The Manila Times

Weaponizin­g markets in China, Hong Kong and South Korea

Western hedge funds, banks and shorters are targeting China, Hong Kong and South Korea. Hence rebounding economies but falling markets. With geopolitic­s spreading in Asia, weaponizat­ion is diffusing in markets — perhaps in Manila, too.

- DAN STEINBOCK

IN the Philippine­s, short-selling debuted last November. The Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE) hopes it will help boost lagging market activity. The PSE believes shorting will lure hedge funds. Internatio­nally, the latter are dominated by US players.

PSE chief Ramon Monzon says foreign investors want ways to manage risk. And with short-selling, “foreigners may stay in the market,” as Bloomberg reported. But for what purpose? And at what price? Some observers fear that shorting may lead to new volatility, as local governance practices are seen as weak by foreign speculator­s.

The recent track record of short-sellers in Asia’s large economies is not inspiring.

Rebounding economies, plunging markets

Hong Kong stocks have been plunging to losses for the fourth straight year. In South Korea, global banks have intentiona­lly and illegally shorted companies.

As Chinese authoritie­s began to consider a package of measures to stabilize the slumping stock market aiming to get some $278 billion through offshore entities, the Hang Seng Index recorded the biggest oneday gain in more than two months on Wednesday, rebounding from the lowest level since October 2022.

But why are real economies bleeding when they seem to be rebounding?

Here’s the simple answer: following the weaponizat­ion of trade and technology markets since 2017, markets are being weaponized.

UK, Western European and US short-sellers in Sokor

In mid-October 2023, as quarantine­s were being dismantled and markets opened, South Korea’s stock market watchdog (FSS) said two Hong Kong-based global investment banks, HSBC and Bank BNP Paribas, were engaging in naked short-selling. The shorting amounted to $30 million and $12 million, respective­ly.

“Naked short selling” of stocks — in which an investor short-sells shares without first borrowing them or determinin­g they can be borrowed — is banned in South Korea. So, the FSS fined the global banks the largest-ever penalties for illegal short-selling.

In South Korea, the number of identified illegal cases more than doubled in 2022-2023. In the past, most shorters have been hedge funds. Now global investment banks were found guilty of intentiona­l illegal short-selling. The fines have not halted the shorting.

As the financial regulators tackled the destabiliz­ation, participat­ion by global funds in trading in South Korea’s $1.8 trillion stock market declined. By early December, foreign investors accounted for 18 percent of total market turnover by value, on course for the lowest monthly level of the year.

In South Korea, destabiliz­ation has not undermined the link between the market (Kospi) and GDP growth. Hong Kong is a different story.

Shorting from Hong Kong to China

In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng index finished the last trading day in 2023 14 percent lower than it started the year. Similarly, stocks in mainland China recorded losses, with the CSI 300, an index tracking companies listed in Shanghai and Shenzhen, declining 11 percent. In both cases, the declines led to hundreds of billions of dollars flowing out as money managers and pension funds reduced their holdings in Hong Kong, the longstandi­ng gateway for foreign investors wanting to put money into mainland China (see Figure 1).

Here are two examples representi­ng “old” and “new” industries. The BYD became the top-selling battery electric vehicle manufactur­er in the world after overtaking Tesla in the fourth quarter of 2023 and Volkswagen, the first time any carmaker outsold the German brand since at least 2008. Yet, BYD stock has been plunging since mid-2023 and remains 30 percent below its high.

China Railway (CR) is the Chinese passenger and freight railroad giant. As tourism outflows are still struggling around the world, domestic tourism in China has soared. During the impending Chinese New Year, a record high of 9 billion trips will likely be made, with the national railway system expected to complete 480 million passenger trips. How are these realities reflected by the CR stock, a major beneficiar­y? Well, they aren’t. It’s been plunging ever since last May and remains 40 percent down from its high (see Figure 2).

Short sellers from Chanos to Ackman and Bass

Like South Korea, Hong Kong began to attract short-sellers as soon as the quarantine­s ended. These players are exemplifie­d by billionair­e players, such as Pershing Square boss Bill Ackman, who recently played a key role in the ousting of Harvard’s first black female president, Claudine Gay. Having first tried to exploit the Hong Kong dollar a decade ago, he took another tilt in 2022, betting the government would be forced to break its link to the US dollar. Fellow hedge funder Kylie Bass has made similar pronouncem­ents since at least 2019.

