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China Situation

Apr 10, 2018

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  • 8/8/2019 China Situation

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    China: The Greatest Game

    Philip Blix, Kato Capital Management ([email protected]) July, 2009

    Background: China has been one of the greatest success stories of the last 30 years. The country has

    grown tremendously and wealth has increased materially. This growth has been built on the back of a

    massive investment program and a currency regime that has allowed China to become the worlds

    manufacturing hub.

    Thesis: 50% of Chinas GDP is made up of capital investment (capital formation or FAI). That strategy

    was effective when the economy and the exports were growing, however, as exports wind down and

    growth slows as a greater service economy takes hold, so should investment, thereby creating the

    possibility for negative GDP growth. However, the Chinese government is determined to maintain

    growth and output and so we find ourselves at a point when factories, houses and investments are

    being built at a pace that far exceed expected demand. As we move into 2010, the markets believe that

    this spending will increase and create even more overcapacity. Rolling that assumption forward, it

    becomes apparent that over time, the only way to maintain growth in the Chinese economy is to

    continuously increase fixed asset investment, FAI. This is unsustainable and a Ponzi scheme of the first

    order.

    Timing: The timing to take advantage of the trade is right now. Basically, in August or September it will

    become apparent that there are only two courses of action (1) a decrease in bank lending forcing 2010

    expectations of FAI to fall OR (2) an increase in deficit funded government spending of epic proportions

    which will lead to (hyper)inflation. Either should have a negative effect on the stock market.

    Is there a way out? Yes. The Chinese consumer can step up and start consuming. Is that possible? No.

    Why now? Many people have noticed these issues in the past. I believe this is a good time to revisit the

    idea because:

    Bank loans accelerated during 4Q2008/2Q2009 to such a degree that it will be very difficult to

    repeat a further growth spurt from the current level and it will be more difficult to see increased

    fixed asset growth as loans start to taper off in July/August of 2009

    o The current level of FAI can no longer be supported by any rational business judgment

    and is adding capacity to industries where there is overcapacity and building buildings

    that nobody will possibly fill--driving deflation despite 25% Y/Y M2 growth

    The market has recovered around 1/2 of its decline from its 2007 peak which is a typical reversal

    point based on Elliot Wave type analysis. Valuations are also high relative to past periods and on

    an absolute basis. The Chinese market is now valued at 22x P/E and represents 50% of GDP a

    level twice that of the S&P vs. the U.S. GDP

    The external macro environment continues to be negative

    Consumers are neither ready nor able to offset the decline in FAI

    A reversal in GDP would be a surprise of the first order but is a logical extension of a fall in bank

    lending

    A failure to reign in credit expansion could easily become hyper-inflationary as M2 growth is in

    the 25% y/y area and the propagation mechanisms in China (relative to the US) are much more

    efficient

  • 8/8/2019 China Situation

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    Components of the Thesis:

    GDP Growth:

    Over the last decade China has produced stellar growth. The main component of the growth has been

    acceleration in FAI. Looking at the data, it is clear that in order to maintain GDP growth with FAI an ever

    increasing proportion of GDP (and GDP growth), growth will require ever increasing amounts of FAI. FAI

    is used to build long-life assets which will support the Chinese consumer over many years hence atsome point this will need to taper off as enough plants have been built to meet the burgeoning demand.

    Depending on the pace of deceleration, slowing FAI can very quickly turn Chinas GDP growth negative.

    GDP Development (Nominal RMB Billions)

    0

    5,000

    10,000

    15,000

    20,000

    25,000

    30,000

    35,000

    40,000

    2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009E 2010E

    GDP(RMB

    Billions)

    Trade Balance

    Investments

    Consumption

    Source: Citigroup

    It is clear from the yearly changes that the Chinese consumer has so far failed to offset decline in FAI

    through increased consumption and that as the economy grows and the FAI grows, the required stepchange for consumers will grow increasingly wide. This is why the economy will run into a wall I think

    its today, but maybe itll hold for a little longer. This increasing requirement to maintain investments is

    the key of the argument why this cannot last for example, think about what would happen in 2014 at

    current rates of growth?

