China’s domestic demand firming?


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As I’ve said for a very long time, the last thing we need is a billion new consumers in the world competing for resources.

But by failing to unilaterally sustain domestic demand at a time when the rest of the world wants to export to us, we are causing exactly that to happen.

It’s still not too late as China remains leveraged to exports, but that will change if that channel remains closed.

China Manufacturing Index Rises on Stimulus Spending

by Li Yanping and Nipa Piboontanasawat

Mar 4 (Bloomberg) — A Chinese manufacturing index climbed for a third month, adding to evidence that a 4 trillion yuan ($585 billion) stimulus package is pushing the world’s third-biggest economy closer to a recovery.

The Purchasing Manager’s Index rose to a seasonally adjusted 49 in February from 45.3 in January, the China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said today in an e-mailed statement. A reading below 50 indicates a contraction.

Stocks rose after output and new orders expanded for the first time in five months. Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao may announce extra measures to reverse the nation’s economic slide at the annual meeting of the National People’s Congress starting in Beijing tomorrow.

“There are more noticeable signs that China’s economy is bottoming out,” said Zhang Liqun, an economist at the State Council Development and Research Center.

The Shanghai Composite Index rose 2.4 percent as of 10:47 a.m. local time.

While manufacturing contracted for a fifth straight month as the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression cut exports, the PMI is up from a record low of 38.8 in November.

Surging loans, growth in retail sales in January, and an increase in electricity output and consumption from the middle of last month are signs that government measures have shown “preliminary results,” according to Premier Wen.

Recovery ‘Very Likely’

A recovery in the first half is “very likely,” central bank Vice Governor Su Ning said yesterday.

Industrial-output growth in January and February may be higher than in November and December, Zhang forecast. Still, he cautioned that “seasonal factors” may have boosted the output and new-order indexes, which could fall again.

“The government’s stimulus investment has finally started to take effect,” said Xing Ziqiang, an economist at China International Capital Corp. in Beijing. “However, a recovery may be short-lived as export demand may get worse in the second half and the outlook for consumption is uncertain.”

The manufacturing index likely got a boost from factories resuming production after a Chinese Lunar New Year holiday in January, Xing said.

The output index jumped to 51.2 from 45.5 in January and the new-order index climbed to 50.4 from 45.

Export Orders

A measure of export orders rose to 43.4 from 33.7. The employment index rose to 46.1 from 43, the first increase in six months.

The premier may unveil a record 950 billion yuan budget deficit for this year to cover government spending on the economy and welfare, according to the China Business Journal and Wen Wei Po newspapers.

The slowdown has triggered speculation that the government will increase the stimulus package announced in November. An unidentified planning-agency official said today that more will be spent, Reuters reported.

Officials have indicated 8-10 trillion yuan of “government-sponsored investment” is possible, Stephen Green, Shanghai-based head of China research at Standard Chartered Bank Plc said yesterday.

A separate purchasing managers’ index, released on March 2 by CLSA Asia-Pacific Markets, showed manufacturing contracted for a seventh month in February.

“Manufacturing activities may only start to recover from March after more projects break ground in spring,” said Sun Mingchun, an economist at Nomura Holdings Ltd. in Hong Kong. “Economic growth may start to pick up from the second quarter onwards.”

Steel Glut

A glut of steel at ports in China, the world’s biggest maker of the alloy, shows mills were too quick to boost output on expectations the stimulus package unveiled in November would spur demand, according to Bank of Nova Scotia.

Steel stockpiles at Shanghai’s main port have jumped 44 percent this year to 2.1 million metric tons on Feb. 27, the highest since Bloomberg began compiling the data in June 2006.

While China’s economy is the only one of the world’s five biggest still expanding, the pace has slowed for six straight quarters. Growth in the three months through December was 6.8 percent from a year earlier, the smallest gain in seven years. That compares with a 13 percent expansion for all of 2007.

Tongling Nonferrous Metals Group Co., China’s second- biggest copper smelter by output, said Feb. 27 that profit tumbled last year after prices slumped in the fourth quarter.

Lenovo Group Ltd., the world’s fourth-biggest personal- computer maker, said Feb. 25 that it will cut 450 jobs in China to reduce costs after demand fell in the U.S. and China.

20 Million Jobs

China’s government said last month that 20 million migrant workers had lost their jobs because of the slowdown.

