China: don't believe the hype

By MoneyWeek editor-in-chief Merryn Somerset Webb Jan 20, 2010

Merryn Somerset-Webb

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It is the fastest-growing consumer of luxury goods in the world. It will have an economy bigger than the US by 2027 (or maybe 2030, depending on who you listen to). It has 70 big cities, all crammed with new-build apartment blocks. It is home to the world's largest dam. It buys more cars than America and produces half the world's steel. It has grown 8-10% every year for decades and can keep doing so. It is the world's second-largest consumer of energy. It produces 60% of the world's buttons in just one of its towns. It has a huge population with a growing middle class poised to gobble up every consumer good in sight.

Yes, it's China – the world's current miracle economy, the country that will dominate the decade, and the best possible home for your savings during that decade. That, at least, is the hype. But how much of it stands up to scrutiny?

At the end of last year, I wrote that, while I agreed with much of the China story, I wouldn't touch its markets because they were far too expensive. But having looked at things in more depth, I'm beginning to doubt the status of the economic miracle itself.

Why? Because, right now, it rests on about the most unstable of foundations there is: rampant credit growth.

China has been growing fast – at around 10% a year – for about 30 years. That, says a note from Pivot Asset Management, combined with the fact that the growth has mostly been investment led, means that, "both in its duration and intensity", China's capital spending boom has now outstripped all other "previous great transformation periods", such as those of postwar Japan and Germany.

The point? That China's growth cycle is more mature than emerging: it has most of the infrastructure it needs already, and so should be slowing rather than accelerating its capital spending.

When you look at where capital spending is now going, that makes sense. On YouTube, you will find an amazing film from Al Jazeera on the city of Ordos.

It is newly built, and could be home to a million people. Instead, it's empty. With property prices rising 50-60% a year in some areas, its houses have been bought by investors expecting to make a return without having to bother with pesky tenants. Think Manchester 2006.

And it isn't just residential cities that are empty. China now has more ports, offices, airports and steel factories than it will know what to do with for many years to come. Commercial property vacancy rates in central Shanghai are said to be as high as 50%.

Yet far from pulling back on building, the Chinese are pushing on at speed. In the first three quarters of 2009, China's industrial capacity expanded at more than 25%.

So what's going on? It's all about the global credit bubble. Its collapse was nasty for China; much of China's expansion was based on exporting goods to Westerners buying them on credit, so vanishing credit quickly meant vanishing exports.

China's response has been to try to keep its famous growth rate going (and head off social unrest and so on in the process) by replacing export demand with state-sponsored demand – $586bn worth of it in direct spending, and many billions more in unfettered bank lending.

The result? Its very own credit bubble. Today, far from being the miracle economy of the popular imagination, China looks to be caught in a nasty trap of artificial and unsustainable growth driven by rapid credit growth and bubble psychology (everyone thinks the authorities can and will stop asset prices falling).

In the first five working days of January alone, China's commercial banks are said to have lent out the equivalent of more than $50bn. Not good.

Dylan Grice of Société Générale points to a recent study from the National Bureau of Economic Research that looked at 60 financial crises going back 140 years and asked if there was one good indicator of a coming crisis. There was: rapid credit growth.

Look at it like that, and the Chinese miracle begins to look like it might end in rather the same way as the Irish, Spanish and Japanese miracles.

Still, the state of an economy is rarely the best predictor of stock market returns; the price you pay is. I've just been reading John Cassidy's latest book How Markets Fail, The Logic of Economic Calamities. In it, he reminds us that researchers have shown again and again that value stocks (those with a low price/earnings ratio or low price-to-book ratio, or dividend ratio) "systematically outperform" so-called growth stocks.

But look at the Chinese market now and there is, I think, one thing you can be pretty sure of: overall, you are not getting much value. As Peter Tasker pointed out in the FT earlier this week, the Shanghai market trades on a Graham and Dodd price/earnings ratio (which uses the ten-year average) of around 50 times. Hard to see how it could systematically outperform from that kind of starting point, isn't it?

• This article first appeared in the Financial Times

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  • 1. phil

    (20 January 2010, 12:51PM)  Complain about this comment

    I also read the Pivot AM piece and, as someone who actually lives in Shanghai, I can only say this was written by some analyst/economist based somewhere in the western world, but most definitely not in China. When you live here there is one thing you learn very quickly - forget logic as we know it. The economy here is so tightly controlled, and the tools at the disposition of the government so numerous that they are unimaginable to most westerners, that we often fail to understand how rapidly a situation can change in China, either for the better or worse. Do not forget that China is not a democracy - it is the world's largest totalitarian state!

