This is obviously a major crisis and possibly it is been deliberately
produced to crush off balance sheet fraud. We can hope that it is a
plan. Otherwise, we have to accept that we are at the beginnings of
a huge financial break.
China's export business is doing fine. The real problem is that
internally it has been building white elephants that produce
mountains of bad debt. This eventually chokes out the good business
and distorts the capital markets.
It is really a natural failure of the imagination caused by a top
down decision system that is unable to empower investment at the
bottom of the food chain.
This break has been predicted for a long time and it looks as if it
may well have arrived. The same thing happened to Japan for much the
same reasons in 1990. It has only now figured out how to make it
work after a full twenty years of nominal growth.
I am expecting to see a repeat in China simply because they refuse to
create a new political dispensation.
China Banking
Crisis: Interbank Rates at Record
By Frank
Yu, Epoch Times | June 20, 2013
The LIBOR rate spiked
sharply in 2008 before and immediately after the bankruptcy of Lehman
Brothers in 2008, at the height of the financial crisis. A similar
situation is currently playing out in China.
A credit crunch is
escalating in China, a possible precursor to a full-fledged banking
crisis that could harm the world’s second biggest economy.
Each negative economic
event, in isolation, may have its reason. Taken together, however,
the recent string of negative economic developments signal something
far worse may be afoot in China.
Ominous signs usually
emerge from the banking system, just like in the fall of 2008, when
the Western financial system was on the brink of collapse. When banks
don’t trust each other anymore, they charge higher rates for
inter-bank lending, fearing that they might not get their money back.
Since the Chinese banking system is fraught with bad loans, there are
ample reasons to be skeptical.
So far government
intervention has kept things under control; until now.
The current funding
squeeze began in late May, and last Friday, the Chinese Ministry of
Finance sold only 9.5 billion yuan in government bills out of 15
billion on offer. Buyers demanded higher than usual interest rates on
the 9-month bills, and the failed auction was China’s second in
only half a month.
Another worrying
detail in this failed auction: The auctions are designed to drain
liquidity from the system. If banks are not buying bills, it means
they are hoarding cash on hand, a measure usually taken only in a
high risk environment.
The best indicator of
the distrust between banks is the Shanghai Interbank Offered Rate
(SHIBOR), a Chinese version of the LIBOR, benchmarks the rate at
which banks lend to one another in the Shanghai money market. The
overnight SHIBOR has been on a see-saw lately, beginning at less than
3 percent annualized in April, rising to above 7.6 percent on June
19, and skyrocketing to more than 13.4 percent by June 20 close.
That’s an absurdly
high rate for overnight money market and commercial paper. As
comparison, it means that investors are more worried about lending to
Chinese banks for 24 hours than they are lending to the Greek
government for 10 years.
Why the sudden lack of
liquidity? There are some valid reasons for the cash market
tightening, including businesses having to pay taxes, and banks
needing capital to meet capital requirements at the cut-off on June
30. The high rates we are seeing currently, however, present all-time
records.
This implies the
current crisis isn’t so cyclical in nature. Apparently, the
People’s Bank of China (PBOC), its central bank, has been limiting
the liquidity it pumps into the market as a way to cool off the
recent lending craze, refusing to backstop Chinese banks’ lending
activity as they had done before.
On Tuesday, PBOC did
not inject 2 billion yuan of liquidity into the market as expected,
and announced that it would further take cash out of the market by
selling 2 billion yuan of 91-day bills, which would put further
pressure on Chinese banks hungry for capital.
On June 6, China
EverBright Bank defaulted on an interbank borrowing valued at 6
billion yuan. There are other reported cases of banks unable to pay
interbank loans, which undoubtedly have contributed to rising rates.
In the past, the PBOC funded Chinese banks through official means as
well as off-balance sheet means, but given the recent bank defaults,
the PBOC could have indeed tightened the supply of money, both
officially and unofficially.
Lending Craze Fueled
Asset Bubbles
In recent years, China’s economic growth has largely come on the back of lax monetary policy, expensive infrastructure projects lacking productive uses, speculative real estate, and increases in other economic activity.
This largely
unproductive lending has been supercharged by a so called “shadow
banking system,” a lending network outside the banking system.
Chinese banks often
engage in selling off-balance sheet structured products to
individuals, high-yield wealth-management products, and other schemes
which could involve fraudulent transactions, political corruption,
and fake invoicing. In turn, Chinese banks are sitting on a mountain
of bad debt—its own state regulator estimates the amount being
526.5 billion yuan, which is a conservative estimate.
The UK Telegraph
reported on Wednesday that Fitch Ratings analyst Charlene Chu
estimated that China’s debt-to-GDP ratio now exceeds 200 percent,
and each additional yuan lent is producing ever smaller economic
value (as low as 0.17 yuan per yuan lent).
“The earlier they
(the PBOC) act, the lower the cost. If they waited longer, there
would be more bad loans to deal with,” said Nomura Chief China
economist Zhang Ziwei in a research note this week.
No Easy Answer
Perhaps the only constant in the world of finance is that no single trend can last forever. Included in China’s recent economic boom were government-sponsored economic subsidies that have created massive asset bubbles, which can only be maintained via even more lax monetary policy.
China’s economic
figures from May were shockingly bad. Exports increased only 1
percent from last year, far lower than consensus estimates of 7
percent growth. That’s extremely low considering the probability of
fake invoicing by exporters to boost numbers.
Its Producer Price
Index last month decreased by 2.9 percent, down for the 15th month in
a row. Because China’s economy is largely driven by its
manufacturing engine this means that the country is likely suffering
from deflation.
Chinese Premier Li
Keqiang is in an unenvious position. He can continue to stimulate the
economy to buy himself more time, exacerbating the current bank
lending craze, or he can tighten monetary policy and risk a
full-blown credit crunch and banking crisis. But given the high
leverage of Chinese banks, even incremental increases in interest
rates could have dire consequences.
China cannot afford to
expand its money supply, and it also cannot tighten credit. It’s
between a rock and a hard place and will have to be truly innovative
to get out of this dire spot.
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