Jia Qinglin, a member of the Communist Party’s Politburo, urged a “vigorous employment policy” in his speech yesterday at the opening meeting of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference.

“China will pick up in the second half of this year as the stimulus package” begins working, Vivek Tulpule, the chief economist at London-based Rio Tinto Group, said yesterday in Canberra, Australia. Rio is the world’s third-biggest mining company.


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Hong Kong currency board reserves at risk


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Hong Kong’s currency board arrangement requires net exports to fund domestic net financial assets (‘money supply’) needs that other nations get ‘free’ from their deficit spending.

Net Hong Kong dollars can be had only by buying them from the monetary authority with USD, etc.

With exports markets collapsing, the direct result for Hong Kong is a deflation of costs of exports that doesn’t stop until exports resume at levels sufficient to fund the domestic need for net financial assets.

Bank deposits can not be insured by the monetary authority without threatening the solvency of the monetary authority as bank deposits necessarily exceed monetary authority reserves.

So, the move to guarantee deposits is only a temporary fix limited by the reserves of the monetary authority.

A currency board advocate would oppose insuring bank deposits and would let the currency board arrangement work itself out via the deflation route.

While theoretically correct, the deflation process is politically unacceptable as it drives real wages towards zero in a process that ends only when exports resume.

Hong Kong’s attachment to its currency board system that makes it fully dependent on net exports just to fund itself means it will continue to be hit particularly hard by the collapse in export markets.

Best I can tell the currency board arrangement was designed by England to force net exports from its colonies.

Bank of East Asia Posts First Loss in Four Decades

by Kelvin Wong

Feb 17 (Bloomberg) — Bank of East Asia Ltd., the Hong Kong lender that suffered a run on deposits in September, had its first loss in at least four decades after writing down the value of credit-market investments.

The HK$855 million ($110 million) deficit for the six months ended Dec. 31, derived by subtracting first-half earnings from full-year numbers reported by the company today, compares with profit of HK$2.26 billion a year earlier.

Chairman David Li said he’ll “fast track” measures to cut costs after expenses rose 23 percent last year and bad-loan charges more than doubled. Bank of East Asia’s shares tumbled 61 percent in the past year, and the September run on the lender spurred Hong Kong’s central bank to guarantee all bank deposits.


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Domestic demand picking up in China?


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China’s Economy Shows Signs of Recovery on Stimulus

by Kevin Hamlin

Feb 13 (Bloomberg) — “China looks set to be the first major economy to recover from the current global meltdown,” said Lu Ting, an economist with Merrill Lynch & Co. in Hong Kong. “China is the only economy in the world to see significant growth in credit to corporate and household sectors after September 2008, when the financial crisis worsened to a near collapse.”

State owned banks lending without all that much regard to credit quality functions like a fiscal transfer.

The government’s stimulus plan, announced in November, is beginning to gather momentum. Projects such as the building of 3.5 billion yuan of public houses in Shaanxi province and Shanghai began in December, while Shandong province started work on three new railway lines the same month.

China is committing about 1.2 trillion yuan of central government funds to the plan, which means banks’ willingness to fund projects is crucial. So far they are responding.

Housing construction is real investment.

Growth will accelerate from the current pace to 7.2 percent for the full year, according to Wang Qian, an economist with JPMorgan Chase & Co. in Hong Kong. Her calculation is that consumption will contribute 4.4 percentage points and investment 4 percentage points. The collapse in exports will slice off 1.2 percentage points.

Stimulus spending will contribute up to 3 percentage points of the total, she estimates.

Still low growth for China.

China’s imported iron ore has climbed 28 percent to 690 yuan per metric ton since the end of October. Hot-rolled steel has surged 41 percent from Nov. 13 to 4,027 yuan per metric ton. The Baltic Dry Index, a measure of shipping costs for commodities, has more than doubled since Jan. 28.

“You are starting to see the underlying demand of the Chinese economy,” BHP Billiton Ltd. Chief Executive Officer Marius Kloppers said Feb. 4. “We have seen in the steel business in China that the de-stocking cycle is almost complete and that means people are coming back into the market and buying.”

BHP Billiton is the world’s third-largest producer of iron ore. China is its largest consumer.

The post-Olympic lull is over?


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China News


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Highlights

China eases rules on forex advances

Domestics somehow caught short USD like the rest of the world?

