Thursday, July 23, 2015

China’s Stock Market Crisis: Parallels with Wall Street 1929 and Japan’s 1989 Crashes



The Quartz draws parallelism of the current stock market crisis in China to Wall Street’s 1929 and Japan’s 1989 episodes.

The similarities with 1929 by stage (according to Quartz): Booming GDP, Boundless optimism, Property boom-and-bust, easy credit, Epic stock market surge, Margin trading rampage, Investment trusts abound and finally Rescue efforts

The Quartz on the 1929 rescue efforts and China's current response: "Even though the stock market officially crashed in October 1929, it suffered an alarming minor collapse in March of that year too. In both instances, corporate barons stepped in to stabilize the market and prevent margin calls from compounding the selloff. The first instance—when Charles E. Mitchell, head of National City Bank, announced that the bank would loan up to $25 million to the call market—halted the March slide. However, an October effort by a coalition of bankers to prevent a collapse by buying up shares of big companies failed. Both approaches are similar to what the Chinese government has undertaken to stop the mid-June crash from triggering margin calls."

What’s even more interesting has been the likeness of Japan’s 1989 stock market crash. The resemblance seems deeper considering these factors: investment-led growth model, state dominance, the perils of the “land standard” and Crumbling corporate profits 

In short, China’s current model signifies a marriage of two worst worlds which led to an economic crisis where a stock market crash served as a trigger.

But what stirred my interest is how the article differentiated Japan 1989 version with the US 1929 counterpart

Again from Quartz: (bold mine)

Japan made a different mistake

Japan avoided a depression after its stock crash—and the property market collapse that followed—by furiously expanding money supply and by ramping up government stimulus to replace vanished demand. So why is it still struggling to escape from its “Lost Decades”?

Bureaucrats and bankers believed that with enough time and loose money, they could grow out from under the debt burden.


(Hoshi and Kashyap.)


But Japan had too much debt for that approach to work. Loose money only went to keep broke companies alive—a phenomenon called “zombies”—instead of funding productive investment that might spur the economy. The chart below shows the percentage of bank customers whose loans were being rolled over. By the late 1990s, around 30% were being kept alive by this subsidized credit:
 



("Zombie Lending and Depressed Restructuring in Japan," Caballero et al.)

On top of that, by investing so heavily in industry, Japan built itself the capacity to churn out far more goods than anyone actually wanted to buy. The trouble isn’t just that money could have been spent better building the means to make things people truly wanted. It takes a long time for a factory to need replacing. With enough industrial capacity to last it for many years—even decades—Japan had few other options in which to profitably invest. Fiscal stimulus couldn’t make Japanese industry more productive, therefore. So as Japan waited a decade for growth to kick in once again, its debt pile mushroomed even more.

The lesson Japan failed to master is that too much debt makes it near-impossible to grow—and that the only way to get rid of that burden is therefore to recognize losses.

Whereas in the Great Depression, lots of companies and banks went bust, in 1990s Japan, hardly any did. America’s bankruptcy epidemic destroyed huge sums of wealth and, as a result, damaged the economy. But it also cleared away debt problems, preparing the country to borrow, invest, and grow again. While the Great Depression lasted just shy of a decade, Japan’s debt woes haunt it to this day, more than 25 years after its stock crash. Much of it’s simply shifted onto the Japanese government’s balance sheet. The threat of deflation still looms.

I have written about this here and here. All those bailouts and market interventions to prevent market clearing have only spurred two lost decades and today’s desperation through Abenomics


Lessons from the above

-governments’ response has always focused on the short term popular fixes. Yet short term actions lead to unforeseen long term consequences

-no crisis is similar. While the root will always be DEBT, the manifestations will be different. That’s because of the distinct character of the political, economic and financial structures. In China’s case, current episode merges the worst traits of both Wall Street’s 1929 and Japan 1989 crisis.

While China may not be in a full crisis mode yet, all these bailouts including the $483 billion stock market subsidies are signs that the crisis is just around the corner.

-finally the Chinese government seems to have hardly learned from history.

