China RMB Devaluation 2016

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1 China RMB Devaluation Likely in 2016 China is in the acute phase of a deleveraging process that is causing remarkable volatility across financial markets. China must make hard decisions to avoid crisis and move onto the second, more benign, phase. China’s debt binge has been well documented and now the inevitable deleveraging occurring. Much like the US in 2008, China now faces tough choices. The political leaders in Beijing must engineer a deleveraging either through recapitalization, currency devaluation, economic growth, or outright default. The probability of outright default is quite low. China has enough resources to absorb much of the bad debt, while a default risks political and social unrest. It is doubtful that the Chinese leadership would choose this path. Choosing default, as the solution to its debt problem is a last resort, it’s possible but not probable. The next least likely solution is engineering economic growth. The debt buildup since 2008 created tremendous excess capacity in virtually all economic sectors. Ghost cities and zombie factories are a few of the observable outcomes of this excess capacity. The economic impact of excess capacity is stagnation at best and recession at worst. Therefore, the probability of another China growth miracle is also quite low. Over the last year, the Chinese government attempted and failed to jumpstart its public equity markets. The plan was to fashion a vibrant equity market that debt-laden firms could use to recapitalize via IPO’s. The debt burden would have been shifted from corporations to equity holders. Alas, the only thing that Chinese leaders were able to generate was a stock market bubble and subsequent crash. In order to halt the crash, officials were forced to suspend IPO’s. In effect, this has shut the stock market to February 7, 2016 BKCM LLC 340 Madison Ave New York, NY 10173 212-220-9249 China has at most 5 months before a currency crisis. China’s FX reserves are inadequate relative to the size of its economy. China reached a “Minsky Moment” in 2014 that could keep the asset prices depressed until 2019. We expect a devaluation of the RMB on the order of 25%+ in 2016.

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China has at most 5 months before a currency crisis.China’s FX reserves are inadequate relative to the size of its economy.China reached a “Minsky Moment” in 2014 that could keep the asset prices depressed until 2019.Expect a devaluation of the RMB on the order of 25%+ in 2016.

Transcript of China RMB Devaluation 2016

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ChinaRMBDevaluationLikelyin2016

China is in the acute phase of a deleveraging process that is causingremarkable volatility across financial markets. China must make harddecisionstoavoidcrisisandmoveontothesecond,morebenign,phase.China’s debt binge has been well documented and now the inevitabledeleveragingoccurring.MuchliketheUSin2008,Chinanowfacestoughchoices. The political leaders in Beijing must engineer a deleveragingeitherthroughrecapitalization,currencydevaluation,economicgrowth,oroutrightdefault.The probability of outright default is quite low. China has enoughresources to absorbmuchof thebaddebt,while adefault riskspoliticalandsocialunrest.ItisdoubtfulthattheChineseleadershipwouldchoosethis path. Choosing default, as the solution to its debt problem is a lastresort,it’spossiblebutnotprobable.The next least likely solution is engineering economic growth. The debtbuildup since 2008 created tremendous excess capacity in virtually alleconomic sectors. Ghost cities and zombie factories are a few of theobservable outcomes of this excess capacity. The economic impact ofexcesscapacityisstagnationatbestandrecessionatworst.Therefore,theprobabilityofanotherChinagrowthmiracleisalsoquitelow.Over the last year, the Chinese government attempted and failed tojumpstart its public equitymarkets. The plan was to fashion a vibrantequitymarketthatdebt-ladenfirmscouldusetorecapitalizeviaIPO’s.Thedebtburdenwouldhavebeenshiftedfromcorporationstoequityholders.Alas,theonlythingthatChineseleaderswereabletogeneratewasastockmarketbubbleandsubsequentcrash. Inordertohaltthecrash,officialswereforcedtosuspendIPO’s. Ineffect,thishasshutthestockmarketto

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BKCMLLC340MadisonAveNewYork,NY10173212-220-9249 • Chinahasatmost5monthsbeforeacurrencycrisis.

• China’sFXreservesareinadequaterelativetothesizeofitseconomy.