    GDP Y/Y Change in RMB by Component

    Year GDP

    Consumption

    & Government Investments

    Trade

    Balance

    2001 1,022 525 467 20

    2002 1,138 574 650 143

    2003 1,605 554 1,019 (88)

    2004 2,388 880 1,300 208

    2005 2,841 1,157 1,222 463

    2006 3,296 1,271 1,417 830

    2007 4,144 1,809 1,519 595

    2008 4,377 2,145 2,452 87

    2009E 2,332 1,143 1,687 (804)

    2010E 3,632 1,413 2,404 (185)

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    Fixed Asset Investment and GDP Reversal

    A reversal of FAI could very quickly move GDP from positive territory to negative. At the extreme, this

    could lead to a 30% quarter-on-quarter decline. However, that kind of move is probably too dramatic.

    For example, if you let FAI decline by 20%, GDP would decline by 10%.

    Illustrative GDP Decline based on rapid FAI reversal

    GDP C I G X-M Q/Q Y/Y

    Q1 2009 5,745 2,155 2,340 750 500

    Q2 2009 8,995 2,230 5,500 765 500

    Q3 2009 9,289 2,308 5,700 780 500 3.3%

    Q4 2009 9,685 2,389 6,000 796 500 4.3%

    Q1 2010 5,785 2,473 2,000 812 500 -40.3% 0.7%

    Q2 2010 7,888 2,559 4,000 828 500 36.4% -12.3%

    Q3 2010 7,994 2,649 4,000 845 500 1.3% -13.9%

    Q4 2010 8,103 2,742 4,000 862 500 1.4% -16.3%

    In the following analysis, I assume that ALL of the investment in smelters and cyclicals is eitherstockpiling or used to fill working capital shortfalls (as a result of the export declines). This FAI demand

    could reverse quickly so it is not entirely unlikely to see a 10-20% drop in FAI in the third and fourth

    quarter of this year.

    FAI Based on Data through May from China Statistics Bureau

    2009/5 2008/5 2007/5 2006/5

    Mining and Washing of Coal 72.9 52.7 35.8 31.6

    Extraction of Petroleum and Natural Gas 69.7 63.2 54.0 43.8

    Mining and Processing of Ferrous Metal Ores 22.4 14.9 9.6 9.4

    Mining and Processing of Non-Ferrous Metal Ores 19.0 16.0 10.7 6.8

    Mining and Processing of Nonmetal Ores 15.1 9.1 10.7 5.0

    Mining of Other Ores 0.4 0.2 0.3 0.2

    Processing, Coking, Processing of Nuclear Fuel 52.3 52.8 31.7 26.0Manufacture of Chemical Material and Chemical Products 171.6 131.9 94.2 74.0

    Smelting and Pressing of Ferrous Metals 96.8 96.6 79.9 76.1

    Smelting and Pressing of Non-Ferrous Metals 63.8 49.8 35.8 26.3

    Manufacture of Metal Products 85.9 61.8 46.0 29.5

    Production and Supply of Electric and Heat Power 297.7 247.1 236.8 212.8

    Real Estate 1,211.9 1,075.4 802.8 619.1

    Total "Speculative" and non-productive assets 2,179.4 1,871.5 1,448.3 1,160.5

    Working Capital coverage

    Processing of Timber, Manufacture of Woo d, Bamboo, Rattan, Palm, and Straw Products 24 .0 - -

    Manufacture of Paper and Paper Products 36.7 - -

    Manufacture of Chemical Fibre 8.5 - -

    Manufacture of Rubber 19.7 - -

    Manufacture of Plastics 40.7 - -

    Manufacture of Non-Metallic Mineral Products 168.7 - -

    Manufacture of Electrical Machinery and Equipment 104.2 - -

    Manufacture of Communication Equipment, Computers and Other Electronic Equipment 71.1 - -

    Total "Working Capital" 473.6 - - -

    Total "Non-productive Fixed Asset Investment" 2,652.9 1,871.5 1,448.3 1,160.5

    Remaining Fixed Asset Investment 2,699.1 2,154.9 1,756.2 1,383.8

    Last Year Fixed Asset Investment 4,026.4 3,204.5 2,544.3 1,971.9

    Decrease in Productive Fixed Asset Investment -33.0% NM NM NM

    Change in Productive Fixed Asset Investment 25.3% 22.7% 26.9% NA

    Proportion "Speculative" 100% 75% 50% 25%

    Adjusted Series 2,652.9 2,622.8 2,480.3 2,254.2

    "Adjusted Productive Investment" 1.2% 5.7% 10.0% 14.3%

  • 8/8/2019 China Situation

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    Components of Fixed Asset Investment