This validates German philosopher’s Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel prescient observation: What experience and history teach is this — that nations and governments have never learned anything from history, or acted upon any lessons they might have drawn from it. Lectures on the Philosophy of History Vol 1 of 3 (1832)

 

Sunday, July 19, 2015

Phisix 7,600, Falling Peso and The $483 Billion Xi Jinping Put

In this issue
Phisix 7,600, Falling Peso and The $483 Billion Xi Jinping Put
China’s Stock Market Crisis: The $483 Billion Xi Jinping Put
-Doubling Down on the  Fading Effects of Earlier Measures
Phisix: Bulls Recapture 7,600 as Peso Falls and as Signs of Liquidity Stress Deepens
-Liquidity and the PSEi
-Phisix 7,600: Divergences Re-emerge
-More Signs of Liquidity Issues: Flattening Yield Curve and Falling Peso
-Falling Currency: Indonesia’s Economic Troubles as Paradigm
-SMC Vulnerable To A Weak Peso
-Bubble Mentality: Survey Reveals 30% of Philippine Residents Believe in Unicorns (Developed Economy Status)
NOTICE: 

I am having a very difficult time publishing this post. And I have given up trying. 


Anyway I have created a Google document link from where you may access my article. 



or cut and paste below to your url 

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1jSvDjSG_6kYdMK_pxyPAqzxPI-0xxYBv66TqUBX6O1c/pub


China’s Stock Market Crisis: The $483 Billion Xi Jinping Put
I recently predicted that the degree of urgency of China’s stock market crash would prompt the Chinese government via its central bank, the People’s Bank of China (PBoC), to conduct their version of Abenomics[1].
The Chinese government through her central bank, the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) may take a page out of Bank of Japan’s Abenomics to conduct direct (or indirect) stock market interventions via a QE.
This seems to have been fulfilled last week.
The initial effects of the Chinese government’s motley assembled measures of credit easing, credit infusion, information control and censorship, price and capital controls to rescue the embattled Chinese stock market seem to have faded last week. The three day 12+% buying rampage suddenly transformed into a two session of nearly 5% in losses.
Since selling have now become stringently regulated, Chinese authorities seem to think that stocks can only go up eternally. Hence the two day losses incited the political leadership to announce a fantastic stock market support program backed by the PBoC.
From the Bloomberg[2] (bold mine): China has created what amounts to a state-run margin trader with $483 billion of firepower, its latest effort to end a stock-market rout thatthreatens to drag down economic growth and erode confidence in President Xi Jinping’s government. China Securities Finance Corp. can access as much as 3 trillion yuan of borrowed funds from sources including the central bank and commercial lenders, according to people familiar with the matter. The money may be used to buy shares and provide liquidity to brokerages, the people said, asking not to be named because the information wasn’t public. While it’s unclear how much CSF will ultimately deploy into China’s $6.6 trillion equity market, the financing is up to 25 times bigger than the support fund started by Chinese brokerages earlier this month.
And part of this massive stock market backstop emanates from a combined Rmb1.3tn ($209bn) of banking loans from 17 banks that includes the 5 largest state owned banks— Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, China Construction Bank, Agricultural Bank of China, Bank of China and Bank of Communications —which has provided more than Rmb100bn, according to the Financial Times.
China’s $483 billion of stock market support through China Securities Finance Corp. doesn’t seem to even include buybacks and other equity rescue activities by state owned enterprises and from other non-brokerage perhaps local government owned entities.
While different in form or technicalities in implementation, the Chinese government’s half a trillion stock market subsidies almost compares with the 80 trillion yen (US$ 670 billion) stock market support by the Bank of Japan.
Combined with the debt for bond swap now totaling 2 trillion yuan ($ 322 billion), aside from various stimulus measures instituted in 2014 ($ 81 billion in bank injections$24.6 bonds for railways,$16 billion loans to small enterprises and to agriculture and $300 billion for low income housing under the pledged supplementary lending program and more), the Chinese government’s bailouts appear to have already vastly exceeded the 4 trillion yuan ($586 billion) stimulus of 2008.
And such massive debt financed stock market and economy comes as “Outstanding loans for companies and households stood at a record 207 percent of gross domestic product at the end of June, up from 125 percent in 2008” according to the Bloomberg
And as systemic debt continues to swell, the US credit rating agency S&P issued a warning last week on the prospects of rising defaults on Chinese corporate bonds (as well as US bonds). China’s corporate debt represents 160% of GDP.
Experts who diminish the impact of China stock market imbroglio say that only 90 million of gamblers and a few thousands of listed companies have been involved, yet why the half a trillion billion stock market bailout?
Doubling Down on the  Fading Effects of Earlier Measures
Could it be perhaps that the Chinese government shuddered when they realized that crashing stocks has showed signs of filtering into the property sector where stock market losses have prompted many to liquidate and or even cancel recent property purchases? 
So far the side effects from the stock market crash on the real economy have been mainly about sentiment. But what if sentiment segues into issues of liquidity, equity valuations and debt?
What happens when markets realize that the government’s price controls and interventions may also lead to conflict over valuations?  For instance, how will banks and their clients agree on how and what to value billions of equity derivatives especially for those issues that have been suspended?  
What if the injunction for major investors to sell and or a clampdown on short selling would translate to the need to raise cash? Given that stock market exit has become a politically restricted activity, what should stop people from diverting their selling activities from the stock market into other non-stock market household or corporate assets such as properties and or even commodities?


this post is truncated. Pls click on this link

Friday, July 17, 2015

China Stock Market Crisis Spreads to the Property Sector!

