China Slows, not Crashes
Posted by China Sourcing CommentatorAug 6
Chinaâ??s economy is now slowing significantly. The AMP’s Dr Shane Oliver says it has slowed significantly on the back of slowing exports and a domestic property slump. The share market is off 70%. Â Growth is likely to slow to 8% in 2009, but a hard landing (say 5% growth) is unlikely.
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The Chinese economy is slowing
The evidence is now overwhelming that Chinaâ??s economy has slowed significantly:
â? ¢ Real GDP growth slowed from the peak of 12th 6% per year over the June quarter of last year, up 9% year September quarter, its slowest pace this year for the next five years;
â?¢ Industrial production has slowed from annual growth of around 18% a year ago to 11. 4% last month;
â? ¢ Auto sales fell by 8% in the second year to September, its first decline since early 2005;
â?¢ Chinaâ??s average house prices have fallen about 4% from their peak in January and home sales are down 42% from a year ago;
â?¢ Money supply and loan growth are running well below year ago levels; and there are
â?¢ Numerous anecdotes of business failures amongst east coast exporters (for example, half of Chinaâ??s toy exporters closed in the first seven months of this year);
The slowdown is primarily being driven by three factors:
â?¢ A slowdown in export volumes in response to the US and European slumps;
â?¢ A property slump which resulted from policy measures designed to slow the economy and property development that were put in place since 2004; and
â?¢ Production restrictions in the Beijing area associated with the Olympics and Paralympics have exaggerated the recent weakness in production.
Leading indicators suggest a further deceleration ahead – The OECDâ??s leading indicator for China suggests a slowdown in growth to around 8%.
This is likely to be led by a further slump in export growth to around 10% from 21% currently on the back of the global slump and a sharp rise in the trade weighted value of the Renminbi in recent months.
The impact of the property downturn will also feed through to business investment (where property construction accounts for about 25% of fixed asset investment) and consumer confidence.
But why not a hard landing?
While China is slowing significantly itâ??s unlikely to have a hard landing, which given Chinaâ??s potential growth rate of around 8 to 10% and need to find jobs for roughly 10 million rural workers each year would mean growth of around 5%.
â?¢ The Chinese banking system looks solid compared to that in the developed world. Loan to valuation ratios have been falling, there are limited linkages to global banks, there is no dependence on foreign capital, there is no confidence crisis and credit availability has only been an issue to the extent that the Government has restricted it.
â?¢ The Chinese corporate sector is in good shape. Leverage has been falling and the level of retained earnings is high as is the return on equity. The equity market only accounts for 15% of corporate financing.
â?¢ Consumer spending is likely to remain robust. Despite the 70% slump in the Chinese share market and falling house prices, consumer spending has actually accelerated recently. See the next chart.
Chinese consumers have very high saving rates, are not very geared and only 5% of Chinese households have a significant share exposure.
On top of this the authorities have been trying to boost consumer spending via a range of policies including social security reforms, labour reforms and assistance for rural workers; these policies seem to be working.
Monetary conditions are now being eased aggressively with two interest rate cuts in less than two months.
This has been made possible by a sharp fall in inflation.
In fact, after years of plus 20% pa investment growth itâ??s likely that the slump in demand for Chinaâ??s exports will see deflation become more of an issue as excess capacity starts to build up.
With Chinaâ??s key lending rate at 6. 93% there is plenty of scope for further easing and this is likely to occur soon.
â?¢ Fiscal easing is now on the agenda with the Government looking set to increase spending on infrastructure related to agriculture, energy, transport and urban development.
Increased social spending and increased subsidies for farmers are also likely.
There is a lot of room for fiscal stimulus in China as the budget surplus is running around 2% of GDP.
â? ¢ Policies in order to increase the direct property sector, including increased public housing, lower transaction costs and taxes to support their shopping home.
Some cities are already moving to stimulate their local property markets.
â?¢ Finally, further increases in export tax rebates for exports such as textiles are also likely.
The Chinese Government has switched focus from worrying about inflation to trying to stabilise and maintain fast growth. While Chinaâ??s economy has slowed and is likely to slow further a hard landing is unlikely.
Furthermore, it should be noted that the current slowdown in China should be seen as cyclical.
Structural forces driving growth remain very strong.
These include strong productivity growth, huge competitive advantages, rapid urbanisation, surging consumer demand and very strong investment.
With per capita income levels still very low Chinaâ??s rapid growth phase has a long way to go, probably over several decades.
Chinaâ??s slowdown will cut into commodity demand
While Chinaâ??s growth is unlikely to collapse, a slowdown from 12% last year to 8% in 2009 coming on top of the recession in the US, Europe and Japan will cut sharply into commodity demand.
Stockpiles of iron ore and coal are already building up in Chinaâ??s ports and it has reportedly asked some resource companies to slow their supply down.
In fact, itâ??s likely 2009 will see demand running below supply in the case of several commodities.
Commodity prices (and resource shares) are currently very oversold after recent sharp falls and due for a decent short term rally, but the unfolding slump in global growth (made worse by slower growth in China) suggests they are yet to see their cyclical bottom.
Commodity prices lag the economic cycle and is only likely to record their long-term bull market again soon, it’s clear that global economic growth begins to head higher.
This is unlikely for at least another six to nine months.
For Australia, this suggests a falling terms of trade and softening export demand growth.
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What about the Chinese share market?
From its high to its recent low last October of China’s stock market has fallen nearly 70%.
This has restored value to Chinese shares, with the price to earnings multiple falling from over 50 times back to 16 times which is below its long term average.
Additionally: the liquidity cycle for shares is turning more positive with easier monetary conditions; the Government is becoming active in trying to boost the market with moves to abolish stamp duty on share purchases, allow margin trading, encourage buybacks and delay the sale of nontradeable shares; and investor sentiment in China seems to have reached the despair often seen around bear market lows.
While itâ??s too early to be confident the market has bottomed, particularly with earnings estimates still falling and investor panic feeding on itself, Chinese shares are looking attractive from a long term perspective.
Conclusion
Chinaâ??s economy has slowed from over 12% growth to 9% and is likely to slow even further. On top of the recession now unfolding in developed countries this will cut into commodity demand over the year ahead and suggests commodity prices may still fall further.
However, Chinaâ??s downturn is unlikely to turn into a hard landing and does nothing to detract from Chinaâ??s positive long term outlook, which, if anything, is being enhanced in a relative sense by the debilitating problems the US faces.
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Article Source:China Sourcing Blog
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