Too Much Liquidity |
By Bill Bonner |
Published
02/23/2007
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Stocks
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Unrated
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Too Much Liquidity
“Bubbles Brewing in Shanghai, Tokyo, and London,” writes Gary Dorsch, editor of the Global Money Trends newsletter.
We will hear the evidence in a moment, dear reader, but first we will render judgment: Too much liquidity.
“There is a bubble growing. Investors should be concerned about the risks,” said Cheng Siwei, vice-chairman of China’s National People’s Congress in a February 1st interview with the Financial Times. “But in a bull market, people will invest relatively irrationally. Every investor thinks they can win. But many will end up losing. But that is their risk and their choice,” Cheng warned.
The Shanghai Composite “A” share Index has gone up over 200% in the last 16 months. The market is limited to Chinese nationals, which just goes to show that the Chinese can be as silly as Americans.
“On the smaller Shenzhen market,” Dorsh continues, “three new IPO’s soared into orbit, suggesting that the Chinese stampede into stocks hasn’t run its course. Non-ferrous metals maker Yunnan Luoping Zinc soared to 30.94 yuan, triple its IPO price of 10.08 yuan. Zhejiang Sunwave Communications jumped to 19.65 yuan, double its IPO price of 9.15 yuan. And China Haisun Engineering 002116.SZ surged 178% to 19.16 yuan.
“Investors opened 50,000 retail brokerage accounts a day in December and mutual funds raised a record 389 billion yuan ($50 billion) last year, quadruple the 2005 amount. January turnover was five times early 2006 levels. Beijing is now ordering banks to prevent retail borrowing for stock investments.”
What is the source of this bubbly activity? It is the same ‘tide of liquidity’ that is washing over the rest of the world. As the Chinese sell more and more goods to U.S. consumers, Chinese firms end up with more and more U.S. dollars. These are turned in to the Chinese central bank, which now has foreign currency reserves of more than $1 trillion - the biggest pile ever built up - most of it in U.S. dollars. In return, the bank of China gives out local currency, the yuan. What are the gambling-mad Chinese to do with all that money? Play the stock market!
Meanwhile, in neighboring Japan, the Topix stock market index is at a 15 year high. The much-despised yen has been driven down to such low levels that it has made Japanese exports cheap. Japanese exporters - notably Toyota Motor Company - are having a great time of it.
Dorsch: “Since the BOJ dropped its overnight loan rate to zero percent in March 2001, the Euro has advanced from around 105-yen to as high as 158.70-yen today. Aided by the euro’s strength against the yen, Japanese exports to the European Union nearly doubled to 1.06-trillion yen in December. But on the flip side, European exports to Japan have waffled between stagnation and deterioration.
“Last year, Japan racked up a 18.6 trillion yen ($160 billion) current account surplus, while the Euro zone suffered a 16.8 billion Euro $21.5 billion) deficit. Yet the power of the ‘yen carry’ trade was able to swim against the tide of these trade imbalances, by pushing the Euro 12% higher against the yen last year.”
Just last week, Japan began to ‘normalize’ its interest rates. But it did so in such a weak and waffly way that it merely served to convince speculators that the ‘yen carry trade’ would last a long time.
Dorsh again: “Japan’s interest rates remain abnormally low and far out of alignment with the rest of the world, and the ‘yen carry’ trade lives on.”
Finally, Dorsch looks to another island nation:
“The Bank of England (BOE) delivered a nasty New Year surprise on January 11th, its third quarter-point rise in interest rates in six months...
“But London’s FTSE-100 all but shrugged off the rate hike. It suffered a 30-point fall to as low as 6,140 just after the announcement, but then closed the day 70 points higher. After stabilizing above the 6,200 level, the Footsie-100 tacked on another 5% gain to 6,450 last week.”
While the Bank of England raises rates, it keeps the money flowing. Money supply figures show available liquidity increasing as much as four times faster than the economy last year. As a consequence, house prices in Britain went up more than 10% in 2006 and the stock market reached its highest level in six years.
On Tuesday, the BOE not only read the past, but predicted the future:
“Investors are likely to take advantage of this ample liquidity and the associated easy credit to purchase other assets, driving risk premiums down and asset prices up...In due course, those higher asset prices may be expected to feed through into higher demand for goods and prices, putting upward pressure on the general price level.”
Yes...and then what?
We’ve given up guessing. This liquidity bubble should have blown up a long time ago. That it has not yet doesn’t mean it won’t. It just means that when it does many more people in many more places will hear the loud crashing noise...and feel the walls shake.
Bill Bonner is the President of Agora Publishing. For more on Bill Bonner, visit The Daily Reckoning.
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