• Chinareacheda“MinskyMoment”in2014thatcouldkeeptheassetpricesdepresseduntil2019.

• WeexpectadevaluationoftheRMBontheorderof25%+in2016.

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anyfirmlookingtorecapitalize.CurrencydevaluationisChina’slastandonlyrealisticchoice,inourview.Acurrencydevaluationof25%wouldstimulateexportgrowthandfosterinflationthatcouldeasethedeleveragingprocess.Ofcourseadevaluationofthismagnitudewouldsendshockwavesthroughfinancialmarkets,butinthemediumtolongrunitappearstobethemostprobablepath.Ontheotherhand,thereisalong-termargumentforastrongercurrency,especially as China shifts toward consumption. A stronger Chinesecurrencywould giveChinese citizensmorepurchasingpower that couldincreaseconsumptionof foreigngoods. Inourview, it is thiscompetingargumentthathascausedChinatocommitamonetarypolicyerror.The competing arguments on the proper direction of the Yuan, coupledwithcapitalflighthaveforcedChinatodefenditscurrency.BydefendingitscurrencyChinaisactuallyconductingquantitativetightening(QT)andthiscontractionarypolicyhascreatedanuglydeflationarydeleveraging.Theterm“uglydeleveraging”wascoinedbyRayDalioofBridgewaterandin our view accurately describes the current situation. In an uglydeflationary deleveraging very few asset classes do well, typicallycommoditiesandequitiesfallwhilebondsrise.Youmay be asking yourself why Chinamatters to the US stockmarket.AfteralltheUSisarelativelyclosedeconomythatgenerallybenefitsfromthedeflationaryforcescurrentlyswirlingaroundtheworld.Chinamattersto investorsbecausemostof thecompanies in theS&P500havegrowthmodelsthatcenteronChina.Inarecentreport,OlegMelentyevofDeutscheBank, laidouta fewstatsabouttheimportanceofChinatotheglobaleconomy:

Smartphones:70%ofallsalesarecomingoutsideofNorthAmericaandEurope,45%aresoldinBRICscountries;Bigpharma:43%ofsalesareoutsideofUS/EU/Japan;Education–alongwithtravelandthusretail–contributes1/4toallUSservices exports, the single-largest line-item; 62% of all internationalstudentsintheUSarecomingfromChina;Social media – Facebook, Google and Twitter receive about 1/3rd oftheiradrevenuefromEMcountries;Media – themovie industry only breaks out international sales,which

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are65%oftotal–butit’sreasonabletoassumethatthisbeingasmall-ticketitem,theproportionofEMsalesherecouldbeclosetoEMshareofworldpopulation,whichis85%.Mostofthesegoodsandservicessoldinternationallydonotregisterasexports from the US as they are assembled/provided, delivered, andbooked by non-US subsidiaries of multinational corporations. As anobvious example, if all such revenueswere booked as exports, Apple’ssales in China alone would account for 1/2 of all US exports to thatcountry,servicesincluded!

ThefeedbackloopbetweenChinaandUScorporationsisstrongerthananaïve analysis of direct exportswould suggest. In the first fewweeks ofJanuary,USinvestorsdirectlyexperiencedthepowerofthisfeedbackloop.Chinaisonthevergeofitsown“2008”moment.Chinahasachoice;intheshort termitmustabandon itsdesire forreservecurrencystatusand itsplan to boost consumption through increased purchasing power. Theseareadmirablegoals,butbettersuitedforafterthedeleveragingprocess.IfChinadoesnotmake thedevaluationchoice it risksa crisis that couldtakeyearstoresolve.DuringsimilarexperiencesittooktheUS2yearsin2007-2009 and 1930-1932 before it moved to the second stage of thedeleveraging. Japanalsooffersacautionaryexampleofaneconomythatprolongeditsdeleveragingandsufferedlostdecades.UntilChinaaddresses itsdebtproblemtheglobaleconomywillcontinuetoslowandfinancialmarketswillcontinuetoremainvolatile. Thereisapath forward, but recent policy mistakes make it unclear if China willchoosewisely.Asthisprocessunfolds,investorsneedtoexerciseextremecaution.

