• Featured
  • Australasia
  • The Americas
  • Europe
  • Africa
  • Market
  • Precious Metals
  • Resources
  • Currencies
  • Real Estate
  • The Bonner Diaries

Trickle of Chinese Money into Australian Housing and Equities Small Compared to Growth in Bank Lending


By Dan Denning • January 12th, 2010 • Related Articles • Filed Under

About the Author

DanDan Denning is the author of 2005's best-selling The Bull Hunter (John Wiley & Sons). He began his financial publishing career in 1997 and has covered financial markets form Baltimore, Paris, London and, beginning in 2005 Melbourne. He’s the editor of The Daily Reckoning Australia and the Publisher of Port Phillip Publishing.

See All Articles by This Author

  • The Chinese Gold Rush
  • Every Investor in Commodities Should Know China is their Biggest Buyer
  • Teach Your Children Chinese Because China is the Next Great Country
  • Economy Has to Grow at 1% to Stay Even With Population Growth
  • Consumer Price Inflation has Spooked Investors Everywhere
Filed Under: Market
Tags: Alex Cowie • Australian housing • Australian resource equities • base metals • Bauxite Resources • Chinese bank lending • Chinese central bank • Chinese exports • gold futures • Kris Sayce • monetary policy • palladium • People's Bank of China • precious metals • U.S. government
feature photo

Let's look at the clues and see what we have today. Chinese exports grew by 17.8% in the last twelve months. But imports to China surged even more, up 56%. Base metals, precious metals, and virtually the entire commodity complex rallied on surging Chinese demand. New ETFs for platinum and palladium fuelled investment demand in the commodity story. February gold futures traded at $1,151.40 overnight.

Our resource man on the ground, Dr. Alex Cowie, sent us a short research note yesterday. It was mostly good news, with his recent recommendations riding the rally higher. He had several double-digit winners and a few triple-digit stalwarts. He concluded his note thusly: "Personally I am really bullish on resources for at least the first half of 2010. Then the China question comes in. I am still reading, thinking and reading some more about this."

But here's the thing. We wonder if the surge in commodity prices (and stocks) is related to a rushed dash by Chinese investors to borrow before rates go up and shove the money into a higher-yielding asset class. As mentioned yesterday, the People's Bank of China raised the yield on three-month bills for the first time since August. This may signal a tighter (anti-inflationary) monetary policy in China.

In the meantime, however, the Chinese seem to be buying up anything that's not paper. All up, the move feels like the end of something and not the beginning of a new rally. It may not mean that the Chinese bubble in real estate and stocks is popping just now. But if the Chinese central bank does rates, what are the unintended consequences?

Well...putting our anti-thermonuclear heat thinking cap on (it's pretty hot in Melbourne now) we'd say this accelerates the movement of Chinese capital out of real estate and Chinese equities and into, at least in several examples, Australian resource equities.

Granted, the trickle of Chinese money into Australian housing and equities is small compared to the growth in bank lending. In the first week of January - presumably in the rush to beat tighter reserve requirements or higher rates - Chinese banks lent out a healthy US$88 billion. But all of last year, the number was much bigger.

Chinese bank lending surged by over US$1.35 trillion in 2009, according to Shaun Rein at Forbes. Much of that money went into stocks. And a lot of it went into Shanghai and Beijing real estate. Whether China bought itself a bubble is a very good question. One important point is that Chinese lending is based on savings...and isn't borrowed (in U.S. fashion).

Given those loan volumes, even a slight worry about tighter monetary policy or inflation would explain a drive into commodities and commodity stocks. For example, take the Tampakan copper and gold project in the Philippines. It's a 2.4 billion tonne inferred resource which may produce around 13.5 million tonnes of copper and 15.8 million ounces of gold, according to pre-feasability studies.

That would be a handy little resource to get your hands on. It's owned jointly, at least until this week, by Aussie-listed Indophil Resources (ASX:IRN) and global mining behemoth Xstrate, via a majority holding through another company. But yesterday Australia's Foreign Investment Review Board approved a takeover of Indophil by China's Zijin Mining Group.

Zijin is no upstart. It's China's largest gold producer and third largest copper producer. It's bid values Indophil (including its stake in the project) at $545 million. Indophil's market cap yesterday was $491.4 million, according to Google Finance.

Frankly we have no idea how long China Inc's asset purchase program is going to last and whether its derivative of a lousy credit policy by the People's Bank. But it's surely a better policy than having your central bank support your mortgage market via quantitative easing. In one case, you take real money to buy real assets. In the other, you print new money from nowhere to buy assets that are falling in value anyway.