More measures to spur consumption and foreign trade(Xinhua)

Help for both domestic consumption but exports as well- still pushing exports.

China to Raise Export Rebates, Use Yuan to Settle Some Trade

Pushing exports.

China Must Prevent Drastic Decline in Property Prices

China eases rules on forex advances

Exporters will be able to increase their advances on foreign-currency payments to 25 percent from the current 10 percent, the China Securities Journal reported on Wednesday.

The decision came in a circular issued by the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) on Tuesday night.

Importers’ quota for deferred foreign-currency payments also rose to 25 percent from 10 percent.

Analysts said the move would help small and medium-sized enterprises raise funds and improve their cash flow.

A banker who asked to remain unidentified told Xinhua the financial crisis has caused difficulties for many enterprises and this move would give them more operating capital.

The State Council, or China’s cabinet, urged a higher quota of foreign exchange advances to support trade during a standing committee conference on Dec 3.

SAFE official Cai Qiusheng was quoted by Tuesday’s Shanghai Securities News as saying that foreign exchange reserves were below their peak at $1.9 trillion as of the end of September.

According to the paper, enterprises that have good credit and haven’t violated any foreign-exchange regulations can qualify for the new limits.

To prevent “hot money” inflows through trade, SAFE, the Ministry of Commerce and the General Administration of Customs issued a joint circular on July 14 to step up supervision of cross-border capital flows.

The foreign exchange agency told administrative departments at all levels to step up inspection to prevent large-scale cash outflows.

More measures to spur consumption and foreign trade(Xinhua)

Updated: 2008-12-24 20:02BEIJING — More measures will be taken to stimulate consumption and support foreign trade, according to Wednesday’s executive meeting of China’s State Council, or the cabinet.

A document released after the meeting, chaired by Premier Wen Jiabao, said to stimulate domestic consumption, efforts should be made to improve the rural circulation network, increase varieties of commodities available in rural markets, improve urban community service-facilities, promote upgrade of durable goods, support development of circulation companies, stimulate consumption in holidays and through exhibitions, and step up supervision over product quality and safety.

In the fiscal year of 2009, the central government would increase its financial support for development of the rural circulation network and the service industry.

To sustain a stable growth in the country’s foreign trade, the central government would raise export tax rebates of high-tech and high-value-added products, adjust the forbidden and limited commodity catalogue of processing trade, encourage a transfer of processing trade from the eastern to the central and western region.

The government would also urge banks to improve services for foreign traders, increase imports of products needed, direct foreign funds to high-tech, energy-saving and modern service industries, simplify customs procedures and keep a close eye on the quality and safety of both imported and exported products.

China to Raise Export Rebates, Use Yuan to Settle Some Trade

Dec. 24 (Bloomberg) –China will raise export rebates on some machinery and electronics and let some trade with Hong Kong, Macau and Southeast Asia be settled in yuan to help boost faltering overseas sales, the Cabinet said.

China will also expand the use of government money to develop foreign trade, the State Council announced today.

The pilot program for settling trade in yuan will take place in Guangdong province, eastern China’s Yangtze River Delta region, and Guangxi and Yunnan provinces, the statement said.

China Must Prevent Drastic Decline in Property Prices

Dec. 24 (Bloomberg) — China must prevent a drastic decline in property prices, the State Council said in a report to the nation’s parliament today, state-run China National Radio said on its Web site.

The government will increase construction of housing for low-income families and control excessive gains in land prices, the report said.


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Re: Wall St. Journal OpEd piece by Christopher Wood


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(email exchange)

Thanks, this is yet another example of the WSJ publishing and thereby promoting authors with no understanding of monetary operations, which means the WSJ editors don’t have any either.

Feel free to send this along the the WSJ with your own introductory comments as well!

>   
>   This is a well written piece, by Mr. Wood of CLSA.
>   

I respectfully don’t agree.

>   
>   He has long maintained a bearish bias which comes through in the
>   article. The points he raises I believe are cogent and logical and ones I
>   have addressed as well over recent days and months.
>   

It doesn’t seem you understand monetary operations either.

>   
>   The end of the article discussing gold I found to be particularly of
>   interest.
>   

The Fed Is Out of Ammunition: A Discredited Dollar Is a Likely Outcome of the Current Crisis

By Christopher Wood

With an estimated $4 trillion in housing wealth and $9 trillion in stock-market wealth destroyed so far in the United States, there is little doubt that we are witnessing a classic debt-deflation bust at work, characterized by falling prices, frozen credit markets and plummeting asset values.

