Look at the spiral Greece has fallen into: 20.5% of Greece's 11M people are over 65 (and there are currently 400,000 new pension applications on hold due to Government cutbacks) while, because of the austerity measures being undertaken to pay off debts, 50% of the youths in the country (16-24) are unemployed – meaning they can't contribute to the pension system. It's not like Greek pensions are generous, either, with half of them below the poverty limit of $775/month. In fact Greece's (EL on this chart) spending per beneficiary is in the low middle of the EU pack:
If you have been reading us this month, you know we're short the China ETF (FXI) and you know why, so I'm not going to rehash it all here (see: "Greece and China Race to Default" or "China Stocks Drop 6.5% Yet the MSM is Silent?"). China is only better off than Greece in that they get to print their own money and make up their own economic statistics without the fear of being audited (it was an audit of Goldman Sach's cooked books that began the Greek crisis). That means China has less chance of having their backs placed against the wall than Greece but that doesn't mean that, like fellow BRIC nations Brazil and Russia, investors won't simply lose confidence in what is more and more obviously an unsustainable system.
Since last June, the Chinese markets have gained $6Tn (150%) in PRICE
(not value!) as margin debt climbed from $100Bn to $358Bn (250%).
Meanwhile, net inflows of cash into the Chinese markets were just
$200Bn. $200Bn + $358Bn is not $6,000Bn is it? Not to mention that the
MAJORITY of this money is coming through via asset funds that are
loaded with completely junk stocks that few self-respecting US firms
would touch.
“There’s definitely a ceiling on margin-lending,”said Wu Kan, fund manager at Dragon Life Insurance Co., which oversees about $3.3 billion. “Once
leveraged investors begin to cut their holdings, it means they’ve
turned cautious on the market and that will probably spark a correction.”
With so much borrowed money at stake, market downturns run the risk of snowballing as traders are forced to sell shares to meet margin calls. The Shanghai already dropped 6.6% in a single day on 5/28 when one brokerage upped margin requirements and 7.7% on 1/9 when regulators suspended new margin accounts (which they quickly backed off on).
The China Securities Regulatory Commission is planning to curb the amount of margin finance and short selling to no more than four times a brokerage’s net capital, according to draft rules posted on its website June 12th. There is currently no ceiling. In 2008, the Shanghai composite fell 70% in 10 months but, at the time, that "only" cost investors $1.6Tn out of $2.5Tn yet still the whole World fell apart. What happens if we drop $7Tn now?
That's because the PRICE of the stock market is based on what the last person paid – not what everyone paid. Just because the last person paid $10Tn (current market cap for China) doesn't mean the next person will. In fact, now you need $150% more inflows and debt ($1.4Tn) to maintain this pace and, just to SUSTAIN the current level, you need to find another $750Bn in cash and debt because we're beginning this period at the top of the range vs $558Bn being the average of the previous range.
With so much borrowed money at stake, market downturns run the risk of snowballing as traders are forced to sell shares to meet margin calls. The Shanghai already dropped 6.6% in a single day on 5/28 when one brokerage upped margin requirements and 7.7% on 1/9 when regulators suspended new margin accounts (which they quickly backed off on).
The China Securities Regulatory Commission is planning to curb the amount of margin finance and short selling to no more than four times a brokerage’s net capital, according to draft rules posted on its website June 12th. There is currently no ceiling. In 2008, the Shanghai composite fell 70% in 10 months but, at the time, that "only" cost investors $1.6Tn out of $2.5Tn yet still the whole World fell apart. What happens if we drop $7Tn now?
This morning there was no additional stimulus from China (something
that was expected going into the weekend) and the Chinese markets fell
2% into the close. Most notably, Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Ltd.
lost 3 percent amid disappointment authorities didn’t make an
announcement on the city’s stock link with Shenzhen as had been
speculated. That has been one of the key drivers of the recent rally in
mainland shares – theoretical access to International money through Hong
Kong.
Will International buyers be dumb enough to push money into the
Chinese markets just because the exchanges open up and even though China
is clearly in a bubble. LOL – do you really have to ask?
Meanwhile, in May, Chinese company insiders(senior executives or their relatives) sold a combined 1.68BN shares, tripling April's total - much more than in each of the previous months of this year, according to data compiled by Reuters. It's not just company management who are selling; major cornerstone investors, freed from mandated lock-up periods, are also reducing their stakes. Cornerstone stakeholders slashed 109Bn Yuan ($18Bn) worth of China-listed shares in May, double the amount sold during the previous month, according to data from Southwest Securities.
Rats are leaving the ship, folks – are you just watching it happen from your first-class cabin windows?
Read in tallmarkets
Meanwhile, in May, Chinese company insiders(senior executives or their relatives) sold a combined 1.68BN shares, tripling April's total - much more than in each of the previous months of this year, according to data compiled by Reuters. It's not just company management who are selling; major cornerstone investors, freed from mandated lock-up periods, are also reducing their stakes. Cornerstone stakeholders slashed 109Bn Yuan ($18Bn) worth of China-listed shares in May, double the amount sold during the previous month, according to data from Southwest Securities.
Rats are leaving the ship, folks – are you just watching it happen from your first-class cabin windows?
Read in tallmarkets
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