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In This Issue
Casino Royale, China and the ghosts of 1929
POP, Goes the Bubble?
Casino Royale, China and the ghosts of 1929
No matter where you turn for your financial news, one item regularly makes
it way to the front page. It is the amazing bull markets in Shanghai, and Shenzhen,
China. These phenomenal bull runs reflect a number of situations emerging from
China. But make no mistake, to glean important economic signals from the price
action and say it reflects the economy of China is not one of them. They are
casinos, pure and simple. Up until recently they could have crashed and the
Chinese economy would not have sneezed, two years ago stock brokers in China,
were viewed as they were in America in 1982, their names were mud as anything
you gave them quickly turned into mud. My wife is currently visiting China,
as she should as she is CHINESE. She just left Shenzhen and is now in Chang
Chun, with family visits in Beijing and Shanghai still on the schedule.
The stories I am getting are hair curling to say the least. This is a story
of endless liquidity forming a bubble that if it happened six months ago would
have had very little global significance as the amount of money involved was
puny, but the domestic liquidity in the Chinese economy has pushed this to
far, far outstripping the fundamentals and huge money is now out upon statistically
unbelievable wings. This is a story about madness of crowds and financial speculation,
and reckless confidence in the future after 15 years of ever increasing wealth.
The Chinese are tremendously hard working, increasingly smart and very studious,
but first and foremost they love to take risks and gamble. But gambling in
China is illegal. To a Chinese citizen "to get rich is glorious", they love
to make money and are willing to work hard for it. Of course this is also the
definition of "Entrepreneurs", those dynamic personalities which also allows
capitalism and wealth creation to thrive through creative destruction, wealth
builders of the first order creating new and exciting new businesses and services
that improve everybody's life they touch, through the improved means of doing
things whatever they may be. This is why they are going to be an unstoppable
economic force, now and into the future.
Anyone who closely follows financial markets knows these same domestic Chinese
stock markets were flat on their backs less than two short years ago, having
experienced grinding brutal bear markets for years before the bottoms that
emerged at that time. Conversely China's economy has grown at a compounded
annual rate of almost 10 % for over a decade. So obviously, these stock markets
didn't reflect the fundamentals economy of China up to that point. They understated
what the economic situation was then, and it massively overstates it now.
Half the Companies listed are SOE's (STATE OWNED ENTERPRISES), their business
models and products are for the most part very inferior to their competitors,
but improving as they are forced to compete against cutting edge factories
springing up right next to them. Most are bankrupt and survive based on government
subsidies: their books are opaque or non existent testaments to the failings
of the workers paradises that is called socialism and communism. The Chinese
government is constantly on the prowl for partners to come and remake these
dinosaurs into effective businesses. The pressure of the market is quickly
issuing a wake up call to the ineffective managers now in charge of these enterprises.
They are not closed as the unemployment and unrest it would cause would shatter
the delicate social peace that is emerging China.
The Chinese are undergoing an industrialization process no different then
America did at the turn of the last century, when we went from an agricultural
society to an industrialized one. People moved from the farms to the cities,
quit farming and learned to do other things then farm for a subsistence type
of living. Huge productivity and wealth creation in the best tradition of Austrian
economics, huge savings added to creation of plant and equipment equals a virtuous
cycle of wealth creation, middle classes are born in this fertile recipe for
growth. This history for the United States is repeating now in China. But the
size and dimensions of the problem is far different, in that the US was sparsely
populated and China is overflowing with population. There are hundreds of millions
of people leaving the fields and moving to places with more prospects for personal
improvement.
Just as the Wild Wild west was dying in the United States at that time, it
is dying now in China. It takes generations and decades of time for this to
transpire. But if you must characterize it at this time, It would be the "WILD,
WILD EAST", there are very few laws or government officials which can be relied
on. Just as in America during industrialization. The rule of law emerged over
a period of decades then and it is doing so now in China. The Robber barons
of that time are plainly seen in today's Chinese society, at every level, municipal,
provincial and nationally. Politically connected insiders and business men
were almost above the law then and they are above it in many ways in today's
China. The two way street of powerful business interests supporting politicians
for favors is one written over thousands of years, it takes many forms.
In China to get ahead is as much a function of good business practices and
products as it is who you know and pay. To operate in China you must know the
proper government officials related to what you wish to accomplish, and you
must wine and dine them properly and offer "GIFTS" of appreciation to get your
objectives accomplished. These people have rooms full of gifts they have never
opened, they have everything they could possibly want, when their cars go down
the street you get out of the way and let them pass or risk "HAVING PROBLEMS".
