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"There is a bubble growing. Investors should be concerned about the risks," said
Cheng Siwei, vice-chairman of China's National People's Congress in a January
31st interview with the Financial Times. "But in a bull market, people will
invest relatively irrationally. Every investor thinks they can win. But many
will end up losing. But that is their risk and their choice," Cheng warned.
In what might develop into the third biggest stock market bubble in history,
ranked alongside Japan's Nikkei-225 of 1986-89, and the Nasdaq's 1999-2000
bull run, the Shanghai Composite "A" share Index, restricted mainly to Chinese
nationals, has posted a 140% gain over the past 12-months, after soaring 46%
in the fourth-quarter of 2006 alone. And without deliberate market intervention,
the A-share market could inflate into a Nasdaq-like bubble.
How Beijing decides to deal with the Shanghai bubble, can have a great impact
on the outlook for the Chinese economy, global commodity markets, and exporters
in the region from Australia, Hong Kong, Japan, and Korea. Will Beijing try
to prick the bubble and set-off a steep correction, or carefully calibrate
a series of tightening measures to take some steam out of the market and simply
flatten it out?
Sometimes, markets can boomerang on central banks and torpedo the most carefully
designed strategies. Therefore, jawboning is usually the first act of official
intervention in the market place, because it's cost free and doesn't change
underlying market conditions. Siwei's remarks did trigger a 15% pullback from
January's peak, as traders locked in profits from sky-high valuations, figuring
that official warnings might turn into concrete steps to cool down the market.

Then on Feb 9th, the People's Bank of China (PBoC) tried to keep the market
off balance, by warning that it would use a number of tools to keep flush liquidity
conditions in check. "The central bank would use a combination of open market
operations and higher required reserves for banks in an effort to stave off
a credit-fuelled investment boom, and will make the yuan more flexible," it
said.
The Shanghai "A" share index fell 2.5% to an intra-day low of 2,541, within
minutes of the PBoC's threats, but then put in a reversal bottom, and closed
2.3% higher on the day. One week later, on February 15th, the "A" share index
jumped more than 3% to an all-time closing high of 2,993. A total of 828 stocks
rose while only 31 fell, and over 40 stocks in Shanghai rose by their 10% daily
limits.
On the smaller Shenzhen market, three new IPO's soared into orbit, suggesting
that the Chinese stampede into stocks hasn't run its course. Non-ferrous metals
maker Yunnan Luoping Zinc soared to 30.94 yuan, triple its IPO price of 10.08
yuan. Zhejiang Sunwave Communications jumped to 19.65 yuan, double its IPO
price of 9.15 yuan. And China Haisun Engineering 002116.SZ surged 178% to 19.16
yuan.

The PBoC put its verbal threats into action on February 16th, when it lifted
bank reserve ratios by half-percent to 10%, coming only six weeks after the
last hike, and at faster pace of tightening than expected. The hike in bank
reserve ratios should drain about 160 billion yuan ($20.7 billion) from the
Chinese money markets, and is less expensive to Beijing's budget, that issuing
T-bills or raising interest rates.
The reserve ratio hike, the fifth of its kind since last July, was made to
deal with "dynamic currency liquidity changes and to consolidate macro-economic
controls," said the PBoC in its latest statement. "Imbalanced international
payment generated by mounting trade surplus resulted increasing currency liquidity
and made another reserve ratio hike necessary," it added.
Shanghai Red-chip Rally fueled by Explosive Money Supply
The PBoC prints yuan in exchange for foreign currency flowing into the country,
and until Beijing abandons its crawling peg of the dollar-yuan exchange rate,
the M2 money supply growth rate will remain very high. Hot money will continue
to flow in Shanghai stocks, feeding the bubble frenzy. The fifth hike in bank
reserve ratios since June has only slowed the annual growth rate of China's
M2 money supply from an explosive 19.1% to a robust 15.9% rate last month.
So far, the PBoC's open market operations to drain liquidity have only put
a floor under Shanghai money market yields rather than pushing them up. The
PBoC plays a clever shell game, but is still pegging its 7-day repo rate in
a range of 1.50% to 2%, which encourages speculation in stocks. The PBoC bought
about $250 billion a year in 2005 and 2006, but only about 75% of such intervention
was sterilized.

