. Every city is full of empty apartment buildings. So where and when are they going to start to get the income to pay back the loans to build all of these new structures? My apartment is 5 years old and only 50% capacity. I can see a new building less than 1000 meters away, 35-40 stories tall and just a shell, not even looking like being finished. I visited Hainan, and it still bares the scars of a fixed asset over heating in the '80s. Building shells everywhere, empty.
Will history repeat itself with the rest of China? Will the central Gov't manage to slow things down enough, and will see capacity rates change, income start to flow in from the investments?
The Chinese are buying 1000 new cars every day. If the U.S. slows, where will they get the income to buy the new cars, that use up the resources from Australia and other countries?
What happens if they really let the Yuan go?
Brazil, Russia, and India all face the similar growing pains.
At some point there must be a pause. The pause i fear could be very painful in the short to medium term.
I'm very curious to your thoughts?
hissho said:in the long run, YES.
in the short term, NO.
and the situation will get worse before it can get better.
Nice Wayne I like your replywayneL said:I think that encaspulates the question very succinctly.
China expands a blistering 11.5% in Q3
October 25, 2007
CHINA's economy expanded at a blistering pace in the third quarter, the government said today, even as it declared the immediate overheating risk had receded thanks to a series of control measures
The world's fourth-largest economy grew by 11.5 per cent in the third quarter and the first nine months of 2007, compared with the same periods a year earlier, the National Bureau of Statistics said.
“Due to the macrocontrol policies adopted by the central government, we have prevented the economy shifting from speedy growth to overheating,” bureau spokesman Li Xiaochao told a briefing in Beijing.
“The energy supply situation has improved markedly, the transportation systems have expanded, and the bottleneck problems have been eased.”
As evidence of the slight slowdown, he pointed out that economic growth in the second quarter had been 11.9 per cent.
Inflation, too, was down in September, standing at 6.2 per cent compared with 6.5 per cent in August, he said.
Even so, China is all but certain to experience its fourth consecutive year of double-digit growth in 2007 and is expected to soon overtake Germany as the world's number three economy.
Costello warns of market 'tsunami'
Posted 6 hours 23 minutes ago
Updated 6 hours 21 minutes ago
Federal Treasurer Peter Costello says international markets will be hit with a "tsunami"-like effect when China eventually adjusts its currency.
China has been under strong international pressure to float the yuan. Mr Costello agrees it should do so but he expects that when it does there will be major volatility.
"The day they decide to float their currency you are going to get huge reversals of financial flows around the globe, which will affect all exchange rates, that's why I compared it to a tsunami," he said.
Mr Costello says his comments have nothing do with the prospect of the Reserve Bank lifting the benchmark interest rate after they meet on Melbourne Cup day.
"This has nothing to do with the Reserve Bank and its meeting. This is an observation about the global economy, looking out over the horizon," he said.
"And the point I made yesterday when I was asked about Chinese growth is I think Chinese growth will continue. It will go in fits and starts. It won't be even growth.
"It has a long way to go but the Chinese at some point will have to make a decision on their exchange rate."
He says as China becomes more open and democratic, it will be good for the world - but there will be a lot of dislocation along the way.
"This is not something that's going to happen in the next couple of weeks. This is something that could happen in a year's time or in five years' time," he said.
"But you are seeing a lot of volatility in international financial markets at the moment. I think during the period I've been Treasurer, the Australian dollar has been as low as 47 cents against the US dollar, and now I think it's as high as 90. That's doubled in recent years."
Mr Costello also says the US subprime crisis is sending ripples through the global economy.
http://www.abc.net.au/rn/counterpoint/stories/2007/1849915.htm
In the case of China, the most important thing is that China has, contrary to what many people think, severe economic problems. It is certainly a dynamic economy, but like any economy what goes up must eventually come down, to some extent. 2007 is a year in which that's going to happen, and many of the optimistic assumptions about the Chinese economy are going to prove themselves to be untrue.
So while certainly the US-Islamic war is going to be very important, to some extent it's already been redefined as the US-Iranian conflict and we expect negations to take place that will, if not fettle the war, certainly contain it in 2007 in some ways. We're really looking at Russia and China as more interesting and more dangerous places.
Paul Comrie Thomson: You mention in your report that what goes up must comes down in terms of China, and you talk about this ongoing problem of bad loans. Can you enlighten us a bit on just how bad the non-performing loans problem is in China?
George Friedman: The conservative count of non-performing loans is $600 billion in non-performing loans. A more realistic estimate that comes from companies like Ernst & Young are $900 billion in non-performing loans. There are some who say that non-performing loans are in the $1.2 to $1.3 trillion range. However you look at it, we're talking about somewhere between 30% and 60% of the Chinese GDP being bound up in bad loans. To benchmark it, when Japan reached about 15% non-performing loans of GDP it began its severe generation-long recession.
When East Asia, particularly South Korea, for example, reached about 20%, 22% it began to tumble. So looking at those two prior Asian benchmarks, we look at China's bad debt problem, its non-performing loan problem, and it is already substantially exceeding that, and we're already seeing the precursor events that we saw in Japan and East Asia; profitless export surges, tremendous growth, demand for commodities, money leaving China for investment in other countries. These are things we saw from Japan in 1990, we saw it in East Asia in 1996 and we're seeing it again here.
The Shanghai stock market is telegraphing that Chinese appetite for gambling on shares is on the wane -George Friedman: The conservative count of non-performing loans is $600 billion in non-performing loans. A more realistic estimate that comes from companies like Ernst & Young are $900 billion in non-performing loans. There are some who say that non-performing loans are in the $1.2 to $1.3 trillion range. However you look at it, we're talking about somewhere between 30% and 60% of the Chinese GDP being bound up in bad loans. To benchmark it, when Japan reached about 15% non-performing loans of GDP it began its severe generation-long recession.
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