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Be careful for what you wish, because you may get it, and sometimes as H. L.
Mencken wrote, you get it good and hard. The collective brain deficit trust,
otherwise known as the US Congress, wish for the Chinese to revalue their
currency upwards. Today we look at why they may indeed get their wish and why it
is not going to produce their desired results. We look at a possible connection
between China and the recent and odd volatility in interest rates, connect the
dots on inflation and the US economy. How do you explain higher interest rates
on government bonds and a slowing economy, but a relentless march to Dow 14,000?
It is a lot to cover, so let's jump right in.
Last year, Senators Charles Schumer (D-NY) and Lindsey Graham (R- SC) introduced
a bill which would put a 27.5% tariff on Chinese imports. There was not much
chance of the bill passing, and given that such a tariff was illegal under World
Trade Organization rules, it was clear the Senators were pandering to their
various local constituencies. Not that they are not serious about punishing
China for have the audacity to sell us cheap goods, while taking our dollars and
investing them into US government debt, but their bill was mostly for show.
Be Careful What You Wish For
I wrote at the time that the Chinese would only revalue their currency when they
were ready and not one day before. Bluffs and threats from the US Congress do
nothing, as the Chinese will do what they want when they want.
This week, however, a more serious bill was introduced, which would require the
US Treasury to coordinate with the Federal Reserve and intervene in currency
markets when the exchange rates of other countries have become distorted. The
bill would send exchange rates disputes to the World Trade Organization by
treating them as unfair export subsidies and includes a range of sanctions. This
bill has more substance as it actually might work within the rules. And
unfortunately, it seems to have widespread bi-partisan support, although it is
doubtful that President Bush would sign such a measure. And in two years, the
question may be moot, as we shall see. China may decide for reasons of their own
that it is time to allow the Yuan to rise at a faster pace. And the unintended
consequences of that rise may give us at least as many problems as a clearly
under-valued currency.
Let's set some background. Let's review some interesting data from this month's
Far Eastern Economic Review written by Michael Pettis.
(www.feer.com) China saw
an astounding rise in their reserves in the first quarter of $136 billion to a
total of $1.2 trillion. For sake of comparison, China's reserve increase in all
of 2003 was "only" $117 billion. They grew $247 billion in 2006. Reserve growth
is clearly out of control, and with it the growth of the money supply. And as we
know, if the money supply grows to fast, it can bring an unwelcome round of
inflation. And inflation can bring about an instability which the Chinese
government definitely does not want.
Where does such growth come from? Part of it a rising trade surplus of $46
billion, which almost exactly doubled from last year during the same quarter.
Foreigners invested another $16 billion. Growth in the portfolio and currency
appreciation (mainly in the euro) adds another $15 billion. That still leaves
$60 billion. Chinese authorities commented that some of this comes from the
unwinding of swaps between the central bank and Chinese commercial lenders, some
of it from foreign IPOs with the money coming back into China. But that number
is just staggeringly large by any standards.
Last year the total Chinese trade surplus was $178 billion, and Chinese
economists expect that to rise by 43% to over $250 billion. That is an
astounding number.
But there may be more to that story. Simon Hunt writes that some of the trade
"surplus" may actually be a way to get around currency controls, as it is
difficult to get money into the country as China is desperately trying to keep a
lid on investment and speculation.
Let's say you are a businessman in Country A with manufacturing and assembly
plants in China. If your Chinese subsidiary underpays for the materials imported
into China needed to make your products and then overcharges for what is
exported, you now have "excess" profits and therefore currency in China. You can
take that money and invest it in the Chinese stock market, which is up almost
400% in the past two years, and 200% in the last year.
That fact has not gotten lost on the locals, who are withdrawing money from
their banks accounts and opening brokerage accounts at prodigious rates. Bank
deposits are actually down. P/E ratios are now well over 40. The Chinese market
is clearly a bubble, but that doesn't mean the party won't last for some time.
The Chinese economy is on target to grow at 11% real. This clearly has the
leaders of the country worried. Premier Wen Jiaboa said at a National People's
Congress in March of this year that the economy is "unstable, unbalanced,
uncoordinated and unsustainable." Can you imagine what would happen if President
Bush or any leader of a western country said such a thing?