This is why if you're going to be in the equity markets at these valuations and with so many open questions about what 2010 holds, you could do a lot worse than park yourself in the Aussie resource patch, get a good tip sheet, and take a few punts. The only caveat we'd introduce is you should try to front-run the Chinese. If you're riding on their coat-tails, you're probably already too late.

For example, in September small-cap maestro Kris Sayce issued a sell recommendation on Perth-based Bauxite Resources (ASX:BAU). The share was up 388% from the recommended entry price and Kris reckoned (correctly in retrospect) that everything good you could expect to happen to the share had happened.

Today we read that BAU has signed a Heads of Agreement with Yankuang Corporation to jointly develop an alumina refinery in Western Australia. There is many a slip between the cup and lip. But in principle, the deal is simple: Bauxite's directors and geologists scoped out great alumina deposits in the Darling Ranges south of Perth.

Having spoken with them at the time, they reckoned bauxite could become the next iron ore: a key raw material in China's next stage of industrial growth. Getting in early was the key, and identifying a valuable resource and a mineable ore body. That's just good old fashioned analysis, though, and nothing exotic. No Nostradamus required.

The main point: you have to be about a year and a half ahead of the story hitting the papers. That means you could be too early, wrong, or risk looking like a hyperbolic fool (something we're often accused of). But hey, it beats getting your share tips from CNBC.

Other signs of the changing times? China became the world's largest car market last year. Over 13.6 million cars were bought by the Chinese last year. Over in the USA, 10.6 million vehicles were sold.

Speaking of the U.S., did you see that the yield curve - the spread between 2-year Treasury yields and 30-year yields, grew to its widest ever level at 380 basis points? This tells you two things. First, investors are loading up on the short end of the curve, driving down yields. They'll buy U.S. debt for now, but not for longer-terms.

Second, the U.S. government must be getting the dry heaves about now. It's shifted much of its borrowing burden to shorter maturity bills and notes. And as you know, it's about $3 trillion in the next 12 months. Where is that money going to come from?

Dan Denning
for The Daily Reckoning Australia

VN:F [1.9.11_1134]
please wait...
Rating: 10.0/10 (5 votes cast)
VN:F [1.9.11_1134]
Rating: +3 (from 3 votes)
Trickle of Chinese Money into Australian Housing and Equities Small Compared to Growth in Bank Lending, 10.0 out of 10 based on 5 ratings



P.S. to get The Daily Reckoning direct to your inbox sign up to our free e-mail newsletter or if you prefer to use RSS, subscribe to the Daily Reckoning RSS feed.

Related Articles:

  • The Chinese Gold Rush
  • Every Investor in Commodities Should Know China is their Biggest Buyer
  • Teach Your Children Chinese Because China is the Next Great Country
  • Economy Has to Grow at 1% to Stay Even With Population Growth
  • Consumer Price Inflation has Spooked Investors Everywhere

About the Author

DanDan Denning is the author of 2005's best-selling The Bull Hunter (John Wiley & Sons). He began his financial publishing career in 1997 and has covered financial markets form Baltimore, Paris, London and, beginning in 2005 Melbourne. He’s the editor of The Daily Reckoning Australia and the Publisher of Port Phillip Publishing.

See All Posts by This Author

There Is 1 Response So Far. »

  1. Comment by Ross on 12 January 2010:

    From Bloomberg today below comes the story of the AU bankers capital and the spiking swap rate. Current account deficits will cost consumers much more money. What happens in AU when current account deficit money costs that much more in interest differential? FUGLY story that and it has only just begun as world balance sheet risk price standardises without the priviledges to housing and with the raw leverage limits in plain sight.

    quote

    In Australia, overseas borrowers are selling the most local-currency notes in almost three years to exploit the record-low cost of swapping the proceeds for U.S. dollars.

    Australian Banks

    So-called kangaroo bond sales jumped to A$9 billion ($8.4 billion) last quarter from A$5.3 billion in the three months ended Sept. 30, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The sales were the highest since A$11.4 billion was raised in the first three months of 2007. So far this year, kangaroo bonds totaled A$1.75 billion.

    Financial institutions are benefitting as Australian banks increase overseas borrowing before a change in capital reserves regulations triggered by the global credit freeze. A sevenfold increase in U.S. dollar bond sales after the rules were proposed drove the cost of exchanging debt in greenbacks for Australian dollars to the highest on record, the five-year basis swap shows, meaning kangaroo bond sellers performing the opposite transaction are getting the biggest-ever discount.