  • 2. Half phil

    (20 January 2010, 01:31PM)  Complain about this comment

    Another 'Masters of the Universe' claim by Phil and we know what happenned to the western banks who thought the same don't we.

  • 3. To

    (20 January 2010, 01:38PM)  Complain about this comment

    Both comments are right. I live in China and what Phil says is true but what is also true is totalitarian states can only manipulate/adjust indefinitely for so long even if its longer than democracies.

    Anyone living in China will know China is the new America and America we all know is a state built on hype and debt.

    As a result whats coming to roost in America will be whats coming to roost in China but in a much longer timeframe (totalitarian remember). So like America in the 60s, 70s, 80s and 90s, live it up. China is only gunna blow up in well over 50 yrs time. Like the babyboomers who robbed later generations in America. You too can live it up in China now!

    yeeha!

  • 4. Peter Kellow

    (20 January 2010, 01:40PM)  Complain about this comment

    Thanks to Merryn for highlighting what is happening in China. But to compare this with western countries we need to point out where China gets the money for all this development.

    It prints it just like the Bank of England does for QE. The difference is that instead of stuffing it into bankers' pockets and then hoping that they lend it out with interest to businesses and individuals it is spent directly into the economy.

    Thus the money passes into the economy without interest being paid on it. Neither is spending funded by issuing bonds allowing the banks to create the money and then charge the government interest as in the west. The Chinese are not THAT stupid.

    The Peoples' Bank of China is wholly government owned and is charged with regulating the money supply by printing or withdrawing it as necessary. The lack of debt interest means China has created massive dollar reserves and so can protect its currency.

    In assessing China all this needs to be taken into account.

  • 5. referee

    (20 January 2010, 02:21PM)  Complain about this comment

    Interesting article. But how accurate are the statistics used to develop the argument, one way or the other ( Greece springs to mind).
    As an aside, in her first paragraph, surely " good" should be "goods". "goods" is the singular as well as the plural, in the same way that " premises" is both singular and plural.

  • 6. Al

    (20 January 2010, 06:41PM)  Complain about this comment

    I suggest that the author leaves the China assessment to folks who live and work there and understand the Chinese way of doing business.
    After all, her her proposals about the UK recovery written in the spring have proven to be somewhat less than accurate. Articles written on 20 March 2009 and 24 April 2009 warned us against the "HYPE" concerning Bear Market Rallies and Green Shoots and painted a very negative picture overall. Had readers taken her advice then, they would have missed out on one of the most spectacular recoveries seen in financial markets. Rather than read about possible "HYPE" about China it would be interesting to read an update on her views on the UK market today.

  • 7. pk

    (21 January 2010, 03:43AM)  Complain about this comment

    well AL, the fundamental analysis is correct. There are no green shoots, we are in deeper trouble than before. The entire stock market rally is built on printed money and in unexpectedly large numbers. Despite waves of redundancies and bad results, the stock market continued to rise. Throw away the text book.

    The analysis of the chinese market is also based on the fundamentals and the note on credit based bubbles is spot on. I don't look to her articles for short term stock market tips but on spotting the trends ahead of time, especially when everyone else is saying the opposite. Those trends over the long term have generally been correct, few writers can predict what an insane government will do in the short run.

  • 8. china observer

    (21 January 2010, 04:53AM)  Complain about this comment

    Merryn ignores the fact that China has $2 trillion in foreign exchange reserve. This is the key difference between China and the west.

    Perhaps Merryn has been influenced by Jim "Dubai times 1000" Chanos. Marc Faber has made his comments recently about China on CNBC. China is not going to implode yet. Thomas Friedman has also written an article in New York Times, never short a country with a massive foreign reserve. The banks are state-owned and will take order from the CCP. Unlike in the US where it is Wall Street telling Washington what to do.

  • 9. Norris Hall

    (21 January 2010, 07:03AM)  Complain about this comment

    One thing that separates the Chinese from their American counterparts is that the Chinese are fantastically hard workers. 7 days a week is not uncommon. And they are fanatical savers. Chinese save 40% of their income. Plus they put a heavy emphasis on education...science and math.
    Westerners love their weekends and holidays, they save less than 5% of their income , are over their heads in debt. And when it comes to education...as a nation we are way behind Asia

  • 10. Roger

    (21 January 2010, 10:34AM)  Complain about this comment

    We should take a note today, compare the performance of Japan and China in a couple of years' time and see who out performs.

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