Until the PBoC lifts interest rates high enough to discourage borrowing, it
won't be able to contain the robust growth of the money supply. Official data
revealed that yuan-denominated loans jumped 567.6 billion yuan ($74.7 billion)
in January, twice as much as last year's monthly average, to 23.1 trillion
yuan, up 16% from a year ago. Chinese banks arranged 3.18 trillion yuan in
new loans in all of 2006, exceeding the central bank's original target of 2.5
trillion yuan.
Therefore, an interest rate hike seems inevitable, as reserve ratio adjustments
and open market operations have failed in curbing liquidity and lending. China's
7-day repo rate has erupted to above 4% on two brief occasions in the past
3-months, linked to strong loan demand for stock market IPO's, but it mostly
trades below 2%, due to large to inflows of money from foreign investment and
exports.
Is the Shanghai stock market in a Bubble?
It's popular to call a market that triples in value within less than two years,
a bubble, but seen from a different angle, the spectacular resurrection of
Shanghai "A" share index might have corrected a grossly undervalued position,
into closer alignment with the global benchmark MSCI All-World Index, which
closed at all-time highs of 1500 last week, up 100% from its low in March 2003.
From 2001 thru 2005, China's economy and the Shanghai "A" share market spent
much of time moving in opposite directions. China was emerging as the world's
leading manufacturing power, its economy was growing at an frantic 9.5% pace,
and exports were tripling, yet the Shanghai A share index, lost half of its
value, sliding from a high of 2200 to below 1000 on June 6, 2005.
Daily turnover in Shanghai declined to an average of 8 billion yuan (US$1
billion) at the end of 2005, down more than 25% from the previous year. The
overhang of massive blocks of government-owned shares in the listed State-owned
enterprises was responsible for much of the decline. Known as "non-tradable
shares" (NTS), these share accounted for two-thirds of the $400 billion market
value of the companies listed on the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges.

The threat that Beijing would one day flood the market with NTS shares helped
send the mainland share indexes to six-year lows in 2005, although the Chinese
economy and exports were booming and other Asian and global markets were posting
big gains. On June 6, 2005 the Shanghai stock index dropped to 998.23 points.
Two days later, however, the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges jumped by
more than 8 percent. The Shanghai A share index closed at 1,115.58 points.
Beijing announced a new policy to reform the split structure of mainland shares,
which took into consideration the rights of holders of exchange traded shares,
who bear the risk of decline in share prices when state owned shares are dumped
on the market. Compensation is now paid to holders of floating shares when
NTS shares are put on the market, and determined at an extraordinary shareholders'
meeting, and are subject to prior approval by at least two-thirds of holders
of floating shares.
Compensation to floating shareholders was paid with bonus share and supplemented
with cash. By July 2006, more than 1,000 listed firms, or 80% of all listed
companies had adopted resolutions for the reform of nonnegotiable shares. The
ongoing reforms will mean the end of the split share structure, which crippled
China's stock markets in recent years, and eventually replaced with one class
of shares.