Yes, as well as fiscal automatic stabilizers working their way to the rescue as always.

Those who want to understand the mechanism might ponder Irving Fisher’s comment in 1933: When it comes to booms gone bust, “over-investment and over-speculation are often important; but they would have far less serious results were they not conducted with borrowed money.”

Irv was writing in the context of the gold standard of the time, and that did very well.

But it’s inapplicable with today’s non convertible currency and floating FX.

The growing risk of falling prices raises a challenge for one of the conventional wisdoms of the modern economics profession, and indeed modern central banking: the belief that it is impossible to have deflation in a fiat paper-money system.

You can easily have deflation if the deficit is allowed to get and remain too small.

Yet U.S. core CPI fell by 0.1% month-on-month in October, the first such decline since December 1982.

Pull back in commodity prices mainly, after a long run up, but yes, for now the moment the outlook is deflationary.

The origins of the modern conventional wisdom lies in the simplistic monetarist interpretation of the Great Depression popularized by Milton Friedman and taught to generations of economics students ever since. This argued that the Great Depression could have been avoided if the Federal Reserve had been more proactive about printing money.

On the gold standard this might have worked, though it would have meant the need to rapidly devalue the conversion rate which would have considered a government default. And this did happen.

Today it is inapplicable with non convertible currency and floating FX.

Yet the Japanese experience of the 1990s — persistent deflationary malaise unresponsive to near zero-percent interest rates — shows that it is not so easy to inflate one’s way out of a debt bust.

Doesn’t show that at all. Just shows the depth of their reluctance to use sufficient deficit spending to restore output and employment via increased domestic demand. They want to be export driven and have paid the price for a long time.

In the U.S., the Fed can only control the supply of money;

No, it only can control the term structure of risk free interest rates.

it cannot control the velocity of money or the rate at which it turns over.

True.

The dramatic collapse in securitization over the past 18 months reflects the continuing collapse in velocity as financial engineering goes into reverse.

By identity.

True, this will change one day. But for now, the issuance of nonagency mortgage-backed securities (MBS) in America has plunged by 98% year-on-year to a monthly average of $0.82 billion in the past four months, down from a peak of $136 billion in June 2006. There has been no new issuance in commercial MBS since July. This collapse in securitization is intensely deflationary.

Yes, though offset by increased government deficit spending, increased export revenues (for a while), and increased direct lending by banks to hold in portfolio (which is how it was all done in not so distant past cycles).

It is also true that under Chairman Ben Bernanke, the Federal Reserve balance sheet continues to expand at a frantic rate, as do commercial-bank total reserves in an effort to counter credit contraction.

In an effort to lower rates and thereby counter credit contraction.

Thus, the Federal Reserve banks’ total assets have increased by $1.28 trillion since early September to $2.19 trillion on Nov. 19. Likewise, the aggregate reserves of U.S. depository institutions have surged nearly 14-fold in the past two months to $653 billion in the week ended Nov. 19 from $47 billion at the beginning of September.

So??? Just entries on a government spread sheet with no further ramifications.

But the growth of excess reserves also reflects bank disinterest in lending the money.

So?

This suggests the banks only want to finance existing positions, such as where they have already made credit-line commitments.

Banking is necessarily pro cyclical- get over it!

Monetarist Bernanke and others blame Japan’s postbubble deflationary downturn on policy errors by the Bank of Japan.

Not me. It was the lack of sufficient deficit spending, as above.

But he and others are about to find out that monetary gymnastics are not as effective as they would like to think. So too will the Keynesians who view an aggressive fiscal policy as the best way to counter a deflationary slump. While public-works spending can blunt the downside and provide jobs, it remains the case that FDR’s New Deal did not end the Great Depression.

Mixing metaphors. The New Deal’s deficit spending was far too small to restore output and employment.

There are no easy policy answers to the current credit convulsion and intensifying financial panic — not as long as politicians and central bankers are determined not to let financial institutions fail, and so prevent the market from correcting the excesses.

Yes there is an easy answer- make a sufficiently large fiscal adjustment.

This is why this writer has a certain sympathy for Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, even if nobody else seems to. The securitized nature of this credit cycle, combined with the nightmare levels of leverage embedded in the products dreamt up by the quantitative geeks, means this is a horribly difficult issue to solve.