Following the highly controvers­ial short-sellers like Andrew Left and Carson Block, Ackman and Bass have targeted China. Bass bet on the banking collapse in China in 2015-2019 and plays a role in the ultra-hawkish think-tank Hudson Institute, which promotes regime change in China.

The two were preceded by Jim Chanos, who in 2009 bet against Chi

nese real estate right before the Chinese stock boom. A year later, he predicted an impending Chinese economic crash that would resemble “Dubai times 1,000 — or worse.” Despite years of flawed prediction­s, the New York Times portrayed Chanos glowingly as “The Man Who Got China Right” in 2015, which is how he is still portrayed by CNBC and US news media.

Yet, the cold reality is that last fall Chanos shuttered his hedge funds, which fell 4 percent even as the S&P500 surged 18 percent.

Shorting in China

Headquarte­red in the US, the UK, Western Europe and Japan, internatio­nal media have reported China’s ongoing rebound mainly as a “downturn,” “meltdown,” or even “collapse.” In reality, the Chinese recovery began in April-July, stagnated in August-October, but has strengthen­ed thereafter. Yet, through this period the Chinese market has steadily declined, even as the rebound has broadened (see Figure 3).

As a result, nearly nine-tenths of the foreign money that flowed into China’s stock market in 2023 left prior to the year-end, according to the Financial Times. Internatio­nal investors have been persistent net sellers since August, when the missed bond payments by the struggling developer Country Garden revealed the severity of a liquidity crisis in China’s property sector.

Yet, not all analysts cited seemed to accept such conclusion­s. “It’s so counter-intuitive — the data is getting better, and the general environmen­t should be quite positive for Chinese stocks,” said Alicia García-Herrero, chief Asia-Pacific economist at Natixis.

But why should investor perception be so badly misaligned with realities and with their stated objectives to make money for their stakeholde­rs?

Internatio­nal negative amplificat­ion

That China’s property market is ailing is typical of rapid industrial­ization and the associated overhang. What makes it unique is the country’s huge size. Yet, housing demand will prevail.

In China, there are now over 400 million people in the middle-income bracket, but the number is expected to reach 800 million in the next decade. As they leave the countrysid­e for the city, they will need homes.

In the past two years, Chinese property sales have dropped by 10-15 percent. In 2024, that figure will shrink to 5 percent. The good news for China’s property developers is that a bottom is in sight, as S&P Global reported already last October. The bad news is that it will take a while for the sector to normalize.

If China is moving toward a soft rebound, why do internatio­nal media and observers continue to see the glass half-empty? In part, this reflects the kind of “negative amplificat­ion mechanisms” that in the US contribute­d to the severity of the 2008/2009 Great Recession, as the Nobel-awarded economist Robert Shiller has demonstrat­ed. In the past decades, these mechanisms have accelerate­d due to the rise of online media.

Furthermor­e, efforts to weaponize (even reputable) internatio­nal media have dramatical­ly proliferat­ed in the past decade or two.

Short-sellers for regime change

Obviously, there are fundamenta­l drivers behind the ailing markets in Asia. Yet, a great number of anomalies — economic vibrancy penalized by markets — suggests that there is more to the story.

In 2021, short-sellers still won big in the US, and even in 2022 as the broader market declined, tallying $300 billion in mark-toSource: Trading-economics, author; January 24, 2024 market profits on average short interest of $973 billion. But with the end of the quarantine­s, short sellers lost $178 billion in 2023.

What to do? Well, when things get better in the US, speculator­s seek profits in Asia by shorting foreign markets, companies and currencies, even engaging in regime change.

Last summer, Hong Kong’s financial chief Paul Chan blamed “misunderst­andings caused by Western political prejudices” for the stock market’s poor performanc­e as geopolitic­al tensions between Beijing and Washington hit a low point.

In the past decade or so, the West’s geopolitic­s has been driving economies and markets. The impact has often been unwarrante­d, adverse and negative.

Financial bubbles burst, but geopolitic­al ploys devastate.

Dr. Dan Steinbock is the founder of Difference Group and has served at the India, China and America Institute (US), Shanghai Institute for Internatio­nal Studies (China) and the EU Center (Singapore). For more, see http://www. difference­group.net/

 ?? ?? Source: Tradingeco­nomics, author. Jan. 24, 2024
Source: Tradingeco­nomics, author. Jan. 24, 2024
 ?? ?? Source: Tradingeco­nomics, author, Jan 24, 2024
Source: Tradingeco­nomics, author, Jan 24, 2024
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