China’sMinskyMoment“…Itcanbeshownthatifhedgefinancingdominates,thentheeconomymaywell be an equilibrium-seeking and containing system. In contrast, thegreater the weight of speculative and Ponzi finance, the greater thelikelihoodthattheeconomyisadeviationamplifyingsystem.” -HymanMinskyMinsky’s analysis of credit cycles accurately describes the boom-bustperiods experienced by virtually all economies over time. A “MinskyCycle” reaches its climax when corporations or governments begin toborrowmoneytopayinterestonexistingloans,thisistheso-calledPonzi

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Financestage.Whenthismomentarrivestheprobabilityofarapiddeclineinassetpricesandeconomiccollapseincreases.

The“MinskyCycle”chartaboveillustratesthevariousphasesofthecreditboom and bust cycle. The “Minsky Moment” is preceded by the PonziFinancestagewhennewdebtisusedtopayinterestonexistingloans.HuaChuangSecuritiesestimatesthat45%ofnewloansinChinaarebeingused topay interest on existingdebt. Moreover, inNovember2015 theheadoffixedincomeforPingAnSecuritiessaid,“SomeChinesefirmshaveentered the Ponzi stage because return on investment has come downveryfast.”

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InourviewChinareachedthepeakoftheMinskyCycleforrealestatein2014andisnowfacingtheinevitabledecline.

We have overlaid the stylizedMinsky Cycle on the percentage change nprices fornewlybuilthomes inChina. Fromthisperspective itbecomesclear that aMinskyMomentwas reached in 2014. Investorsmust nowdecide if the recent uptick in home prices represents a pause in thedowntrendorthebottomofthehomepricedecline.GiventhecontinuedeffortbyChineseleadershiptorestraincreditgrowth,our view is that the increase is a pause and the downtrend shouldcontinue.AddingtoourconvictionisthecontractionarymonetarypolicypursuedbythePBoCinordertodefendthecurrency.Using theUnited States experience during the housing crisiswe can seethathousingpriceshadmultiplefalsedawns.

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The Minsky Moment for the United States was likely to have occurredduring2007,yetitwasnotuntil2012thatUShomepricesbegantoclimb.This is despite an unprecedented expansion of money supply by theFederalReserve.Ifour2014estimateofaChineseMinskyMomentprovestobecorrectwewouldexpectthedeleveragingcycleinChinatolastuntil2019.

ChinaDeleveragingEconomist Hyon Song Shin has dubbed the global credit bubble the“SecondStageofGlobal Liquidity”. In a2013 speech, Shinpresented thefollowing chartsusingBISdata that showamarkedaccelerationofdebtissuancebyleadingemergingmarketeconomiessince2010.

ThistrendhasbeenechoedbytheBIS intworeportsthatconcludedtheamountofglobaldebthasincreasedby50%since2010from$6trillionto$9trillion.Mostimportantly,China’scontributiontothisdebtbuildinghas

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increasedalmostfive-foldsince2009.

CapitalReservesInadequateThe refrain from investors who do not believe currency devaluation islikelyornecessaryisthatChinahasamassedthelargestforeignexchangereservesintheworld. Whilethisistrue,itisnottheabsolutesizeofthereservesthatmatter,itistherelativesize.There are twoways to determine the adequacy of the foreign exchangereserves:1)asapercentageofmoneysupply2) IMFReservesAdequacyEquation.AccordingtothemostrecentdatafromthePBoC,China’sFXreservesare$3.23 trillion (or 21.2 trillionRMB). Themajority of these reserves areheld inUS Treasury securitieswithmaturity of 5 years or less. China’smoneysupply(asmeasuredbyM2)hasbeengrowingat13%forthelastfewmonthsandcurrentlystandsat136trillionRMB.AsapercentageofM2, Chinese FX reserves are at 15%, the lowest level since 2004. As acomparison during the Asian Currency Crisis of 1997-1998 the AsianTigershadreservesthatwere30%+ofM2.

