TIPSTER: Europe’s Tonsillitis Economy
Quote of the Day:
There is great recession fatigue in Greece and the social cost is very high…
Stathis Kalyvas – Professor of Political Science at Yale University (more…)
Quote of the Day:
There is great recession fatigue in Greece and the social cost is very high…
Stathis Kalyvas – Professor of Political Science at Yale University (more…)
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… the doctrine of Central Bank independence – which is truly a religious matter – doesn’t hold at all times…
Paul McCulley – A Hairy Man who used to run PIMCO with Bill Gross. (more…)
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These are rallies that you rent not rallies you necessarily own.
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At this time I had complete confidence in Russian policy and believed that the Western Allies deliberately allowed Germany and Russia to fight each other to death.
Klaus Fuchs – German-British Nuclear Physicist (more…)
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How do we begin to covet, Clarisse? Do we seek out things to covet?
Hannibal Lecter – from the film Silence of the Lambs. (more…)
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What has The Fed got against the pricing mechanism? It’s gotten this country a long way over 200 years…
James Grant (more…)
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Only one candidate, Ron Paul, seems to have grasped the issues and is offering the right remedies for the central problems we are facing.
Nassim Taleb – 13th March 2012 (more…)
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The only thing certain in China this year is that the Communist Party will win in a landslide come October.
I’ll tell you how bad the Chinese banking system is: this Chinese banking system is worse than the Texas S&L business in the 1980’s. (more…)
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China’s rise as a major international actor is likely to stand out as a defining feature of the strategic landscape of the early 21st century.
US Department of Defense. (more…)
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The case for reform is compelling because China has now reached a turning point in its development path.
Robert Zoellick – World Bank President
Macro Overview
Recap Michael Pettis On China
- Breakneck Growth in China hides a lot of cracks beneath the surface. I’m not just talking about NPLs it’s the entire nature in which capital is allocated in a business society used to persistently high growth and relatively low inflation.
- This has been touched upon by Peking University Professor, Michael Pettis, in particular in a couple of pieces:
- To quote a couple of sentences from the second piece:
“In all previous cases of countries following similar growth models, the dangerous combination of repressed pricing signals, distorted investment incentives, and excessive reliance on accelerating investment to generate growth has always eventually pushed growth past the point where it is sustainable, leading always to capital misallocation and waste. At this point – whichChinamay have reached a decade ago – debt begins to rise unsustainably.”
The World Bank Frets About China
The country’s current growth model is unsustainable. This is not the time just for muddling through – it’s time to get ahead of events and to adapt to major changes in the world and national economies
This what I worry about most for China as it decides its adjustment process.Beijingcould easily choose to absorb debt rather than pay it down through asset sales, and as debt rises it will be all the harder to raise interest rates. It will ultimately also create what is potentially a destabilizing debt overhang, although as Japan showed, it can take many years before the debt itself becomes unsustainable.
That is why although I don’t think it is a certainty, I am expecting that the most likely economic outcome for China for the rest of this decade is a combination of much slower growth and rapidly rising government debt. Privatizing assets and using the proceeds to shore up household wealth, directly or indirectly, is politically tough to do.
And how much will growth slow? The World Bank report apparently doesn’t say, but the consensus has been slowly moving down towards 5-6% annual growth over the next few years. That’s better than the crazy numbers of 8-9% most analysts were predicting even two years ago (and some still are), but it is still too high. GDP growth rates will slow a lot more than that. I still maintain that average growth in this decade will barely break 3%. It will take, however, at least another two or three years before a number this low falls within the consensus range.
And by the way when it does, metal prices should fall sharply. Copper prices have done reasonably well in the past few months as Chinese buyers have restocked, as we suggested might happen to our clients last fall. With the recent easing we may see more strength in copper over the next month or so, but I have little doubt that within two or three years copper prices are going to be a whole lot lower than they are today. Chinese investment demand simply cannot hold up much longer.
Market Overview
A Rampant Chinese Stock
Volatility Back To the Lows
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Chart of the Day
VIX (Source: Bloomberg)
Events
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