Showing posts with label China. Show all posts
Showing posts with label China. Show all posts

Saturday 22 December 2012

Chinese Stocks Lose Their Luster

The average price-earnings ratio of Chinese stocks sank 76 percent over the past decade as growth cooled and investors soured on the lumbering state-owned enterprises that dominate the country’s main equity index.

Tuesday 20 November 2012

7 China stocks facing boom, not doom


By MarketWatch

HSBC weighed in on China's leadership transition Friday, identifying seven sectors -- and selected individual stocks -- as likely beneficiaries from the nation's new government.

Among them, the research house named: consumption, urbanization, innovation, environment, health care, culture and financial reform.

While the list offered similar investment ideas to those already mentioned by other research brokerages, the bigger standout was HSBC's bullish tone towards China's new administration.

It noted that events over the past week in Beijing suggest the new leadership is poised to deliver positive change, even though the final unveiling of the seven-member Politburo Standing Committee included a lineup that left out two reform-minded candidates.

The research house also said that the handover was an "orderly transition of power," and it praised a key political report presented by departing President Hu Jintao as making the "right noises about the country's direction in the next five years."

HSBC said the 90-minute address delivered to the Party Congress on Nov. 9 -– viewed as influencing the reform agenda for the incoming leadership -- made all the right noises, using the phrase "scientific development" 19 times, "socialism with Chinese characteristics" 79 times and "reform" 84 times. The phase "the people" appeared 145 times. The keywords show Beijing's sensitivity to the need for reforms, HSBC said.

Still, while HSBC praised the open talk about reform, it also cautioned that delivering such reforms won't be easy. In a nod to the challenges ahead, HSBC's outlook for China's economy calls for a slow recovery -- more "U-shaped" than "V-shaped."

It noted an improving backdrop, and that Chinese stocks were "fairly valued" rather than expensive.

Among selected ways to invest in each theme, it laid out its respective picks: Hengan International Group Co. , Zoomlion Heavy Industry Science & Technology Development Co. , Lenovo Group Ltd. , China Longyuan Power Group Corp. , Sinopharm Group Co. , Youku Tudou Inc. , and China Construction Bank Corp.

-- Chris Oliver
Follow The Tell blog on Twitter @thetellblog

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/7-china-stocks-facing-boom-032900464.html


Tuesday 4 September 2012

China Stocks a Screaming Buy: Strategist


China Stocks a Screaming Buy: Strategist

Published: Tuesday, 4 Sep 2012 | 3:32 AM ET
Lisa Oake, Anchor CNBC Asia Pacific
By: Lisa Oake
Co-Host of CNBC Asia's Squawk Box


The old adage in the stock market is never try to catch a falling knife.  With the Shanghai Composite Index at levels not seen since the aftermath of the financial crisis, many investors are steering well clear of Chinese stocks.
Liu Jin | AFP | Getty Images

But Stephen Sheung, Investment Strategist at SHK Private, thinks this is the perfect time to buy Chinese equities [.SSEC  2043.65    -15.50 (-0.75%)   ]. “We still see a rebound in the Chinese economy over the course of the year and equities warrant a higher valuation than now,” Sheung told CNBC Asia’s “Squawk Box.”           
He added that China’s cautious approach to stimulate the economy will result in a gentle re-acceleration of economic growth, but investors should not make the mistake of comparing Beijing’s recent efforts to stimulate the economy with the massive $586 billion stimulus program of 2008.
Policy Lag
“This time around, the policies are not coming directly from Beijing, but more so at the provincial level. The Chinese government is trying to get more private capital to be more involved in the investment projects so the policy lag might be longer,” said Sheung.
Beijing — wary of stoking inflation and reigniting property speculation — is using a lighter hand with stimulus this time around. Despite mounting evidence the economy is grinding lower, the central bank has been quiet since last cutting interest rates in July.

“Chinese GDP in the next few quarters will be at a more stable and calm level in terms of pick up. You might have to wait until November to December to actually see things turn around, but when that comes, you'll see a cyclical pick up in (corporate) earnings and the GDP,” said Sheung.
Until then, he is advising investors to take advantage of China’s economic downtime and get stocks on the cheap.
“Valuations are the solid foundation for Chinese equities. What investors have to do right now is really look ahead,” he said.