    FAI can be grouped into real estate investment, government investment/spending and industrial

    construction/other. There are significant lags as well as policy initiatives which impact GDP development

    as well. However, over time it will be hard for a privatized property market as well as a publicly owned

    industrial base not to adjust their spending based on external factors rather than government strategy.

    Over the next 12 months, the majority of FAI spending is expected to come from property development

    and private enterprises as they ramp up spending on new plants.

    Both of these premises appear to be wrong-headed:

    1. Private enterprises, while needing to complete plants started in 2008, have not started

    significant projects so far in 2009 (and dont have cash flow for building). Based on the above

    analysis, private enterprise spending may even start to decline (which would be rational given

    the overcapacity)

    2. Unemployment is rising as utilization falls why would private enterprise start more projects in

    such an environment?

    3. There has been a rush to acquire land for property development however, land is only

    that it is a sunk cost until a project of some type has been built. We can observe that the

    construction index is significantly down

    4. Loans to fund construction through April did not grow in parity with overall loan growth

    Near-term Fixed Asset Investment Analysis

    H1 2009 H2 2009 H1 2010 H2 2010

    Property Investment 1.6 2.4 2.0 2.8

    Government Investment 2.0 3.2 2.2 3.3Industry and Other 3.8 5.9 6.6 7.1

    Total FAI 7.4 11.5 10.8 13.2

    Source: Deutsche Bank

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    The cadence of approved projects and bank lending suggests that (1) projects peaked in the 4Q 2008, (2)

    lending peaked in 4Q 2008/1Q 2009 and (3) project starts are peaking in 2Q 2009.

    Project Approval Cadence Bank Lending

    Project Starts Construction Indicators

    Despite a decline in starts, prices for real estate are not increasing in real terms.

    Prices and Sales Volume for Residential Real Estate

    Source: JP Morgan

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    Construction companies did not participate in taking out new loans through April, but may have seen a

    slight increase in June.

    Construction Indicators

    Source: JP Morgan

    Construction Workload Index

    Source: UBS

    Floor Space Completed

    Source: UBS

  • 8/8/2019 China Situation

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    The Chinese Consumer:

    It is clear that the consumer will have to pick up a very, very large piece of the decline in FAI in order to

    maintain GDP growth in the future. This level of spending increase equates to a tripling of the growth in

    consumer spending over the next three years while assuming even a relatively slow ramp-down of FAI.

    This is obviously a positive for the stock market. However, it may not be possible. The below chart

    illustrates this pointconsumer spending increasing as markedly as required to maintain growth is

    unrealistic at best.

    GDP Growth by Component

    Per Capita

    Year GDP

    Consumption

    & Government Investments

    Trade

    Balance Popul at ion GDP/Capita Consump.

    Change in

    Consum.

    2001 1,022 525 467 20 988 11,026 6,726 531

    2002 1,138 574 650 143 1,019 11,812 7,087 563

    2003 1,605 554 1,019 (88) 1,050 12,986 7,402 527

    2004 2,388 880 1,300 208 1,083 14,802 7,993 813

    2005 2,841 1,157 1,222 463 1,116 16,903 8,789 1,036

    2006 3,296 1,271 1,417 830 1,151 19,259 9,630 1,104

    2007 4,144 1,809 1,519 595 1,186 22,174 10,865 1,525

    2008 4,377 2,145 2,452 87 1,223 25,087 12,293 1,753

    2009E 2,266 1,110 1,656 (807) 1,261 26,132 12,805 881

    2010E 3,457 1,330 2,318 (191) 1,300 28,007 13,443 1,023

    2011E 4,005 4,751 (502) (244) 1,326 30,478 16,763 3,583

    2012E 4,446 4,239 73 133 1,353 33,167 19,569 3,134

    2013E 4,935 4,405 381 148 1,380 36,094 22,378 3,193

    Based on my analysis, the Chinese consumer accounts for 55% of GDP--a level that compares quite

    favorably to the debt-laden US consumer who currently accounts for 70% of GDP or so.