After this kabuki dance they snap their fingers, and you are immediately more
successful, as you have been blessed. Regulatory burdens are reduced. At that
point you are almost ABOVE THE LAW, unless you cross the path of another minor
mandarin you may have forgotten to acknowledge. The only time you really can
get in trouble is when you cross the path of someone who has paid off a higher
placed benefactor. Business people in China are in a constant game of cat and
mouse, with the government as cat and the businessman as mouse. Trying to hide
some of the cheese from the government.
It is this way all across China, and extends all the way to Beijing. Recently
there was a pension fund scandal and convulsion in the Communist party leadership
in Shanghai: this was nothing more than Beijing bringing a wayward group of
lower level Mandarins back to the reality of who's really in charge, demonstrating
to others who were contemplating it something to think about. Discipline in
action.
So in China there are two ways to get rich, be an entrepreneur, pay the proper
tolls to "RENT SEEKING" officials or to gamble as in a casino. And as much
as the Chinese growth miracle is set to continue, a minor obstacle is emerging
in this growth story.
A mania is in full swing in the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock markets and the
public is diving headfirst into these skyrocketing markets. Up until about
6 to 12 months ago these markets could have collapsed they would not have represented
a problem for the Chinese economy. The public in China was barely involved,
a total loss could have been sustained and it would have only represented "2
WEEKS" of Chinas trade Surplus. But now it has morphed into something much,
much bigger!
The ordinary Chinese citizen is seeking wealth in the seemingly sure thing
that these markets appear to be. The market is up over 300% in less than two
years. Take a look at this chart:

I still remember visiting Hong Kong in December 2005 to be with my future
wife and discussing with her the buy signals I was seeing emerge in domestic
Chinese bourses. The pervasive bearishness and divergences emerging in technical
studies were unmistakable. Just as in the United States in 1982, the death
of equities talk in China was widespread, at the same time their economy was
roaring along at 10% annual growth and the US trade deficit was exploding as
China was the becoming the supplier to middle America, ala WAL-MART.
The "dumbest among us", are always late to the party and are always the greatest
losers in any bubble, they are emerging in this market as well. The weakest
and least prepared hands arrive last setting the table for the crash to destroy
the most amount of wealth possible. A "Finger of Instability" (see Tedbits
archives for the series at www.TraderView.com)
caused as asset classes get ahead of the fundamentals as fire hoses of hot
money push them to impossible bubble heights. These investors do not understand
risk, liquidity, or the lack of it, or risk control. Just as in NASDAQ 2000,
Housing 2005-2006, the lumpen investors are coming out of the woodwork in China
and the numbers are astonishing.
My wife was at the bank in Shenzhen last week, in the "VIP room" at the bank
lines of people were lined up to withdraw their savings to rush headlong into
these speculative frenzies in Shenzhen and Shanghai. A woman next to her was
withdrawing 2 million Yuan (about $250,000 dollars, a fortune in China), and
taking it in a shopping bag to her new brokerage account. Every one there had
their own story, but they all had one common theme, BUY STOCKS! The regular
bank lobbies were mob scenes of people rushing to withdraw their savings. Every
bank had long lines. They are selling their homes, hocking the jewelry, anything
to get liquid. Rich and poor alike are withdrawing their money and throwing
it at the market. And throwing it is the right metaphor to use: Taxi cab drivers,
shoeshine boys, restaurant employees, public employees, you name it, they WANT
IN. They are selling their homes, jewelry, or whatever to invest.
(Authors note; looking for assistance in creating portfolio diversification
that can survive and thrive in what I am outlining? In fingers of instability?
If so contact me through www.TraderView.com.
Subscriptions to this newsletter are also free at this address; send it to
a friend, Thank you)
The Chinese are prodigious savers (typically 50% of their incomes are saved),
knowing from close personal experience that the government is good for nothing,
and if they fail to provide for themselves there will be no one who will. But
outside the stock brokerages bicycles are piled up, (my wife commented on the
poor condition of them, a sure tip off they are poor) these poor, unqualified
persons are all trying to get rich quick, and just like what happened in the
NASDAQ and housing frenzies in the US. People bemoan the slow emergence of
the Chinese consumer, well this emergence has undergone a detour, as instead
of consumers they are emerging as the Chinese investor instead. Rushing like
lemmings headed over a cliff, a waterfall of investors hurling themselves over
the edge. Mass investors hysteria is a worldwide phenomenon seen many times
in history, whether it be the original tulip mania, south seas bubbles right
up to today's economies. It is front and center in China today.