How did China get to such a place? Let's review. The Chinese pegged their
currency to the dollar in the mid-90's, and after the Asian crisis in 1997-98
the concern among many economists was that the Yuan was heavily overvalued. That
has obviously changed.
Is It Time for the Yuan to Rise?
Even though China has allowed the currency to rise against the dollar in the
past few years, in trade weighted terms, the Yuan has actually fallen by about
10% since 2001 on the back of the fall in the dollar. China has become even more
competitive. And that competitiveness is fueling its growth. Let's look at a
chart and some quotes from one of my favorite sources, Bank Credit Analyst.

This undervaluation "has fueled China's economic boom: China's exports have shot
up massively, its current account has exploded upwards and its official reserve
accumulation has sky-rocketed. Chinese manufacturers, aided by a
super-competitive currency, have rapidly gained market share around the world.
Chinese exports as a share of global trade was less than 3% in 1997. Today' it
is close to 9%." (Bank Credit Analyst)
And BCA estimates that the Yuan is about 20% undervalued, based up purchasing
power parity on consumer prices. But the less scientific and always interesting
Big Mac Index suggests the number would be more than half overvalued by 56%.

A Tough Choice for China
There is a rule in economics. Central banks can control the value of their
currency or the level of interest rates, but not both. You have to make a
choice. China has chosen to control their currency against the dollar, but that
means that interest rates are way too low. Real interest rates on bank loans are
only 4% with real GDP at 11%. These low real rates are part of the cause of
speculation and capital spending. If they allowed or forced rates to rise in
order to help moderate growth and speculation, it would create even more demand
for Yuan. As BCA notes, "The Chinese central bank is trying to achieve the
impossible by suppressing both the Yuan and interest rates. The potential
consequences of this policy are a rapid build-up in economic and financial
distortions, a misallocation of resources and even a return of regulation on
capital account movements."
Let's be clear. The politicians in Congress are right. China does have a huge
advantage because of it lower currency policy. But the problem is a two way
problem, and not just the fault of China. The US is the enabler in our
co-dependent relationship. We continue to borrow and spend and consume. We do
not save enough on our own to finance our own spending. We run a fiscal deficit
which must be financed from abroad. Congress seems to think a weak currency is
good policy for the US, but bad when the Chinese want to do it.
The solution is simply that we should be patient because the Chinese are going
to have to deal with the problems that the policy is creating for themselves.
Chen Zhao at BCA convincingly writes that the Chinese should float their
currency now, and his arguments, or something like them, are certainly being
discussed among Chinese authorities. If the Chinese do not get their runaway
economy and misallocation of assets under control, they run the risk of a series
of massive bubbles. Chen argues that:
"All of these economic problems suggest it is high time for the Chinese
government to take bold steps to float the Chinese Yuan. Needless to say, there
are legitimate concerns over the potentially negative impact a revaluation will
have on Chinese manufacturers, but there are many major positives that will come
with a freely floating Yuan.
"First, the authorities should not underestimate the ability of Chinese
manufacturers to absorb the impact of a stronger currency. During the Asian
crisis, the Chinese Yuan was revalued by over 30% overnight because of the
wholesale collapse in other Asian currencies. Chinese exporters not only
survived the shock but also thrived.
"Today, we have a much stronger world economy than in 1998, and therefore a
better environment to help Chinese manufacturers overcome the short term
difficulties. It is also wrong to believe that a stronger Chinese currency
always works against Chinese manufacturers. In fact, a revalued Chinese currency
would lower import costs of raw materials, helping manufacturers preserve profit
margins.
"Second, by floating the currency the foreign exchange market could help the
Chinese central bank tighten liquidity expansion - a necessary move to contain
asset bubbles and reduce the speed of economic expansion. By moving to a
floating exchange-rate regime, the Chinese central bank will regain its ability
to adjust interest rates to appropriate levels. This will not only help pave the
way to liberalizing the financial system, but it will also stem any further
misallocation of resources.