Thus, the black cloud hanging over the Shanghai and Shenzen markets was gradually
removed in 2006, and share values were unleashed from artificially low levels,
and quickly caught up with other inflated world markets. Gradual yuan appreciation
is attracting foreigners to Chinese stocks and encouraging local investors
to keep money onshore.
But what disturbs Chinese government officials are signs of a speculative
bubble in the stock market. Investors opened 50,000 retail brokerage accounts
a day in December and mutual funds raised a record 389 billion yuan ($50 billion)
last year, quadruple the 2005 amount. January turnover was five times early
2006 levels. Beijing is now ordering banks to prevent retail borrowing for
stock investments.
China's stock markets are dominated by retail investors, who hold 60% of the
total trading shares. By comparison, in Hong Kong, which lists a number of
mainland Chinese companies, institutional investors account for 70% of daily
transactions.
The Chinese stock market has now become the most expensive in Asia, trading
at 40 times 2005 earnings, compared to 16 in Hong Kong. The high P/E ratio
is supported by expectations of 25% earnings growth for 2006 and 2007, from
the possible new tax policy and new accounting standards starting from 2007.
However, if 2006 corporate results fail to meet strong expectations, Chinese
investors could easily dump inflated stocks, and send the overall market into
a tailspin.
Might Beijing tighten its grip on monetary policy too far in an effort to
contain high-flying Shanghai red-chips, even at the risk of triggering a deeper
slowdown in the Chinese economy? If history is any guide to the future, the
PBoC could control its economy, with a series of small rises instead of infrequent,
bigger changes. China should also continue with a gradualist approach to yuan
appreciation, and let the currency strengthen by about 5% a year. But would
that be fast enough to fend off a protectionist bent US Congress?
Déjà vu in Tokyo, a Stock market Bubble Emerges from Cheap
Yen
Is it possible for central banks to devalue their economies to prosperity?
Tokyo's financial warlords have the tonic for whatever ails the Japanese economy
- a cheap yen. The Japanese yen's real trade-weighted value hit a 21-year low
in January energizing its export-driven economy by making Japanese goods cheaper
than European and Korean goods, and propelling its exports to a record high
in 2006.
Tokyo has pursued a weak yen policy for the past few years by pressuring the
Bank of Japan to keep its overnight interest rate near zero percent, and forcing
the central bank to monetize about half of its budget deficit. The BoJ buys
1.2 trillion yen of government bonds each month, which if maintained in fiscal
2007, would equal 56% of the projected government budget deficit of 25.5 trillion
yen.
Super low interest rates have weakened the yen and helped to boost the local
stock indexes. Tokyo's broad equity market, the Topix, touched a 15-year high
and the Nikkei-225 is near its highest since May 2000. The two indexes have
risen more than 6% and 4% year-to-date, outperforming a number of emerging
markets, putting them on a par with high-flying European stock markets.

Foreign investors have pumped 9.1 trillion yen ($76.2 billion) into Japanese
stocks and equities over the past three months, and received a timely batch
of good news from Tokyo apparatchniks on Feb 16th. Japan's economy grew at
a 4.8% annualized clip in the last three months of 2006, the strongest pace
in 3-years, and far exceeding July-September's anemic 0.3% annualized growth.
Private-sector demand showed a 1.1% gain, rebounding from Q'3 when it dipped
1.1 percent.
It's a big stretch of the imagination to believe that Japan's economy has
suddenly vaulted into first place from last place, to become the locomotive
for the G-7 industrial nations. But after-all, these are the same government
apparatchniks that re-jigged Japan's consumer price index in August, shaving
two-thirds off the inflation statistics, to handcuff the BoJ from any further
rate hikes since July.
Tokyo boosted its stock market gauges thru manipulation of economic data and
abnormally low interest rates that weakened the yen to 21-year lows on a trade
weighted basis. But now, Tokyo's schemes are running into opposition from its
top trading partners, who are crying foul play, and demand the BoJ lift its
interest rates to levels that reflect its $4.7 trillion economy, the world's
second largest.

Since the BoJ dropped its overnight loan rate to zero percent in March 2001,
the Euro has advanced from around 105-yen to as high as 158.70-yen today. Aided
by the Euro's strength against the yen, Japanese exports to the European Union
nearly doubled to 1.06-trillion yen in December. But on the flip side, European
exports to Japan have waffled between stagnation and deterioration.
Last year, Japan racked up a 18.6 trillion yen ($160 billion) current account
surplus, while the Euro zone suffered a 16.8 billion Euro $21.5 billion) deficit.
Yet the power of the "yen carry" trade was able to swim against the tide of
these trade imbalances, by pushing the Euro 12% higher against the yen last
year.
While Japan is a small market for European exporters, Euro zone finance ministers
understand that its exporters will suffer in world markets because of cheap
competition from Japan in addition to cut-throat competition from China. With
the European Central Bank poised to lift its repo rate a quarter-point to 4.00%
in the months ahead, the Euro is bound to go higher against the yen, without
similar baby-step rate hikes by the BoJ, thus worsening the bi-lateral trade
imbalance.
European Central Bank chief Jean "Tricky" Trichet expressed his frustration
with Tokyo warlords and their cheap yen scheme on Feb 15th. "I will read again
what we just said in Essen, we reaffirm that exchange rates should reflect
economic fundamentals. We believe that the Japanese economy is on a sustainable
economic path and that exchange rates should reflect these economic fundamentals," Trichet
said after Japan released its stellar GDP report.

