China: Danger signs looming for Oz?
We have previously written about J. Kyle Bass. He is the founder and principal of Hayman Capital Management, L.P., a Dallas-based hedge fund. According to Wikipedia, “Bass became well-known after successfully predicting and benefitting from the subprime mortgage crisis by purchasing credit default swaps on subprime securities issued by various investment banks (similar to shorting the bonds).”
He then parlayed the billions he made from the US financial crisis into a bet against Europe, which again proved profitable.
“Bass has since continued to attract media attention for his prediction of the European sovereign-debt crisis and his expectations regarding the economic future of Japan and Argentina.”
He also is making a big bet buying the bonds of Australia, Canada, New Zealand and Brazil – countries that will be affected negatively by a China slow-down, which he describes as inevitable.
This view reflects that of several others including Bridgewater Associates who point, more generally, to the unsustainability of credit growth above income growth.
At 34:20 in this video, Mr Bass mentions he believes China is slowing down much faster than everyone thinks. Notwithstanding the fact that slowing GDP growth to 5 per cent means regime change in China and therefore the president Xi Jinping may dial-up growth again to save his job, when you look at their import and export data they don’t reconcile with the accounts of their trading partners. They are slowing rapidly and that’s why iron ore prices are falling.
For Australian investors, don’t be too early to buy ‘value’ in resource companies and contractors.
It’s also worth noting his beginning comments about a disorderly unwinding of QE in the US. This would pose some risks for our stronger-for-longer stock market thesis.
Peter Murphy
:
Hi Roger, Kyle makes a compelling case for a weakening and possible collapse of the Japanese yen due to the Abenomics program recently launched combined with the largest government debt/GDP ratio in the developed world. Another financial commentator from America named John Mauldin who writes a free weekly newsletter ( http://www.mauldineconomics.com/frontlinethoughts/a-yen-for-a-mortgage) has also been arguing the demise of the yen for a while citing similar reasons. I was just wondering what your personal thoughts were on the Japanese situation given that they now seem to heading the fastest down the QE path?
Roger Montgomery
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There appears to be only one scenario at the end of this movie…
benjamin.mentha
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The internal politics at the top of the CCP (the recent arrest of former security chief and politburo member Zhou Yongkang) would suggest all is not well. There appears to be two factions at the top, with Jiang Zemin’s faction (which favours economic growth at all costs) on the outer.