    If the Chinese economy was to rebalance and capital spending make up 15% of GDP versus the current

    50%, the consumer would have to become ~70% of the economy and require an entirely new

    infrastructure in terms of consumer lending and credit policy similar to the U.S. (e.g. subprime, credit

    cards etc). In addition, because the Chinese government subsidizes certain products through fixed price

    (e.g. fuel, food) the 55% including the government deficits today could be adjusted higher. This 55% also

    excludes many basic items which Western consumers spend money on such as healthcare and

    education. This will take a lot of time and the perception that the Chinese customer has a large portion

    of untapped spending power appears to be less clear than normally assumed.

    Even the savings rate argument appears flawed as the level of savings by Chinese retail depositors is

    only $2,500 per capita--well short of the U.S. where liquid net household wealth is significant.

    Chinese Consumption

    Current GDP 32,952Less: Investments at Current Rate (15,158)

    Less : Government (4,200)

    Private Consumption 13,594

    Implied Sustainable GDP 24,717

    Normalizing for 25% Investment

    and 20% Government

    Current Consumptio n as a % of Susta inable GDP 55.0%

    Increases Required in Private Consumption 14,726

    Implied Total Consumption as a % of GDP 71.8%

  • 8/8/2019 China Situation

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    Overcapacity within Industry and Property Markets

    The below is not a definitive study but points to some clear imbalances.

    Housing Market

    It is estimated that approximately 10% of property transactions are speculative and the livingarea per capita is very comparable to western standards. These facts suggest that the housing

    market is either overbuilt, or very fully built.

    Living Space Per Capita

    The average house price in China appears to be stretched assuming you adjust GDP for fixed

    assets (which cannot be used to pay rent). Basically, the below suggests that house prices

    equate to between 6-10x GDP/capita. The equivalent metric in the U.S. is around 5x.

    Living Space Per Capita

    Av. Living Av. Price/

    Price/m2 $ / sqft Area Price Adj. GDP

    Shanghai 11,000 144 330,000 48,316 10

    Beijing 5,900 77 177,000 25,915 6

    Chongquing 3,000 39 81,000 11,859 7

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    General Industrial

    Based on actual output it appears that the production index has gone from approximately 16-18 in

    2006/2007 to approximately 8-10 today. However, even though this is an almost 40% decline, Chinese

    industry has been aggressively expanding and utilization therefore (assuming some internal

    consumption growth) is more likely to be in the 50-60% range than the 80% needed in general to

    achieve mid-cycle profitability.

    Chinese Manufacturing Output

    Source: UBS

    Based on specific sector studies it is clear that there is more overcapacity in some of the basic industry

    sectors (as per Deutsche Bank).

    Overcapacity in Basic Industries

  • 8/8/2019 China Situation

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    Another indicator of real industrial demand is truck demand, down around 20% compared to 2009. This

    is one of the few vehicle categories which has not been influenced by government policy. .

    Heavy Truck Demand

    Transportation of industrial goods is similarly down pointing to even greater under-utilization within

    general industry.

    China Composite Freight Index

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    Sovereign Leverage

    There is a myth circulating that China is not levered. This appears to be fundamentally incorrect. Adding

    up the leverage at the bank level and debt issued by the central government, it is clear that there is

    significant leverage on the economy--the below table would suggest the level is somewhere between

    2.5x-4x. This compares to the 3.5x leverage on the U.S. which has most of the world up in arms. A

    historic sustainable range is around 1.2x 1.8x. The other part of argument goes that only external debt

    is important however, it appears that history does not bear this out (see Rogoff and Reinhart, 2008).

    That said, Im not suggesting China default only that it will realize its own constraints and therefore not

    be able to stimulate as aggressively as it is perceived to be able to. This analysis also hints at the idea

    that Chinese businesses have been increasing debt and eating losses while underbidding their

    Western counterparts while enjoying continuous support from a friendly banking system -- a scenario

    which has been suggested by Western business leaders for some time.

