Home—Blog—Why China's currency is not a one-way bet
Jun 22, 2010, 11:51
Posted byMerryn Somerset Webb
Comments (3)
It's looking like it might turn out to be quite an interesting week. China kicked things off yesterday with the news that it is going to reform its RMB exchange-rate regime to allow a little more flexibility.
The markets were pleased – globally, pretty much everything moved up for a bit. Most other Asian currencies had a good day too – which is nice, given that we've been suggesting that you diversify into them for a while now.
But there is something interesting going on here. One of the things that has been bothering us over the last few months has been the utter lack of consensus in the markets. Investors and analysts appear to be neatly divided into inflationists and deflationists, double-dippers and V men, deficit "slash and burners" and "monetise the debt" men.
But on the RMB there is no such division: everyone thinks that removing the peg that linked the Chinese currency to the dollar means that the RMB will rise. That's supposed to be good because it raises the price of Chinese exports to the rest of the world and cuts the price of its imports. That in turn should help out the ailing West (by encouraging the Chinese to buy more of our stuff) and rebalance the Chinese economy too (easing inflation to keep interest rates low and forcing it to find an economic driver beyond exporting toys and buttons).
But what if it doesn't work like this? What if the RMB is not massively undervalued – Credit Suisse says it needs to rise 50% against the dollar to hit fair value – but massively over valued? Let's not forget that while it has been pegged to the dollar it has nonetheless already appreciated massively against the euro and the pound this year. And in trade-weighted terms it has risen 13% or so since the peg was first loosened back in 2005.
It's also worth noting that, according GMO's Edward Chancellor, China currently displays pretty much every single characteristic of a massive bubble. It started with a compelling growth story; it comes with a "blind faith in the competence of the authorities" (how many times have you heard people say that Chinese growth won't fall because "the government won't let it"?); there is a general increase in often misallocated investment: the money supply is growing far too fast; interest rates are too low; credit growth is rampant; and there is strong evidence of rising corruption, spurred on by the real estate boom.
Real estate investment currently makes up around 12% of total GDP. The Chinese economy has been compared to the film Speed in which a bus is planted with a bomb set to detonate if it slows below 50 miles an hour. This seems apt, says Chancellor. "Were China's economy to slow below Beijing's 8% growth target, bad things are liable to happen. Much of the new infrastructure would turn out to be otiose; excess capacity would linger in many industries; the real estate bubble would burst and the banking system would face a rash of non-performing loans. Investors who are immersed in the China Dream ignore this scenario. When the China juggernaut eventually stalls, they face a rude awakening."
The timing of this potential rude awakening is of course impossible to see. But nonetheless, look at China through Chancellor's eyes and it is hard to keep arguing that the RMB is 50% undervalued: there may be more risk in it than the consensus opinion likes to think.
Published in Blog More articles by Merryn Somerset Webb
By Dominic Frisby, May 15, 2012
By Matthew Partridge, May 04, 2012
By John Stepek, May 03, 2012
By Tim Bennett, May 03, 2012
Leave a comment
(23 June 2010, 09:07AM) Complain about this comment
When people were referring repeatedly to the 1920's/ 1930's last year, it occurred to me that the most likely place for a re-run of that scenario is not the USA, but China. It has much more in common with the USA of 100 years ago than any other economy. It's uncanny, from the environmental degradation, China is re-creating it's own version of the dust bowl, a speculative mania with everyone turning into a spculator ( the famous taxi driver anecdote ), and a seemingly unstoppable infrastructure expansion, is there an city in China without plans for a jet speed rail link?It even has a gold rush going on in the West of the country.
(26 June 2010, 11:35AM) Complain about this comment
Personally I'm dubious.The leadership is effectively a dictatorship.Can any information coming from that, be taken as true?Remember communist Russia where they had a set of figures for popular consumption and another set for the government.Could the same apply here, I wonder.
(27 June 2010, 10:21AM) Complain about this comment
Although it is tempting to look backwards and argue that both the Chinese and Russian attempts to manipulate their respective economies were an unmitigated failure ...past performance may not necceserily predict the future. It is far more difficult to conceal what is really going on in the 21st C than it was in the 19th.
Name This will be the name displayed with your comment.
Email This helps us verify comments are genuine. It will not be displayed anywhere on the site and is stored confidentially.
Comment Please keep your comment within 1,000 characters and relevant to the main topic. We encourage healthy debate, but we don't allow insults or bad language. Anything off topic or unpleasant, we'll remove. Enjoy the conversation! Thank you.
To prevent spam-related comments please enter the characters shown in the 'Captcha' box to the left.
Enter the text from the box above
Remember my details
By leaving a comment you accept our terms and conditions.
Our free daily email, Money Morning, is an informative and enjoyable analysis of what's going on in the markets. Written by our Editor, John Stepek, and guest contributors.Sign up FREE to Money Morning here.
22 May 12
21 May 12
Become a smarter investor in just 3 minutes a day.
MoneyWeek is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.