    Borrowers typically use cross-currency basis swaps to exchange floating-rate payments in one currency to another. The Australian dollar basis swap measures the cost of switching interest charges pegged to the Libor for rates linked to Australia’s bank bill swap rate.

    The basis swap rose to 48 basis points on Dec. 2, the highest since 1997 when Bloomberg records began, and was last at 41 basis points after averaging 16 basis points in the first nine months of 2009.

    VA:F [1.9.11_1134]
    please wait...
    Rating: 0.0/5 (0 votes cast)
    VA:F [1.9.11_1134]
    Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Post a Response

Comment moderation policy: Port Phillip Publishing supports free speech and frank and open conversation. But we reserve the right to modify or delete your comments if we consider them to be offensive or in violation of any laws, including Australia's anti-discrimination laws

By submitting your comment you agree to adhere to our comment policy.


  • Why Should I Sign Up?   We Value Your Privacy
  • Master trader predicts next move for ASX...

    Latest Slipstream Trader Video Market Update Just In... watch for free below.


    One viewer said these prediction videos were “scarily accurate”... another said Murray Dawes was “well on the money”... To find out where the Slipstream Trader thinks the market is headed next, and what that could mean for your investments, click below now to watch his latest video update...

    8th February 2012 - Market Update

    It’s one thing to have a view on where the market is headed next... It’s another to have specific stock trading recommendations emailed to your inbox.

    To take a 90-day, no obligation trial of Slipstream Trader, click here
  • Search

    The Markets

    All Ordinaries4318.900  chart0.000
    S&p/asx 2004242.800  chart0.000
    China Shanghai Co2344.771  chart-7.084
    Gold Sep 110.00  chart0.00
    Clj11.nym0.00  chartN/A
    Nikkei 2259052.07  chart0
    Indu0.00  chartN/A
    S&P 5001349.76  chart-2.01
    Ftse 1005899.87  chart-5.83
    2012-02-14 00:39

    Most Comments

    • Australian House Prices Are Severely and Seriously Unaffordable (312)
    • Majority of Australians Believe House Prices Will Rise in Next Twelve Months (293)
    • Gas is the New Oil (256)
    • A Date for an Aussie House Price Collapse (251)
    • How to Profit From the Path of Progress (230)

    Archives

  • Headline Archive

  • Slipstream Trader

    Thousands now trade the markets who never thought they could...

    Breakthrough in trading techniques helps regular investors:

    • Determine how much to risk in a trade
    • Lock in profits while the position is still open...
    • Exit a losing position before a share tanks...

    If you thought trading was too complicated, prepare to be surprised... click here
  • Australian Wealth Gameplan

    "A rapid contagion is spreading.
    Even if you think you are relatively safe, this is a new, permanent risk. It will be with us for the next decade, or even two”.

    - Edward Morse, Veteran oil trader

    Right now a ‘paradigm shift’ is taking place that could present you with the single biggest investment opportunity of your lifetime.

    It also represents risks to your portfolio that could surpass those of the Global Financial Crisis fallout.

    Get full details in this just-completed presentation. (turn on your speakers)
  • Diggers & Drillers

    “Why a mining executive told me to F*** Off
    in front of a whole room of investors”
    Dr. Alex Cowie doesn’t have the most popular of jobs. At least – not inside the mining industry. For his readers, it’s another matter entirely.

    As Laurence says: “I have never bought a stock and got a 100% return before … thanks for providing the information for me to have that experience – and all within two months too!”

    Right now Alex has unearthed six “must buy” resource stocks for the year ahead. His method for finding them might annoy a few people in the industry… but it could help make a lot of money in 2012 too.

    Find out why, right here

  • Home
  • Newsletters
  • About
  • Subscribe
  • Columnists
  • Contact Us
  • RSS

All content is © 2005 - 2011 Port Phillip Publishing Pty Ltd All Rights Reserved

We encourage you to republish our material, all we ask is that you provide a working text link back to the original article on this site.
Port Phillip Publishing Pty Ltd holds an Australian Financial Services License: 323 988. ACN: 117 765 009 ABN: 33 117 765 009
email: dr@dailyreckoning.com.au Tel: 1300 667 481 Fax: (03) 9558 2219
Port Phillip Publishing Attn: The Daily Reckoning PO Box 899 Braeside VIC 3195

Terms and Conditions | Privacy Policy | Financial Services Guide

SEO Powered by Platinum SEO from Techblissonline