By thismeasureChina’s currency reservesareatdangerously low levelsrelative to the sizeof its economyandmoney supply. Moreover, capitalflightislikelytoacceleratethedepletionofreserves.TheIMFReserveAdequacyformulaalsosuggeststhatChinaisperilouslyclose toacurrencycrisis. According to the IMFChinaneedsabout$2.7trilliontooperateitseconomy.

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ThismeansthatChinahasabout$500billionbeforeithitstheminimumlevel of reserves suggested by the IMF. This level of reserve adequacyplacesChinaamongtheworstinemergingmarketswithonlySouthAfrica,CzechRepublic,andTurkeywithlowerscores

The following chart compares the weakness in the South African Rand,CzechKoruna,TurkishLiraandtheRMB.

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Since January 2014, the Rand has depreciated by 56%; the Koruna by20%; and the Lira by 35%, while the RMB has only fallen 8%. TheimplicationisthatonarelativebasisthereisroomfortheRMBtofallbyanother10-50%.

In2015,itisestimatedthatChineseFXreservesdeclinedby$1trillion,orabout $83b per month. The most recent official data from the PBoCpeggedJanuary2016outflowat$99.5b.Inanefforttobeprudentandconservativeweusetheaverageof$83bpermonth of outflows. Based on this level of outflows, China has about 7months before it effectively runs out of reserves. As the level of excessreserve approaches $3 trillionwewould expect the outflows to becomenon-linear.Therefore,theamountoftimebeforeChinaeffectivelydepletesitsreservesisprobablycloserto5months.It is not unreasonable to expect further capital flight even if Chinamanagestoengineerasoftlanding.Chinesecitizensareallowedtomoveamaximumof$50,000peryearfromChina.If5%ofChina’s1.3bpopulationdecidedtomovethisamountitwouldcompletelydepletethe$3.2trillionin reserves. Even more striking is that it would only take 1% of thepopulationoptingtosendthemaximumof$50,000outofChinatodepleteits$600bcushionbeforeitshitstheIMF’slowerbound.

DevaluationistheOnlyOptionTherearetwooptionsbesidesdevaluationthatChinamayuseorthatthemarketmaybecountingon:capitalcontrolsandSDRreservereallocation.In our view, neither of these will be enough for China to avoid adevaluation.

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Chinacurrentlyhascapitalcontrolsthatarefamouslyporous. WewouldexpectChinatousecapitalcontrolsasafirstlineofdefenseasFXreservescontinue to be depleted. However,we do not expect capital controls tostemtheoutflow.AsanexporteconomytherearemanyopportunitiesforChinese companies and citizens to continue to use techniques like over-invoicingtosendcapitaloutofChina.Thesecond“hope”forChinaisforeignbuyingoftheRMBwhenitformallyenters the SDR in October 2016. Many have suggested that reservemanagerswillbuyRMBinordertobetteralignFXreserveswiththeratiosoftheSDRbasket.Itiscriticaltonote,thatSDRinclusiondoesnotrequirereserve managers to reallocate into RMB. Given the widespreadexpectation for continued RMB devaluation, it is unlikely that reservemanagerswillopttobuyRMBbeforedevaluation.Fromourperch, theonlyoptionChinahas isdevaluationandwewouldrecommendChinadevaluesoonerthanlater. Thelongertheywaittoactthe more disruption will occur. As well, with $3.23 trillion in reservesChinawouldexperienceawindfallprofitfromaone-off25%+devaluation.Previousepisodesofdeleveragingsuggestthat25%+devaluationislikelyandneededtoreducethedebtburden.Thefollowingtableshowspreviousdeleveragingperiodsand thecurrencydevaluationduring thatperiodoftime.WeexpectthatalargeRMBdevaluationcouldoccurin2016andwehavepositionedourselvesaccordingly.

DeleveragingPeriod CurrencyDevaluation

UnitedStates1930-1937 40% devaluation after peg togoldbroken

UnitedKingdom1949 Bank of England devalued by30%inSeptember1949

Thailand1997-1997 40%devaluationSouthKorea1997-1998 34%devaluationIndonesia1997-1998 83%devaluationUnitedStates2008 40%devaluationafterQE