Central bankers and finance ministers from the Group of Seven industrial powers,
that account for 65% of global GDP, warned currency traders on February 10th,
that they could get burned by betting in one direction against the yen, with
Japan's economy was steaming ahead at a 4.8% clip. "One-way bets in the present
circumstances would not be, it seems to us, appropriate. We want the markets
to be aware of the risks they contain," ECB chief "Tricky" Trichet warned.
A week earlier, Chicago futures speculators had built-up record short positions
against the yen for a third straight week to 173,005 contracts from 164,860
contracts in the prior week, the CFTC said. The large short position left Chicago
speculators vulnerable to a minor shake-out from G-7 jawboning. The dollar
tumbled 2% to 119-yen, before rebounding to 120.85-yen a few days later. Jawboning
ran its course, but the fundamentals of the carry trade haven't changed.
Bank of Japan hikes loan rate to 0.50%, "Too Little, Too Late"
With the yen's trade weighted value against a basket of foreign currencies
sinking to a 21-year low, and Tokyo gold climbing to a 21-year high, the Bank
of Japan was backed into a corner, and voted 8-1 to hike its overnight loan
rate a quarter-point to 0.50%, its highest level in a decade. But the Euro
remains resilient, rebounding from a low of 156.25-yen, before climbing to
158.70-yen after the BoJ rate hike.
Japan's interest rates are still be far below the 5.25% fed funds rate in
the United States, and next month, the ECB is expected to hike its repo rate
to 3.75% while the Bank of England could boost its base rate 5.50%, keeping
the yen weak. By dumping the yen after the BoJ rate hike to 0.50%, traders
ruled that the central bank's action was "too little, too late" to reverse
its long term trend. The BoJ must face a thicket of political wrangling with
Tokyo warlords, before it can raise rates again.

Tokyo gold traders track the Euro's performance against the yen for direction,
and are not duped by Tokyo's phony claim that consumer prices are only 0.1%
higher from a year ago. As long as Tokyo pursues a cheap yen policy, Tokyo
gold stays on an uptrend. Would the BoJ continue to hike its interest rates
to combat the gold bugs and prevent a bubble from emerging in the Topix index?
"We will continue to adjust interest rate levels slowly," said BoJ chief
Toshihiko Fukui on Feb 21st. "If Japan were to achieve real economic growth
of around 2%, even amid very low inflation, a policy rate level of 0.50% is,
relatively very low. If expectations build up that very low rates will continue
for a long time regardless of economic conditions, banks and companies could
create excessively tilted positions in the stock, JGB or foreign exchange market," he
said.

