Vancouver Sun

China’s climbing debt threatens global growth

Central bank warns asset values may fall as Beijing tries to ward off problems

- ENDA CURRAN AND CHRISTOPHE­R ANSTEY Bloomberg

It used to be that when America sneezed, the world caught a cold. This time around, it’s the risk of a sickly China that poses a bigger risk.

The world’s second-largest economy is now trying to ward off the sniffles. While output is still growing at a pace that sees gross domestic product double every decade, the problem remains that much of that has been fuelled by a massive buildup of credit.

Total borrowing climbed to about 260 per cent of the economy’s size by the end of 2016, up from 162 per cent in 2008, and will hit close to 320 per cent by 2021 according to Bloomberg Intelligen­ce estimates.

Economy-wide debt levels are on track to rank among “the highest in the world,” according to Tom Orlik, BI’s chief Asia economist.

That path may be what prompted outgoing People’s Bank of China governor Zhou Xiaochuan to warn of the risk of a plunge in asset values following a debt binge, or a “Minsky Moment,” earlier this month. Given that China is forecast by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund to contribute more than a third of global growth this year, controllin­g China’s debt matters far beyond its borders.

There are two key components of China’s credit clampdown, each posing challenges to policymake­rs.

First is wringing out bets on property prices.

As President Xi Jinping put it in a keynote policy speech to the Communist party leadership on Oct. 18: Housing is for living in, not for speculatio­n.

The latest data show that in some areas, prices are still surging in many cities despite a raft of measures to make it harder for investors to buy real estate with borrowed money. Xi’an, China’s ancient capital, saw home values soar almost 15 per cent in September from a year before.

It will be up to regulators to come up with measures that deliver on Xi’s mandate without tipping housing into a downward spiral. Property crashes in the U.S., Japan and U.K. over the past three decades amply illustrate­d how damaging they can be to economies.

The second key challenge is progress in aligning borrowing costs with borrowers’ ability to repay — rather than with their relationsh­ip with the state.

China’s financial system has long let companies that are stateowned or are seen to be implementi­ng state initiative­s get funding more cheaply than others. That’s thanks to the assumption the government would step in if needed to back them up. To help encourage capital to be deployed more efficientl­y — and to prevent firms that are effectivel­y insolvent keep going thanks to continued funding — policymake­rs have begun to gradually take away implicit support.

In 2014, a solar-panel maker Shanghai Chaori Solar Energy Science & Technology Co. became the first Chinese company to default on a domestic corporate bond. Since then, even some state-owned firms have been allowed to default. Handling that process is delicate.

“If tomorrow you suddenly withdraw that implicit government support, you would get a freeze-up in credit flow,” said Kenneth Ho, head of Asia credit strategy research at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in Hong Kong. “If they do it too quickly the system will collapse. They’ve been going at the right speed.”

Ho anticipate­s that the number of defaults allowed will go up, though doesn’t see any surge. “We’re in an upward cycle in terms of recognizin­g defaults, but it’s a long cycle,” he said.

To be sure, China’s economy continues to defy prediction­s of an actual debt crisis or a housing bust. Instead, there are signs of a controlled easing. Home prices in September rose in the fewest cities since January 2016, amid curbs on debt-fuelled buying.

A domestical­ly triggered crisis is unlikely, at least in the next five years, according to a report by Berlin-based Mercator Institute for China Studies. “Trouble is more likely to come from some combinatio­n of capital flight and sudden withdrawal of external credit,” wrote Victor Shih, a professor at the University of California at San Diego and author of the report.

Still, few countries that have experience­d China’s pace of debt growth have unwound things without some sort of crunch. Investors, companies and government­s around the world will want China to break that mould. An indication of the ripple effect China can have on global markets came in 2015 when a devaluatio­n of the yuan, followed by other changes to how the tightly controlled currency is traded, sent shock waves through global markets. The move triggered capital to flow out of China, forcing authoritie­s to burn through reserves to support the currency.

While China’s policymake­rs are preaching the commitment to tackle debt, not everyone is convinced.

Some analysts say authoritie­s aren’t going hard enough.

“There is no deleveragi­ng,” Luke Spajic, head of portfolio management for emerging Asia at Pacific Investment Management Co., said at The New Renminbi Reality Summit organized by Bloomberg Live in Singapore. “Debt to GDP is going up rather than down,” he said. “Certain pockets of the economy have been forced to bring leverage down, but in general this is a story of debt growth.”

Trouble is more likely to come from some combinatio­n of capital flight and sudden withdrawal of external credit.

 ?? WANG ZHAO/AFP PHOTO FILES ?? A Chinese worker is seen in Beijing’s central business district. China’s economy is defying prediction­s of a debt crisis or housing bust as it launches a credit clampdown.
WANG ZHAO/AFP PHOTO FILES A Chinese worker is seen in Beijing’s central business district. China’s economy is defying prediction­s of a debt crisis or housing bust as it launches a credit clampdown.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada