Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Andy Xie: Fear the Dark Side of China's Lending Surge

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #61
    Re: Andy Xie: Fear the Dark Side of China's Lending Surge

    Originally posted by FRED View Post
    For clarification, as our subscribers are aware, our position is that debt deflation began in early 2008 and took the stock market down more than 40%, exactly as we forecast. The market then had a First Bounce off March 2009 lows due to re-inflation by global fiscal and monetary stimulus, again as forecast. As the re-inflation cannot produce a self-sustaining recovery in the U.S., China, Europe or any nation without economic restructuring, debt deflation will continue.

    The U.S. fiscal deficit at 12% of GDP in 2009 exceeds twice the level that was previously considered tolerable in an advanced economy without the bond market and currency selling off. We expect long term that the U.S. will deflate the debt against the monetary unit of debt, the dollar, by allowing oil producers to facilitate the devaluing of the dollar against oil rather than gold as in the 1930s. That is the essence of Ka-Poom Theory.
    Fred,

    Can a new thread be started in Select? The above statement would appear to merit further discussion. Is this a change to previous forecasts? If we are expecting another round of debt deflation, do we also have a forecast for duration. The last one lasted 6 months. What's the new time-line? What happened to "Deflation fare thee well" :confused:

    Comment


    • #62
      Re: Andy Xie: Fear the Dark Side of China's Lending Surge

      Originally posted by dummass View Post
      Fred,

      Can a new thread be started in Select? The above statement would appear to merit further discussion. Is this a change to previous forecasts? If we are expecting another round of debt deflation, do we also have a forecast for duration. The last one lasted 6 months. What's the new time-line? What happened to "Deflation fare thee well" :confused:
      dummass, my understanding is that the entire process of debt deflation continues to go on. The characteristics it takes on, disinflation(deflation) vs. inflation, are reflected in the political choices made, i.e. the balance between printing vs. insolvencies/bankruptcies/foreclosures. Since it is much more expedient for our politicians to print, that is ultimately how we will come out of this, hence POOM as an inevitability. The disinflation we saw was just an early presentation of the whole process and we could get multiple whipsaws in the future, just bigger is my guess, or just one big POOM if something goes awry geopolitically.

      Comment


      • #63
        Re: Andy Xie: Fear the Dark Side of China's Lending Surge

        Thanx Jay, that's a good summary. This message is different, however, from the message presented in EJ's "Deflation Fare Thee Well..."

        Comment


        • #64
          Re: Andy Xie: Fear the Dark Side of China's Lending Surge

          Dummass,

          Don't let the deflation word throw you off.

          A debt deflation equals inflation. Similarly an outright deflation is a debt inflation.

          Its all about the denominator...

          Comment


          • #65
            Re: Andy Xie: Fear the Dark Side of China's Lending Surge

            Originally posted by c1ue View Post
            Dummass,

            Don't let the deflation word throw you off.

            A debt deflation equals inflation. Similarly an outright deflation is a debt inflation.

            Its all about the denominator...

            Does this agree with your understanding of the terms?

            Debt Deflation:
            Stocks up (nominal not real)
            Commodities up
            House prices down
            Bonds up (yields down)
            T's down (yields up)
            Consumer goods up
            Food prices up
            Gas prices up
            Gold and Silver up

            Disinflation:
            Stocks down
            Commodities down
            House prices down
            Bonds down (yields up)
            T's Up (yields down)
            Consumer goods down
            Food prices down
            Gas prices down
            Gold and Silver down

            Comment


            • #66
              Re: Andy Xie: Fear the Dark Side of China's Lending Surge

              Originally posted by c1ue View Post
              Dummass,

              Don't let the deflation word throw you off.

              A debt deflation equals inflation. Similarly an outright deflation is a debt inflation.

              Its all about the denominator...
              c1ue, my understanding of debt deflations is that a debt deflation does not necessarily equal inflation, but only will in our present period of debt deflation because there is no gold standard and politicians have the option to inflate. The term debt deflation describes only the amelioration of debt, the process by which the debt is resolved is not essential to the definition. Bankruptcy, inflation or a combination of both are all under the umbrella of "debt deflation" and its manifestations in 1873 and 1929 were different due to this fact. Please clarify my thinking if it is off.
              Last edited by Jay; June 28, 2009, 08:51 PM.

              Comment


              • #67
                Re: Andy Xie: Fear the Dark Side of China's Lending Surge

                Originally posted by dummass View Post
                Does this agree with your understanding of the terms?

                Debt Deflation:
                Stocks up (nominal not real)
                Commodities up
                House prices down
                Bonds up (yields down)
                T's down (yields up)
                Consumer goods up
                Food prices up
                Gas prices up
                Gold and Silver up

                Disinflation:
                Stocks down
                Commodities down
                House prices down
                Bonds down (yields up)
                T's Up (yields down)
                Consumer goods down
                Food prices down
                Gas prices down
                Gold and Silver down
                dummass, I see disinflation as a process within the current debt deflation not the opposite of it, so your categories should be inflation and disinflation (or deflation depending where you sit in that debate) which are all part of the broader concept of debt deflation which can encompass both. Again others, please correct me if I am wrong.

                Comment


                • #68
                  Re: Andy Xie: Fear the Dark Side of China's Lending Surge

                  C1ue makes the point that debt deflation is inflation. So, disinflation or deflation (according to your point of view) must be the opposite.

                  Does this need to be so complicated? :confused:

                  Comment


                  • #69
                    Re: Andy Xie: Fear the Dark Side of China's Lending Surge

                    Originally posted by dummass View Post
                    Does this need to be so complicated? :confused:
                    For most of us (who are not economists) "inflation" means "the local currency prices of stuff I buy are rising" and "deflation" means those prices are falling.