Couldn’t be easier. Start with a payroll tax holiday where the treasury makes all FICA payments for employees and employers.

The spread around a few hundred billion in revenue sharing to the states for operations and infrastructure.

Crisis over.

Virtually everybody blames Mr. Paulson for the decision to let Lehman Brothers go. But this decision should be applauded for precipitating the deflationary unwind that was going to come sooner or later anyway.

The Japanese precedent also remains important because the efforts in the West to prevent the market from disciplining excesses will have, as in Japan, unintended, adverse, long-term consequences.

Doesn’t even mention output and employment.

In Japan, one legacy is the continuing existence of a large number of uncompetitive companies which have caused profit margins to fall for their more productive competitors.

Who cares?

Another consequence has been a long-term deflationary malaise, which has kept yen interest rates ridiculously low to the detriment of savers.

Interesting bit of logic!

Meanwhile, the most recent Fed survey of loan officers provides hard evidence of the intensifying credit crunch in America. A net 83.6% of domestic banks reported having tightened lending standards on commercial and industrial loans to large and midsize firms over the past three months, the highest since the data series began in 1990. A net 47% of banks also indicated that they had become less willing to make consumer installment loans over the past three months.

Banks are necessarily pro cyclical- get over it!

Consumers are also more reluctant to borrow. A net 48% of respondents indicated that they had experienced weaker demand for consumer loans of all types over the past quarter, up from 30% in the July survey. This hints at the Japanese outcome of “pushing on a string” — i.e., the banks can make credit available but cannot force people to borrow.

Good! Lower taxes for any given amount of government spending. Bring it on! Now!

The Fed Is Out of Ammunition

With a fed-funds rate at 0.5% or lower in coming months, it is fast becoming time for investors to read again Mr. Bernanke’s speeches in 2002 and 2003 on the subject of combating falling inflation. In these speeches, the Fed chairman outlined how policy could evolve once short-term interest rates get to near zero. A key focus in such an environment will be to bring down long-term interest rates, which help determine the rates of mortgages and other debt instruments. This would likely involve in practice the Fed buying longer-term Treasury bonds.

Yes. And not do a lot for output and employment until fiscal adjustment takes hold.

And do we really want to encourage an increase in private leverage? Been there done that, right?

It would seem fair to conclude that a Bernanke-led Fed will follow through on such policies in coming months if, as is likely, the U.S. economy continues to suffer and if inflationary pressures continue to collapse. Such actions will not solve the problem but will merely compound it, by adding debt to debt.

I think he’s got it right there.

In this respect the present crisis in the West will ultimately end up discrediting mechanical monetarism —

Hope so. It flies in the face of theory and reality.

and with it the fiat paper-money system in general — as the U.S. paper-dollar standard, in place since Richard Nixon broke the link with gold in 1971, finally disintegrates.

Why??? Deflation as above? Deflation is the increase in value of a currency. Disintegration is via inflation???

The catalyst will be foreign creditors fleeing the dollar for gold. That will in turn lead to global recognition of the need for a vastly more disciplined global financial system and one where gold, the “barbarous relic” scorned by most modern central bankers, may well play a part.

Fleeing the dollar for gold means inflation. He’s been preaching deflation for this whole piece. Can’t have it both ways.

Mr. Wood, equity strategist for CLSA Ltd. in Hong Kong, is the author of “The Bubble Economy: Japan’s Extraordinary Speculative Boom of the ’80s and the Dramatic Bust of the ’90s” (Solstice Publishing, 2005).

Aha! Hong Kong has a fixed FX policy, much like a gold standard. He’s applying fixed FX analysis to the us which has a floating FX policy.

The WSJ should have told him this and rejected this op-ed piece.


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Re: Obama’s Yuan Calls- NOT GOOD


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>   
>   On Thu, Nov 6, 2008 at 7:09 AM, Michael wrote:
>   

Obama’s Yuan Calls May Put U.S. on Collision Course With China

by Judy Chen

Nov. 6 (Bloomberg) — Barack Obama’s calls for changes in China’s yuan policy may put the president-elect on a collision course with the U.S.’s second-largest trade partner, which is holding the currency stable to support its export-led economy.

Obama said China must stop manipulating the currency in a letter to the National Council of Textile Organizations released on Oct. 24.

This is counter productive for the US standard of living.

Obama has yet to discover imports are real benefits and exports real costs.