"Third, the Chinese have saved too much and consumed too little, creating a
burgeoning current account. A strong currency will help the Chinese reduce
excess savings by promoting consumption while discouraging net exports. This
would be a healthy shift in China's growth orientation, which would also reduce
trade tensions with the U.S.
"Finally, the Chinese government has a fear over floating the Chinese currency:
The authorities have long been frightened by the prospect of an exodus of hard
currencies, leading to a depletion of reserves and a currency crisis. However,
the Chinese government should realize that circumstances have changed
dramatically from the 1980s and 1990s.
"The headache today is that China has too much reserves and the government is
trying to find ways to encourage capital outflows. In the meantime, China has
been a huge net creditor, and its foreign debt is minimal. There is no risk of a
currency crisis in China by making the Yuan a freely traded currency."
While I do not think we will wake up and find the gradualist Chinese simply
announce a fully floating currency, I do think they will allow the Yuan to rise
at an ever faster rate. It is entirely possible that the 20% overvaluation that
BCA suggests could melt away in 3-4 years. But before we start cheering that
result let's look at some of the consequences. There is, as they say, the
potential for collateral damage (pun intended).
If they are not pegging the dollar that would allow the Chinese to shift their
reserves assets into currencies that they KNOW are going to outperform the
dollar because of their own actions. It is clear that part of the conundrum of
lower long term interest rates is in part answered by massive foreign central
bank investment into dollars. If that starts to go away, you will also see the
conundrum of lower rates go away as well.
And that policy may in fact be happening as I write. Greg Weldon, on of my
favorite purveyors of all things financial, offers us some interesting insight
into the Treasury International Capital (TIC) data released Friday morning. He
looked into some of the details that have to raise some eyebrows this weekend.
It explains why stocks and US equities are soaring and US Treasury bonds are
under such severe pressure. Let's look at the TIC data from Greg
(www.weldononline.com)
"*Total Net Foreign Purchases of Agencies ... $36.12 billion, more than double
March's $15.14 billion, and FAR MORE than $2.43 bln in Feb.
"*Total Net Foreign Purchases of Equities ... $27.42 billion, more than three
times the March total of $8.77 billion, and more than twice February's $12.39
billion.
"*Total Net Foreign Purchases of Corporate Bonds ... $33.53 billion, and while
less than in March of February, the three-month cumulative total is a
mind-blowing $124.24 billion.
"Between Agencies, Corporate Bonds, and Equities, foreigners made net cumulative
purchases of $97.07 billion during the month of April. With that figure in mind,
nearly $100 billion, we note:
"Total Net Foreign Purchases of US Treasuries ... $ 0.376 billion Yes, less than
$400 million, or, less than HALF A BILLION. Out of $97.4 billion in "Net
Domestic Securities Purchased", US Treasury paper constituted ONLY four-tenths
of one percent of the total.
"There is NO fear. There is only excess USD liquidity that is flowing into
everything EXCEPT the "low risk, flight-to-safety' sector ... the US Treasury
market. Moreover, "Official Foreign Institutions" (ie: global central banks)
were net BUYERS ... meaning ... private foreign institutions and investors were
actually DUMPING US BONDS, and reallocating more heavily into equity purchases."
There is no reason to think this has stopped. It is driving the markets, raising
both stocks and interest rates. And then Greg brings us to the point that is
germane to our discussion on China. I haven't seen anyone else note this, which
is one of the reasons Greg is a must read for me. He finds these details.
"MORE problematic ... and something NO ONE seems to be talking about, China
REDUCED their holdings of US Treasuries. Again ... the Chinese Central Bank
DUMPED US Bonds in April. Note:
"Chinese Holdings of US Treasury Bonds ... $414.0 billion, DOWN (-) $5.9 billion
in the month, falling from $419.8 billion.
"Again, we magnify the point ... China sold 1.5% of their UST holdings. Bottom
Line: the management of Chinese USD reserves (not to mention Korea, an active
're-allocator"), are helping reflate asset markets, and helping push US bond
yields higher."
