| | | Hi Jon, excellent article... The Chinese are putting hot money into markets globally, much as Japan did in the late 1980's. The influx of Chinese buying has put a tax on real estate transactions on high end housing in Vancover as has previously happened in Sydney and Auckland NZ.
Chinese money is pouring into California and Hollywood with talk of large corporate purchases of enities such as Dick Clark productions, which Holds the rights to the Golden Globes, Rockin' New Years eve. etc. These types of things tend to occur at asset market tops.
Bloomberg shows how Hot growth is in China
bloomberg.com;
and Fortune's article points out how China is contributing HALF of global growth if that growth goes away... it exacerbates the trend of Brexit, the vulnerability of the EU and ultimately the EUR over the next 2 years
Zhang recently conducted an analysis of 252 land auctions in 10 Chinese cities. He found that if land values stayed the same, 105 of those deals would end up being money losers, which suggests that developers still believe land values will continue to rise, despite the warning signs. Meanwhile, mortgage loan growth continues to explode, up 88% YTD in September.
The Wall Street Journal on Tuesday also pointed to bubbles forming in China in other assets, from calligraphy to pig feed to PVC used for making pipes. “There are very few places left to invest in the real economy, so the money goes into the so-called virtual economy,” Yang Delong, chief economist at First Seafront Fund Management Co., told the Journal.
Many analysts are predicting that these bubbles, especially those in real estate markets, are presaging serious trouble for the Chinese economy and ultimately for the globe. It’s unlikely that the Chinese real estate bubble, however, will create a financial crisis like the recent subprime bubble in America. The roots of that crisis were that banks lent to borrowers who could not repay their loans, and this inability to repay initiated a chain reaction through the financial system. In China, real estate borrowers have the collateral to repay their creditors if they can’t make their debt payments.
Still, the existence of these bubbles are an indication of the lack of other investments available to Chinese savers,(editorial note by JJP... lack of investment alternatives is the poster child story for the global economy the past few years )
a problem that has troubling global economic implications. The Chinese government has long capped what banks can pay savers, and is also now cracking down on attempts by citizens to move their savings abroad in search of better returns. These policies help the government funnel those savings at low rates to politically important state-owned enterprises, helping to keep unemployment low.
But this strategy also hinders China’s transition to a more consumption-driven economy, and underscores the government’s wariness of enduring any period of significant economic slowdown or unemployment during that transition. Meanwhile, the government and state-owned enterprises continue to crowd out the more dynamic private sector, making inefficient investments for the future. George Mason University economist Tyler Cowen has worried that this habit of papering over slower growth with investments in projects that will not make the country richer in the long term will just make the cost of rebalancing the economy that much larger over time.
This might not matter much if the rest of the world were expanding robustly. But much of the rich world is barely growing at all, so China accounts for nearly half of all global GDP growth. If an inflating real estate bubble—and the unwillingness of China’s leaders to institute genuine reforms—lead to a significant slowdown in East Asia, it could be a problem that infects the global economy as a whole.
The US elections will also prove to be a global event. A Trump victory could create a negative trade catalyst with China and an HRC victory appears to be bringing a presidency that will have elements of fragility not seen since Nixon's reelection in 1972; due to the compromised national security issues and the "Pay to Play" wealth build of WJC and the CGI.
JP |
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