The People’s Bank of China has kept the yuan almost unchanged against the dollar since mid-July as it shifts focus from countering inflation to sustaining growth amid a global credit crisis. The Foreign Ministry said last week the U.S. shouldn’t blame its trade deficit on exchange rates.

“Obama may exert more pressure on China’s foreign-exchange policy to boost U.S. exports and curb unemployment, but China will first consider its own economic fundamentals,” said Ha Jiming, Hong Kong-based chief economist at China International Capital Corp., the nation’s first Sino-foreign investment bank.

Hopefully, Obama will see the light and it will instead be a case of ‘when the facts change I change’.

Policy of Stability
Paulson said on Oct. 21 that he is “pleased” that China’s currency has appreciated more than 20 percent since a peg against the dollar was abandoned in July 2005.

Paulson either has it backwards, or he’s being subversive.

“It will be emphasized in the next Strategic Economic Dialogue that it is more important than ever that China should rely more on domestic demand rather than its trade surplus to sustain economic growth,” said Nicholas Lardy, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington.

Same- ignorant or subversive are the only possibilities.

“Currency manipulation has been a quite specific implication in law, and no other president has ever used that term,” said Straszheim. If Obama doesn’t take actions following the charge that China is manipulating the yuan, “he will be regarded as another old type politician who promises one thing during the campaign and does another in office,” he added.


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Hong Kong and deflation


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The Hong Kong currency board arrangement means net Hong Kong financial assets (AKA money supply) can grow only via net exports (and/or external debt).

This means market forces work to sustain net exports ‘at any cost’.

The usual result is a deflationary mess, until ‘competitiveness’ is achieved to the extent net exports are sufficient for funding the domestic desire for net financial assets.

See ‘Exchange rate policy and full employment’ at www.mosler.org for more details of this process.

Yes, the monetary authority can intervene and give up its reserves to a ‘savings hungry’ domestic market, but at the risk of quickly running out of reserves needed to facilitate convertibility of Hong Kong dollars on demand.

Best I can tell, currency boards were originally instruments of colonial exploitation, designed to force net exports to the mother country.

Today, that’s an enormous price to pay for ‘currency stability’.

Hong Kong Home Sales Post Biggest Drop Since 1999

By Kelvin Wong and Nipa Piboontanasawat

Nov. 4 (Bloomberg) — Hong Kong’s home sales posted the biggest drop by volume in almost nine years, as local lenders tightened mortgage lending amid a slowdown in the economy.

The number of residential units that changed hands in the city last month slumped 58.1 percent to 4,719, according to a Land Registry statement today. That’s the largest drop since November 1999 and the fourth straight month of declines.

By value, sales of residential units dropped 63 percent from a year earlier to HK$16.3 billion ($2.1 billion).

The economic outlook, coupled with declines in the Hong Kong stock market, have curbed demand for real estate and led potential buyers to expect cheaper prices. The Hang Seng Index has dropped 48 percent this year.

Home prices on Hong Kong island, which houses some of the world’s most expensive apartments, had their biggest weekly drop in the week ended Oct. 19, according to figures compiled by Centaline Property Agency Ltd.


“We’ll probably see even worse figures for the following month,” said Wong Leung-sing, an associate director of research at Centaline. “Then things should improve slightly as many
people may try to buy at low prices.”

Hong Kong’s bank lending rose 13 percent in September, the slowest pace in 13 months, and almost half the 24 percent increase in August.


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2008-10-07 China Daily News Highlights


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Highlights

China to Slash Rates, Spend to Fuel Growth, Morgan Stanley Says

China to Slash Rates, Spend to Fuel Growth, Morgan Stanley Says

2008-10-07 03:11:05.320 GMT
By Kevin Hamlin

Oct. 7 (Bloomberg) — China will cut interest rates as many as five times by the end of 2009 and will step up spending to limit the effect of the “global financial tsunami” on the nation’s economic growth, Morgan Stanley said.

The central bank will cut borrowing costs by 27 basis points each time, reducing the one-year lending rate to as low as 5.85 percent next year from 7.2 percent now, Qing Wang, a Hong Kong- based economist, said in a note today. Government spending may add as much as 3 percentage points to economic growth, he said.