Hmm. The Chinese sell $6 billion in Treasuries and spend $3 billion to buy 10%
of Blackstone. Kind of makes you wonder where the value is? Would I rather have
a dollar in Blackstone (at Pre-IPO prices) or a dollar in US treasuries? Beijing
is making a statement. Some sane heads in Congress should pay attention.
I do not think China will make a massive "all-at-once" shift away from US
treasuries. But they could certainly continue to re-deploy assets away from US
treasuries. And they will likely be accompanied by other smaller central banks
with large reserves as well. We could see some serious pressure on US
government bond interest rates.
And it is interesting to note that the growth in Chinese exports was in large
part delivered because of European markets. Europe is the new customer for
China, and it makes sense then that they increase their euro holdings. But that
is not dollar or interest rate bullish
Inflation is in the Eye of the Beholder
A quick note on the inflation data that was released today. How you looked at it
depends on what you wanted to see. Core inflation was rounded down from 0.149%
to 0.1% in the headlines. The market saw that lower than expected number and
soared. Part of the reason for the lower number is Owners' Equivalent Rent,
which is over 30% of the core inflation number. With all the homes for sale that
are not selling, it is clear that owners are starting to rent them in order to
get some cash flow, and that is putting pressure on rent prices. Thus core
inflation was up only 2.2% over the last 12 months, and is clearly moderating as
the economy is slowing.
However, if you looked at total inflation, the number was higher, at 2.7% year
over year. Food and Beverage was up 3.9% and energy was up 4.7%. During the
first five months of 2007, CPI rose at 5.5% on a seasonally adjusted annual rate
(SAAR).
This compares with an increase of 2.5% for all of 2006. The acceleration thus
far this year was due to larger increases in the energy and food components. The
index for energy advanced at a 36.0% SAAR in the first five months of 2007
compared with 2.9% in 2006. Petroleum-based energy costs increased at a 63.9%
annual rate and charges for energy services rose at a 6.8% annual rate. The food
index has increased at a 6.2% SAAR thus far this year, following a 2.1% rise for
all of 2006. Excluding food and energy, the CPI-U advanced at a 2.1% SAAR in the
first five months, following a 2.6% rise for all of 2006.
The real question is can you credibly ignore rising food and energy inflation if
you are a voting member of the Federal Reserve committee. I think not. And if
China allows their currency to rise, that means we will be paying more for their
goods, which is inflationary. It will also allow the countries that compete with
them for the US market to allow their currencies to rise, which will mean
inflation across the board for a lot of goods.
The prospect of rising interest rates and stubborn inflation, and a Fed that
cannot credibly cut rates for a lot longer than the market thinks is very real.
Senators, be careful for what you wish. We just may get it good and hard.
Summer Time and the Living is Easy
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Securities LLC, member NASD.)
This Sunday is Father's Day, and the kids are gathering. I will have all seven
and a spouse and significant other around for the weekend. I am lucky in that
they have not scattered to the four winds as yet, although Amanda will go to the
Czech Republic to work as a cheerleading coach for a few weeks this summer. I
know I need to enjoy these times when we get together, for as the kids get
older, it is not clear they will stay near Dad and getting the whole group
together will be harder.
This weekend the Rangers and the Cincinnati Reds will play three games. It is a
kind of reverse World Series, as the Loser gets to be officially dubbed the
worst team in baseball. I think we have an unfair advantage to garner that
title, as our pitching is literally the worst in the history of baseball. But
even given that, I will have some friends out to watch a few games next week
against the Chicago Cubs.
I enjoyed Europe. Thanks to so many of you who hosted me. It was my first time
in Barcelona, and I really loved the city. I want to go back there, as well as
spend more time in Edinburgh and Scotland. Late this summer I have to go to
Denmark, and am seriously thinking about taking a vacation somewhere in northern
Europe as well after speaking at a conference sponsored by Jyske Bank. We'll see
what time allows. I have read about so many places in International Living that
I want to visit. So many countries, so little time. (You can get your own
subscription at by
clicking here).
Have a great weekend, and enjoy your friends and family.
Your missing his own Dad a lot analyst,
 John Mauldin
John@FrontlineThoughts.com
Copyright 2010 John Mauldin. All Rights Reserved
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