                    The only way I (who dropped out of Econ 101 after one week) can routinely make sense of inflation and deflation claims is to split them into two kinds.
                    If made by a trained economist, then they are likely referring to an increase or decrease in some monetary base -- ask which base, for which time frame.

                    If made by any of the "rest of us", they are likely referring to the currency denominated price of some goods or basket of goods - ask which currency, which goods, which time frame.
                    We are dealing with
                    • much sloshing about, back and forth, of currencies, currency bases, be that gold, euros, dollars, Treasuries, or fraudulent CDOs-squared,
                    • much misallocattion of resources and productive capacity, and
                    • much confusion and misrepresentation of the truth.

                    Claims of "inflation" are always and everywhere a relative phenomenon, relative to whether an economist or ordinary man is speaking, and if an ordinary man, relative to which currency and which basket of goods is being considered, for which time frame.

                    Answer the above questions, which is usually pretty easy in the original context, and most claims of inflation or deflation make sense, at least sufficient to enable further sensible agreement or disagreement.

                    But unqualified claims of inflation or deflation that cannot be grounded by the above specifics are useless in my experience.
                    Most folks are good; a few aren't.

                    Comment


                    • #70
                      Re: Andy Xie: Fear the Dark Side of China's Lending Surge

                      Originally posted by fliped42
                      Article regarding Chinese bank ratings.

                      http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/c...one-of-us.html
                      That was a good read - thanks for the link.

                      The misallocation of productive and financial resources afflicts China as well. I'm playing the recent rise in commodity prices as a dangerous Chinese driven bubble (meaning I already sold what little I had invested there for a small profit.)

                      When the Titanic sank, one end apparently rose up out of the water as the other end flooded first. Not long after, all chambers were flooded, to the long standing amusement of some deep water fish.
                      Most folks are good; a few aren't.

                      Comment


                      • #71
                        Re: Andy Xie: Fear the Dark Side of China's Lending Surge

                        courtesy of naked capitalism.... end of chinese commodity stockpiling? misinformation/expectation management? creating a dip?

                        http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2009/...ockpiling.html

                        Comment


                        • #72
                          Re: Andy Xie: Fear the Dark Side of China's Lending Surge

                          Originally posted by WildspitzE View Post
                          courtesy of naked capitalism.... end of chinese commodity stockpiling? misinformation/expectation management? creating a dip?

                          http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2009/...ockpiling.html

                          end for the time being/

                          Comment


                          • #73
                            Re: Andy Xie: Fear the Dark Side of China's Lending Surge

                            Further arguments against China from the often interesting China Financial Markets Blog

                            Massive growth in lending much of which is likely to be non-performing loans

                            New loans RMB

                            2008
                            2009
                            January
                            804
                            1,600
                            February
                            243
                            1,100
                            March
                            286
                            1,900
                            April
                            464
                            591
                            May
                            319
                            665
                            June
                            332
                            1,200
                            Half year
                            2,448
                            7,056


                            Evidence of Banking Irregularities:

                            Three major Chinese lenders said Tuesday that auditors had discovered irregularities in their lending last year, but added that these findings would not affect their financial results. The Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC), China Construction Bank (CCB) and China CITIC Bank said in separate statements that the National Audit Office (NAO) found some violations of rules in last year’s routine audits. None of the lenders revealed the amount of loans involved in these violations.
                            …ICBC, China’s largest lender, said in Tuesday’s statement that some of its branches were found to have violated rules in business operations, and some weaknesses in management were also pinpointed.
                            The bank added it had corrected the violations and had moved to improve risk management and internal controls. The other two lenders said some of their branches had been found to have extended loans against rules or been negligent in supervision over borrowers after the loans were made.
                            LOANS FOR SPECULATION
                            And of course there’s a lot more evidence of credit gaps. Along with a study by a local economist suggesting that an awful lot of new lending was ending up on the gaming tables of Macau (which after all may perhaps be economically more justifiable than further commodity stockpiling), Wei Jianing, a deputy director at the macro-economics department of the Development and Research Center under China’s State Council, worries about money leaking into illegal stock speculation. According to an article in yesterday’s Bloomberg:Chinese new bank loans worth about an estimated 1.16 trillion yuan ($170 billion) were invested in the stock market in the first five months of this year, China Business News reported, citing a government economist.

                            That’s 20 percent of the 5.8 trillion yuan loans banks extended in the period, the Shanghai-based newspaper said.

                            …A further 30 percent of the loans in the first five months may have been used for discounted bill financing, or short-term credits used to fund working capital needs, China Business News said today. These funds may help form a financial bubble, the newspaper cited Wei as saying, adding this is the economist’s personal view.

                            Comment


                            • #74
                              Re: Andy Xie: Fear the Dark Side of China's Lending Surge

                              Originally posted by fliped42
                              More riots. News, internet and twitter shut down. 1,000 killed or wounded (140 killed, 828 wounded)

                              http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/07/wo...er=rss&emc=rss

                              Does this look like a country that will pull the world out of the crisis or will it only add to it?

                              this is a country in crisis. or rather, the majority of people in crisis - the state, and the 5% of people in the communist party are doing better than ever.
                              Last edited by touchring; July 06, 2009, 11:41 AM.

                              Comment


                              • #75
                                Re: Andy Xie: Fear the Dark Side of China's Lending Surge

                                Originally posted by fliped42
                                Does this look like a country that will pull the world out of the crisis or will it only add to it?
                                I think most look to pillaging their large savings, or that they, themselves, will pillage such large savings, as the source of a recovery.

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X