Global growth is slowing after the collapse and bailout of banks in the U.S. and Europe propelled the cost of borrowing in money markets to the highest ever. Slowing economic growth in Europe and the U.S., which account for 40 percent of China’s total exports, will translate into lackluster exports, falling corporate profit and easing inflation, Wang said.

“A substantial improvement in the inflation outlook should help ease the lingering concerns about the inflationary consequences of an expansionary macroeconomic policy,” Wang said. “We expect a decisive policy shift toward boosting growth in the coming weeks and months.”

Wang cut his forecast for inflation next year to 2.5 percent from 4 percent. He lowered his estimate for economic growth in China next year to 8.2 percent from 9 percent and lowered his forecast for this year to 9.8 percent from 10 percent.

More spending and tax cuts would contribute between 1 and 3 percentage points to growth, Wang said.

China can “afford to run multiyear fiscal deficits without running into debt sustainability problems,” because it has public debt of only 30 percent of gross domestic product, Wang said.

Property Market Risk

The main risk to his forecast was a “meltdown” in the property sector across the country, “which would lead to a massive collapse in real-estate investment, Wang said.

The consequences would be so serious that even pro-growth policies wouldn’t prevent the economy growing less than 7 percent, he said.

The probability of this happening is less than 25 percent, Wang estimated, contradicting a Sept. 12 report by Jerry Lou, a Morgan Stanley strategist, who said the “likelihood of a property sector meltdown is high.”

China thus has ample room for monetary and fiscal initiatives to help offset the impact of slower global growth, he added. This would entail “unwinding” tightening measures introduced since last year, including “the 162 basis points interest rate hike, the 850 basis points hike of the required reserves ratio, and stringent administration bank lending quotas,” he said.

The People’s Bank of China cut the one-year lending rate to 7.20 percent from 7.47 percent, the first reduction in six years, last month.

Morgan Stanley forecasts that the U.S. economy will contract by 0.2 percent next year and that growth in the Europe will reach only 0.2 percent. It expects a 1 percent contraction in Japan.


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Bloomberg: Bank run in HK


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This happens all the time with fixed exchange rates and currency boards.

The only way for banks to get ‘real’ (convertible) $HK for their depositors is to buy them from the monetary authority with $US. That usually means banks have to borrow $US to meet withdrawals of $HK, and most banks won’t have $US lines of more than a relatively small percentage of their deposits. With a strict currency board arrangement the monetary authority isn’t allowed to lend (convertible) $HK or its $US reserves, though in HK they sometimes do. But even those reserves are finite, and way smaller than total bank liabilities.

Historically the result has been a deflationary mess, with GDP dropping double digits, high unemployment, bank failures, and collapsing property and other asset prices.

At the macro level, the only way the island can get the $US it needs to buy $HK from the monetary authority is to net export (or sell assets for $US). The value of the $HK can’t go down (the monetary authority has more than enough $US reserves to buy back all the real $HK it’s sold), so the way costs of production go down is via local deflation due to the collapse in aggregate demand until prices are low enough to drive the needed exports.

Hopefully nothing comes of it this time around. But it hasn’t been that kind of year…

Hong Kong Savers Fret as Bank East Asia Fights Rumors

by Kelvin Wong and Theresa Tang

Sept. 25 (Bloomberg) For the first time since the Asian financial crisis more than a decade ago, Hong Kong has faced a bank run.

Hundreds of depositors lined up at the city’s third-largest lender Bank of East Asia Ltd. yesterday as the bank hit out at “malicious rumors,” and Chairman David Li rushed back to Hong Kong from the U.S. to reassure clients and investors. The city’s central bank jumped to BEA’s defense and police said they’re investigating phone text messages questioning its health.


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Bloomberg: China Halts Interbank Lending With US, China Morning Post…


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This may actually help bring LIBOR down as the US banks don’t need USD funds from China while the rest of the world does.

China Halts Interbank Lending With U.S., Morning Post Says

By Joost Akkermans

Sept. 25 (Bloomberg) China’s banking regulator told domestic banks to halt lending to U.S. financial institutions in the interbank market to help prevent possible losses, the South China Morning Post reported, citing people it didn’t identify.

The ban imposed by the China Banking Regulatory Commission is for interbank lending of all currencies to U.S. banks, though not to banks from other countries, the English-language Hong Kong newspaper said today.

The decree came after the regulator obtained data about the risk of local banks to bonds issued by Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., according to the newspaper. The CBRC wasn’t available for comment yesterday, the Morning Post reported.


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