Chinese investors have been opening accounts at the rate of 1 million a week
since the beginning of the year: it is multiplying on a weekly basis. Bank
accounts offer negative returns after inflation, wages have gone up fourfold
in the last 15 years. The Chinese love to gamble, always have and always will.
Go to Macau or any region where it is legal, it makes Las Vegas look like a
picnic. With the Mandarins of the party in charge as outlined above it is very
tough to really get ahead through private enterprise as the officials just
bully you until you pay the "RENT". Robbing the businessman of the wealth created.
For the man on the street the stock markets represent the one place the can
go an escape the long arm of the communist party officials. It is why foreign
investment in china will always be at risk until these corrupt officials are
reigned in, as the inability to plan for the future is impossible as the law
becomes whatever the local, regional or national mandarin says it is. It is
why only the strongest investors in the world can venture into China (Citigroup,
Goldman Sachs, IBM, Dell, Morgan Stanley, INTEL, etc.) at this time, small
and intermediate sized investors really need to avoid it at this time as they
don't have laws to protect them or the money to pay the tolls necessary to
be secure.
Capitalism and markets really work, China is a great example of the dynamism
of entrepreneurs and creative destruction, but when the inevitable crack ups
occur as markets sometimes get over exuberant, politicians pin the tail on
the donkey to enhance their power, claiming that the public needs to be "PROTECTED",
and this is shaping up to be a prime example of this historically reoccurring
theme. The Chinese government has issued warning after warning, increased reserve
requirements, and jawboned the public repeatedly, but the siren song of getting
rich "QUICK" is too compelling. The Chinese public can't hear anything at this
point but hurry up and get in before you miss the opportunity, and of course
when you hear this it is actually time to "WATCH OUT"!
The herds of investors are stampeding into the market, and stampeding is the
right word for what is unfolding. Two weeks ago I would not have written this
missive, believing that while the overvaluations were severe, the sums involved
were puny, six to twelve months ago a good day on the Chinese stock markets
was 1 billion dollars worth of stock changed hands. This week a report
was released illustrating that now the amount of domestic Chinese stock business
eclipses all the volume in all the stock markets in the Asian region COMBINED.
Yes, the amount of business is now more than the developed markets of Japan,
Hong Kong, Australia, South Korea, Singapore, Thailand and Taiwan. Well here
is a frightening statistic for you, these usually conservative savers have
WITHDRAWN 1.674 TRILLION Yuan in April alone, and translated into dollars that
is 219 BILLION DOLLARS. Yesterdays volume was over 46 billion dollars. This
is BIG money even in the US.
This illustrates how this was an anecdote six months ago as a days worth of
business was 15 minutes volume on the New York Stock Exchange, now the amount
of money is equal to it. Not a problem if this occurred then with puny amounts
of money at stake, the importance is directly linked to the size of the money
involved, now its big big money with its you know what in the wind. The
owners of this big money are the little guys, inexperienced investors with
varying sizes of accounts, ranging from a few hundred dollars all the way to
millions of dollars, multiplied by hundreds of millions of Chinese citizens.
It cumulatively is a great deal of money.
Think of the exponential growth of volume it takes to go from the place we
were 6 to 12 months ago to where we are today. It is a staggering mental exercise.
Another statistical example of the probabilities of a bad thing happening to
this NOW BIG MONEY, can be garnered from previous examples of markets overextensions:
lets take an excerpt from a recent update of Peter Eliade's (www.stockmarketcycles.com).
"But we should point out that the Shanghai market is currently approximately
95% above its 200 day moving average. To put that in perspective, in the history
of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, including wild speculative binges such
as 1929, we are unable to find a market high that was more than approximately
55% above its 200 day moving average. Perhaps the amazing upward explosion
in the Nasdaq leading to the March 2000 peak comes to mind as a similar market
bubble to be compared with Shanghai. That market also stopped its runaway phase
right around the 55% mark above its 200 day moving average.
In our experience, these types of bubbly blow off market phases are more conducive
to subsequent crashes than they are to subsequent economic booms. It is difficult
to conceive that a market almost 100% above its 200 day moving average will
end up in any way but a negative fashion. Only time will tell." Thanks Peter...
WOW, It is 100's of millions of ordinary Chinese citizens turning en masse
to this very small market (in terms of market capitalization), it is like
population of New York City trying to squeeze into a Volkswagen. It
is what we will see in the gold market someday, when people want in at any
cost, when the dollar really does break down and people really want out at
any cost. They have stretched the overextension to almost TWICE what
were previous bubble crashes as detailed by Peter. They want this market in
at any cost....
(Authors note; looking for assistance in creating portfolio diversification
that can survive and thrive in what I am outlining? In fingers of instability?