    Debt at Default

    (Rogoff and Reinhart, 2008)

    Chinese Leverage

    Bank Gov't

    Assets Statistics

    Total YE 2009 Loans 54,884 41,300 Total Assets of Largets Banks plus Loans made in 2009

    Government Debt 12,274 12,274 Assuming 40% of GDP (incl. Muni debt)

    Government 2009 Deficit 1,384 1,384 Government Deficit 2009

    Total YE 2009 Debt 68,542 54,958 Total Debt ( = assets of banking system and government debt)

    GDP 30,686 30,686 2008 GDP

    Debt / GDP 2.2x 1.3x Current Leverage

    GDP Less Investment 17,184 17,184 GDP = C + I + G + (X-M) so remove I you end up with less GDP

    Debt / GDP Less Investment 4.0x 2.4x

    Assuming Consumers L ever Up 152,193 138,609 Adds FAI through 2013 and increase in Consumption

    Pro Forma Debt / Sustained GDP 3.9x 3.5x

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    Sovereign Wealth Fund, Money Supply and Foreign Exchange

    Based on Chinas own 2008 statistical yearbook, the foreign exchange holdings of the country are

    represented as an asset on the balance sheet of the banking system an asset which is largely balanced

    by a similar amount of industrial deposits. Im not sufficiently knowledgeable about China bank matters

    to understand the whole picture but it appears to me that a portion of the deposits which the banks

    hold are actually part of the sterilization process for the USD/RMB peg. As a consequence of these F/X-

    related deposits, the oft-quoted statistics of (i) the Chinese savings rate and (ii) the solvency of banks

    based on deposits are therefore called into question.

    Chinese Bank Deposits

    The 55% consumption to adjusted GDP in combination with increases in consumer spending over the

    last few years could help explain why Chinese retail savings deposits are dipping -- which runs counter to

    the idea of large household savings which are just waiting to be deployed to offset declining FAI.

    Chinese Retail Bank Deposits

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    Flow of Funds from Sterilization

    It is unclear to me exactly how the sterilization works but suffice to say that if the national statistics

    are right and the funds flow as Ive surmised, then China is essentially running a giant hedge fund with

    treasuries on one side and deposits from companies on the other. The downside to this strategy would

    be that if the US were to rapidly debase its currency, the assets of the hedge fund would rapidly decline

    and increase the debt burden on China. Its not something China cant make up by printing additional

    money as printing is inflationary.

    -

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    Similarities with Japan in the 1980s

    There are some similarities to Japan where, clearly, a real estate bubble created the conditions for a

    debt deflation. It appears to me that China is not there however there are several charts pointing to

    certain similarities:

    Foreign Exchange and Lending

    Lending Ratios in Japan

    Lending Ratios in Japan

    Source: JP Morgan and UBS

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    Valuation Considerations

    Chinese stocks are valued above U.S. markets and represent a value of 0.7x GDP which rises to 1.5x if

    the FAI is excluded. On a book basis Chinese stocks appear to trade at 2.0x; however, assuming large

    parts of the books are tied up in PP&E that will never be used and bank loans that are likely to go bad

    the go forward book value is significantly less and the value correlates more closely to what the

    value/GDP ratios suggest (e.g. 4x or so).

    H-share Price / Book

    Source: Citi

    Value / GDP Comparison to USA

    $ trillion U.S. China

    GDP 14.0 4.5

    Stocks 7.0 3.0

    Stocks / GDP 0.5x 0.7x

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    Why now?

    1. Valuations are becoming stretched. According to Bloomberg the Shanghai index is trading at 22x

    P/E

    2. Project approvals peaked in 4Q2008, lending peaked in 1Q2009 and project starts are peaking

    right now which will result in a reversal in GDP growth which will need to be made up by

    consumption in Q3/Q4. The ability of the consumer to make up the shortfall will then berealized. As markets further look to 2010 I think they will come to realize that the FAI

    component will decline and that will trigger a realization that the game is up.

    3. Technicals of equity markets are more or less fully overbought and sentiment/belief in China is

    almost universal. RSI and MACD indicators are at overbought levels.

    Elliot Wave Analysis of Shanghai

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    Trend Indicators RSI

    Trend Indicators MACD