Meanwhile, Japan's interest rates remain abnormally low and far out of alignment
with the rest of the world, and the "yen carry" trade lives on. An estimated
$330 billion is invested the yen carry trade worldwide. What can weaken the
Euro against the yen, if Tokyo warlords won't allow the BoJ to lift interest
rates to normal levels?
"We believe that a weak yen is a reflection of Japanese government policy," said
Rep's Charles Rangel, Barney Franks, John Dingell and Sander Levin. "We urge
the Japanese government to reverse their weak yen policy through concrete action.
Japan should be selling the massive reserves it has accumulated, thereby changing
the imbalances with the dollar and the Euro."
Tokyo could quietly sell some of its $874 billion of foreign exchange reserves,
mostly held in US dollars and Euros, on the open market to put a lid on the "yen
carry" trade. By selling dollars for yen, Tokyo could use the proceeds to pay
down some of the 35-trillion yen in short-term debt it acquired in 2003-04,
when it intervened on a grand scale, to support the dollar between 104 and
110-yen.
The Bank of England Confesses its Sins
It was the monetary equivalent of "shock and awe". The Bank of England (BoE)
delivered a nasty New Year surprise on January 11th, its third quarter-point
rise in interest rates in six months. Bank governor Mervyn King and his colleagues
had been expected to push up rates in February, but by ambushing the markets
with a January move to 5.25%, they may have hoped to make more of an impact.
"The margin of spare capacity in the economy appears limited. It is likely
that inflation will rise further above the target in the near term. The risks
to inflation now appear more to the upside," the BoE explained. But London's
FTSE-100 all but shrugged off the rate hike. It suffered a 30-point fall to
as low as 6,140 just after the announcement, but then closed the day 70 points
higher. After stabilizing above the 6,200 level, the Footsie-100 tacked on
another 5% gain to 6,450 last week.
It wasn't so long ago that even a hint of an interest rate hike sent traders
scurrying for the hills. So clearly, like everything else, the markets are
putting a positive spin on what would normally have been a nasty surprise.
The fact is that interest rates have been too low for too long, and few traders
take the BoE seriously. But bringing the UK economy back into balance will
unfortunately require a lot more discomfort than the slap delivered by Mervyn
King and his chums last month.

For the past four years, the BoE pursued the most radical monetary policy
among the Group of Seven central banks, pumping up its money supply to inflate
British home prices and the local stock markets. UK home prices rose 10.5%
last year, according to Nationwide, a UK home-loan provider, while the UK's
Footsie-100 index climbed above the 6400-level last week, to its highest in
six years.
But after the UK's M4 money supply expanded by 0.9% in January to stand 13%
higher from a year earlier, the Bank of England issued an unusual confession
of its past sins. "Investors are likely to take advantage of this ample liquidity
and the associated easy credit to purchase other assets, driving risk premiums
down and asset prices up," the BoE told parliament's Treasury Committee on
Feb 20th.
"In due course, those higher asset prices may be expected to feed through
into higher demand for goods and prices, putting upward pressure on the general
price level," the BoE concluded. Still, there are plenty of signs of complacency
in the Footsie-100 Index, with Sterling Libor futures for June delivery yielding
5.75%, and discounting the possibility of two more BoE rate hikes in the months
ahead.

Years of monetary abuse by the BoE are finally coming home to roost. In order
to get a handle on the explosive M4 money supply, the BoE would probably have
to hike its base rate by at least 75 basis points to 6%, far above the 5.25%
US fed funds rate, and the BoJ's 0.50% rate, which could put more upward pressure
on the British pound against the Japanese yen and US dollar.
But a stronger British pound could widen the UK's trade deficit with the rest
of the world, after it notched its largest annual trade gap on record last
year. Britain's goods trade gap grew to 7.1 billion pounds in December,cementing
to the largest annual trade deficit in 40-years, with the total trade gap of
55.8 billion pounds in 2006 from 44.6 billion in 2005. The goods balance registered
a record deficit of 84.3 billion pounds last year, from 68.8 billion in 2005.

The massive deterioration in the UK trade balance has been accompanied by
the British pound's rise to 235-yen, it's highest in 14-years. British manufacturers
will find it hard to compete with their Japanese competitors, who enjoy a cheap
yen, and super low interest rates at home. Yet if the BoE aims to tackle the
explosive M4 money supply by lifting its base rate, without similar rate hikes
by the Bank of Japan, it could wreck further damage on Britain's export sector.
How far would the BoE go to contain its money supply and prevent the emergence
of asset bubbles? "British interest rates will probably need to rise one more
time to keep inflation on track to hit its 2% target," the Bank of England
signaled on Feb 14th. Yet one week later, the BoE ratcheted up its hawkish
rhetoric by focusing on the explosive growth of M4. Lately, BoE chief King
has shown a penchant for the big surprise, outflanking his counterpart Jean "Tricky" Trichet,
so stay tuned.
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