If so contact me through www.TraderView.com.
Subscriptions to this newsletter are also free at this address; send it to
a friend, Thank you)
Another big cause of this overextension in Stock market prices is the lack
of modern trading rules in China, populous politicians globally wish to outlaw
short selling, well we can see here what could be expected if this practice
were abolished, short selling is not really allowed in China. This is part
of the modernizing of markets and financial systems Treasury secretary Hank
Paulson speaks of frequently. Limitless liquidity, good fundamentals, no negative
sentiment allowed to enter the market through short selling, very small market
floats, equals the types of statistics peter outlines. Rocket shots. The cost
will be enormous as these inexperienced INVESTORS have pushed the window TOO
FAR and the BIG money is out on the statistical wings, no mans land. The farther
away from the mean and moving average the bigger the money is. OUCH. The only
redeeming aspect of this big money is that the Chinese do not allow leverage
or margin trading, so these stock purchases are fully funded and are not subject
to forced liquidation by margin clerks during sharp pullbacks.
Even though these companies that are listed are enjoying excellent fundamentals
and increasing success, their prices are not reflective of current conditions,
they reflect unbounded optimism and greed ala NASDAQ 2000 and the current housing
debacle, but much more so. Bubbles are created when fundamentals are excellent,
but liquidity is too abundant. So liquidity is doing what it always does, getting
way ahead of itself. But most of this liquidity is coming out of the savings
of domestic Chinese citizens.
Who are flush with cash after the prodigious wage gains they have garnered
over the last 15 years and the savings they have accumulated. For the most
part Chinese stocks cannot be bought by foreigners (except in Hong Kong), and
Chinese investors cannot buy stocks outside their own country. The most vulnerable
and unqualified investors are buying the inflated stocks at the highs, buying
stock prices that can't be supported by even the most robust business fundamentals.
It is a recipe for a crash, which will suck in the least prepared and weakest
hands who will take the full brunt of the losses. MAXIMUM wealth destruction,
by the people who can least afford it.
To compound the problem the Chinese financial and banking system make the
federal reserve and treasury department of 1929 look like a Ferrari, it is
fragmented and dysfunctional, if the Chinese government wished to provide liquidity
they really don't have a transmission mechanism. When I first showed my wife
my check book and how it worked she was incredulous, people in china do not
have modern banking. NO one would take a check even if they did, the chance
of bouncing would be almost assured. The reason Chinese citizens are at the
banks withdrawing the cash is to tote it down the street to the brokerage.
It is the only way to get it there, wires and checks are not a regular means
of facilitating commerce.
The banks are not enmeshed in a seamless electronic interconnected network
or a network of any kind as we know it. Remember back in the old days of the
United States when you waited weeks for a check to clear, because it took weeks
for it to travel through the system to the bank it was drawn on then back to
your bank. China doesn't even have this is place. The authorities are not prepared
to conduct rescue operations, as I mentioned above this is what US Treasury
Secretary Hank Paulson is talking about when he talks of modernizing the financial
and banking systems.
We are about to see the birth of the Chinese Plunge protection team, otherwise
it will turn into an utter and complete disaster, the oceans of shares that
the Chinese government owns in the SOE's must be carefully released to satiate
the demand that is this tsunami of cash and investors. And what a balancing
act the authorities are faced with, curb the rocket shot and stabilize it at
current levels. Or the poorest people in China will be the victims of their
own stupidity, and the social unrest caused by the loss of "EVERTHING" by these
investors will cause a political upheaval of epic proportions. Hundreds of
billions of dollars of domestic savings disappearing in the inevitable crash
that must occur.
This mornings Financial Times is reporting that the Chinese financial authorities
are thinking about pricking the bubble. Think of the lives this official holds
in his hands, and the ones which will be destroyed, including his own as he
will be the donkey they pin the tail on in the aftermath. The Chinese public
is in a full blown mania, enormous amounts of their money in at the top, at
unbelievably stretched valuations and a rickety banking system with the authorities
trying to reign in the mania. Make no mistake in viewing this: this is the
recipe that caused the great depression in the United States. A condition the
Chinese government will wish to avoid at all costs, just as Bernanke and the
US treasury must now avoid a collapse in US asset markets at any cost.
It is now "inflate or die", and the club has just admitted a new member, and
it resides in a place called "BEIJING, CHINA". The Chinese government's
ability to manage markets and capitalism is going to get a severe test RIGHT
NOW, and based on today's report in the FT they are totally unprepared to understand
the enormity of the unintended consequences that can occur if the choose the
wrong path to dealing with this. US dollar based Fiat money and credit creation
is now moving into the arteries of the Chinese economy and has trickled down
to the citizens. What do you think might unfold if the emerging Chinese consumer
and the US consumer are knocked out at the same time? It is not a pretty thought.