I’ve been saying here that there will be linkages between the Chinese stock market crash and the real economy.

The recent stock market crash has begun to show signs of diffusion to the property sector. This has mostly been transmitted through market sentiment (for now)

Reports the Nikkei Asia Review: (bold mine)
Turbulence on China's equity market is starting to rock the country's property market. Investors are quickly pulling their cash out of housing they purchased to cover losses incurred by stock investments. Some have begun offering discounts on property due to difficulties with finding buyers. Continued turmoil on the stock market looks as though it will have a heavy impact on the country's real estate market…

Until recently, the property market showed signs of picking up in major cities and some regions, thanks in part to lower interest rates, eased home purchase restrictions and other measures taken by authorities. According to data released by the National Bureau of Statistics, prices for new houses, excluding those for low-income earners, in 70 major cities for May rose an average of 0.7% from the previous month. China Index Academy, a Chinese private think tank, said that house prices in 100 major cities rose for the second straight month in June on a month-on-month basis. In the first half of the year, China's home sales picked up 12.9% on the year, from the 5.1% increase for the five months through May…

Investors who suffered big losses on the stock market were forced to sell property and cancel real estate purchase agreements. The Hong Kong Economic Times said that consumers are increasingly asking real estate firms for grace periods on down payments for mortgage loans, as they run out of cash because of weak stocks.

Some canceled home purchase contracts, while others canceled mortgage loans, according to China's largest property developer China Vanke, which has a strong foothold in Shenzhen. Local media reported that an official at China Vanke is concerned about massive numbers of cancellations in the future.
Given the degree of leverage used during the stock market ramp, if Chinese stocks continue to flounder or stagnate, then the next phase of transmission will likely be through the debt channel. As I previously wrote
Moreover, to satisfy debt liabilities, in the face of inadequate income, one of these assets will have to be unloaded.

If stock market selling has been prohibited, then selling will be on other assets. Considering that property has widely owned, then selling of properties should be the next logical option.

Thus, China’s dual bubble will implode!
Of course, I forgot include that since that about a third of the listed issues still remain suspended, coupled with the prohibitions on major investors to sell, then “liquidity” can also be a significant factor that could incite further downside price pressures on the property sector, as well as, on prices of other (non real estate household or business) assets.

Besides, the recent stock market boom supposedly puffed up China’s GDP. From Bloomberg:
China’s frenzied stock market boom -- which soured in the second half of June -- helped drive a surge in financial sector growth that underpinned the economy’s better-than-expected gross domestic product result.

Financial services surged 17.4 percent in the first six months from a year earlier, according to China’s statistics authority, as exchanges and brokerages registered surging revenue amid record trading volume. It was the stand out industry as real estate languished and agriculture grew at about half the overall economy’s pace of 7 percent.
As a side note, Western media have cast a leery eye on China’s statistical GDP.

But of course Chinese government will do everything to contain the damage. 

So here are the latest additions to the Xi Jinping Put.

Early this week, a Chinese government agency, China Securities Finance Corp, the country's state margin lender has subscribed to two mutual funds, where the former will also provide “ample liquidity” to support the stock buying program by the latter two. (Reuters)

Today, South China Morning Post editor George Chen tweeted that...


..commercial banks may be given brokerage licenses…


Also more credit money may have been extended by banks to one of the government agencies responsible for sustaining the unsustainable…



Oh by the way, the Bloomberg reports of the deepening addiction by the Chinese economy on debt. (bold mine)
While China's economic expansion beat analysts' forecasts in the second quarter, the country's debt levels increased at an even faster pace.

Outstanding loans for companies and households stood at a record 207 percent of gross domestic product at the end of June, up from 125 percent in 2008, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

China's stimulus, including interest rate and reserve-ratio cuts to shore up growth, threatens to delay the country's efforts to reduce its debt, posing risks to the financial stability of the world's second-largest economy. Nonperforming loans had already climbed by a record 140 billion yuan ($23 billion) in the first quarter as the expansion in gross domestic product slowed.
Hyman Minsky’s Ponzi financing dynamics --the dependence on the appreciation of value of assets as the main instrument to refinance debt--looks increasingly the economic-financial model adapted by the Chinese political authorities