If this happens the Chinese consumer will never emerge as everyone in Beijing
and the world hopes for. The great depression of the US repeated in China,
exacerbated by an antique banking system that is unable to properly transmit
and provide liquidity. You can expect them to handle it the same way Greenspan
did, the Hu Jintao put is about to be born. Moral hazards pasted one on top
of another....
POP, Goes the Bubble?
This week Steven Roach wrote a missive about Trade Relations with China, that
politically they are past the "point of no return" outlining dangerous protectionist
plans, rhetoric and actions coming out of Washington DC. And that this rhetoric
no longer was limited to China, as Japan has emerged as an additional poster
child of irresponsible Trade and currency behavior. America's two biggest creditors
are having spitballs lobbed directly in their eyes (try spitting in your bankers
face sometime, see where it gets you), US politicians behaving locally in a
global world. It appears that if the Chinese don't prick the bubble themselves
the US congress will! It is a disaster, and a pop that will be heard around
the world. It threatens to make the problem in Chinas stock markets much more
unmanageable as if fundamental expectations for future business are punctured
by these "Public Servants", the mis-pricing that the big money is currently
resting at, in the US and in China will become even wider to the fair value
of the holdings. Since business prospects will be severely diminished.
Do you realize what could materialize if these idiots light a fuse while the
broad Chinese public is out on the limb of the previous Tedbit? It will be
like sawing it off, do you think the Chinese government will see this as anything
but an act of brutal aggression? The US consumer will be also be hit hard as
the price they pay for everything Chinese will skyrocket.
Nothing fails to amaze me more than the economic ignorance that is Washington
DC, they are oblivious to history, fundamentally sound accounting and fiscal
policies, and fiduciary responsible behavior. They encourage the American people
to spend beyond their means, save nothing and punish personal initiative and
wealth creation with high taxes and mind bending micro management through overregulation.
Then they pick a fight with the someone's (China, Russia, Japan, etc.), that
can in a heartbeat pull the rug out from underneath the economy and their spending
plans. Daring them to do so, a giant game of chicken with our financial livelihoods
and futures as the wager they are placing. Our asset based economy where systemic
deflationary problems await any appreciable pullback in asset prices, as billions
of dollars of loans inch towards diminished expectations. Asset prices that
are dependant on 3 billion dollars a day being imported from abroad and foreign
lenders. I hope Washington has recently added a number of new printing presses
for all the money they will be forced to print as they are forced to become
the lender of last resort.
In Conclusion, We are seeing a Rotating bubble syndrome as outlined in "Fingers
of Instability" (see www.TraderView.com ,archives)
as global Central Banks and Financial authorities continue the experiment with
fiat money and credit creation begun decades ago. As they pile dollar on top
of dollar, yen on top of yen, Euro on top of Euro, British pound upon British
pound, Yuan upon Yuan, Ruble upon ruble, etc. Every increasing sand piles of
stimulus. Now the man on the street Chinese citizen has joined the fray. Global
fire hoses of hot money created now and in years past bounding around the world
seeking "ALPHA", creating bubble after bubble which when they burst are met
with? What Else? More money printing. This money can no longer sit in the bank
as that is guaranteed confiscation via printing press.
The source of this money in this case is of course the Chinese merchandise
trade surplus, and the wages the Chinese public has received as it has emerged
as manufacturer to the world on a scale that has dwarfed previous industrializations
in history, and is joined by the rest of the BRIC's.
The management of the blow-ups is predictable. No matter how bad the crash
the financial authorities will be forced to "make good" on the money that was
lost by the most important players, and in this case it will have to include
a big part of the public. See what's emerging in the Sub prime space in the
US? Legislation is being brought forth to bail these people out. They may have
raised credit requirements as responsible lending would require, but liquidity
is still very abundant in the United States. I am still being bombarded with
offers to borrow money. The psychology of deflation must be nipped in the bud
before it can become self fulfilling. It is going to be interesting to see
the coordinated reflation and fire containment that will be required to meet
this potential threat to the Global economy.
Next week we will be talking about a huge Chinese financial and trade delegation
that is coming for an unbelievably important Pow Wow later this month. We will
also cover why the middle class is disappearing, the mechanics of it, and how
an illusion of growth covers the fingerprints of its perpetrators. It will
be interesting I promise you. Thank you for your time and consideration. If
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