Follow Lisa Oake on Twitter: @LisaCNBC
© 2012 CNBC.com


Friday 6 July 2012

Three central banks take action in sign of alarm


Arrangement of various world currencies including Chinese Yuan, US Dollar, Euro, British Pound, pictured in Warsaw, January 25, 2011 REUTERS/Kacper Pempel
Arrangement of various world currencies including Chinese Yuan, US Dollar, Euro, British Pound, pictured in Warsaw, January 25, 2011
Credit: Reuters/Kacper Pempel
BEIJING/FRANKFURT | Thu Jul 5, 2012 8:30pm BST
(Reuters) - China, the euro zone and Britain loosened monetary policy in the space of less than an hour on Thursday, signalling a growing level of alarm about the world economy, although suggestions of coordinated action were played down.
Of the three, the surprise move was from Beijing which lowered its lending rate by 31 basis points to 6 percent following an interest rate cut just a month ago that also came out of the blue.
The European Central Bank cut rates to a record low 0.75 percent following a dire run of economic data. But it steered clear of bolder moves such as reviving its government bond-buying programme or flooding banks with more long-term liquidity.
Still, a Reuters poll found the ECB is expected to follow the rate cut with more steps to help the region's economy in coming months.
The Bank of England, whose rates are already at a record low 0.5 percent, said it would restart its printing presses and buy 50 billion pounds ($78 billion) of assets with newly created money to help the economy out of recession.
"It is a surprise that they are moving so quickly. It shows that policymakers' concerns about the global economy have only grown," Mark Williams, an economist at Capital Economics in London, said of the People's Bank of China's action.
A raft of Chinese data is due next week, including second-quarter gross domestic product that officials may know to be poor, he said. But they may also be trying to foster suggestions of acting in concert.
"Policymakers may have felt that cutting rates on the day that the ECB (did) the same would deliver a bigger impact, encouraging talk of a coordinated response to the slowdown in the global economy," Williams said. "Again, though, this might simply underline the seriousness of the downside risks."
"NO COORDINATION"
In Frankfurt, ECB President Mario Draghi denied any globally coordinated central bank action of the sort seen after the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008.
"On coordination, no, there wasn't any ... that went beyond the normal exchange of views on the state of the business cycle, on the state of the economy, and on the state of global demand," he told a news conference.
Asked if conditions were now as bad as they were in late 2008 when the world's financial system was teetering, Draghi replied: "Definitely not."
The action puts even more focus on what the U.S. Federal Reserve will do when it holds its next meeting on July 31 and August 1. The Bank of Japan meets next week.
Last month, the Fed held off on another round of bond-buying but its chief, Ben Bernanke, said there was "considerable scope to do more" and Wall Street bond firms polled by Reuters saw a 50 percent chance of another asset purchase programme.
Some encouraging data on the labour market on Thursday tempered anticipation the central bank could undertake a third round of bond purchases, known as quantitative easing or QE3.
But more weight will be given to Friday's nonfarm payrolls report, which is expected to show job growth picked up in June but still remained tepid at 90,000 jobs.
"If we get a couple of more bad jobs reports, (the Fed) will come in with more stimulus. Today's reports suggest they might hold off, but they will want to see more data before they decide," said John Canally, economist and investment strategist at LPL Financial in Boston.
In recent weeks, economic evidence from Asia, Europe and the United States has pointed to a world economy running out of steam.
WILL IT WORK?
All the major central banks, with interest rates at historic lows, face the law of diminishing returns.
The Bank had already created 325 billion pounds of new money before Thursday's addition. In doing so, it has successfully driven borrowing costs to all-time lows, yet the UK economy is languishing in recession.
"The BoE has been excessively optimistic about how powerful QE is," said Philip Rush, an economist at Nomura, referring to the money-creating strategies known as qualitative easing.
"The latest increase is more than just a token, but it is not hugely significant for the outlook for growth and inflation."
A poll conducted by Reuters found 27 out of 47 economists believe the central bank will stop at the announced 375 billion pounds in total. A minority said the Bank would do more, with a few still calling for as much as 500 billion.
The euro zone is no better off. "We see now a weakening basically of growth in the whole of the euro area, including the country or the countries that had not experienced that before," Draghi said.
Policymakers could counter that things would be much worse if they had not acted, but with most monetary policy levers already pulled, government action is also required to improve the world's fortunes.
The International Monetary Fund has urged the United States to quickly remove the uncertainty over the path of fiscal policy, which is set to tighten abruptly at the start of next year without congressional action.
Measures announced at a European summit last week bought some calm to the euro zone debt crisis with the promise of action to lower government borrowing costs, but economists say they did not tackle the root problems.
The ECB continues to put the onus on euro zone governments to solve their debt crisis and did not even discuss on Thursday "non-standard" measures such as buying Spanish and Italian bonds to lower borrowing costs which are not sustainable indefinitely.
Elsewhere, Denmark's central bank cut interest rates by 25 basis points, shadowing the ECB's action, in a historic move that put one of its secondary rates into negative territory for the first time. Kenya ended its nine-months-long hawkish stance with a bigger-than-expected 150 basis points rate cut. ($1 = 0.6419 British pounds)
(Writing by Mike Peacock, reporting by Reuters bureaus; Editing by Peter Graff and Leslie Gevirtz)


Monday 12 March 2012

China suffers biggest trade deficit in 20 years


Rachel Cooper
March 12, 2012 - 8:04AM

China has recorded its largest trade deficit in more than two decades as Europe's sovereign debt crisis subdued exports and oil imports rocketed.

The country's customs bureau said the shortfall was $US31.5 billion, thought to be its biggest since at least 1989. Imports rose 39.6 per cent from a year earlier, after a 15.3 per cent slump in January, while exports increased 18.4 per cent.

Analysts had expected a deficit as imports rebounded from temporary disruption after the unusually early Lunar New Year in January but they had predicted a greater rise in exports and a smaller increase in imports.

Efforts by Chinese companies to sell to the West have been hampered by the effects of the eurozone debt crisis and an anaemic economic recovery in the United States, although shipments to the US climbed 22.6 per cent from a year earlier to $US19.4b. Overseas sales to the European Union rose 2.2 per cent to $US19.4b after a 3.2 per cent drop in January.

Illustrating the increasing importance of trading with emerging markets, during the first two months of the year trade volumes with Russia jumped 31.9 per cent to $US13.51b.

Imports of copper last month were the second-highest on record, while net crude oil imports increased to a record to meet rising demand as farmers prepare for the planting season and the government adds to emergency stockpiles.

The figures came after statistics on Friday showed China's inflation rate slowing sharply in February and factory output growth also slipping. Data showed that inflation had fallen to 3.2 per cent last month, down from 4.5 per cent in January.

"Overall, economic conditions are getting weaker at a fast pace," said Zhiwei Zhang, a Nomura economist. "The slowdown is happening faster than the government expected."

There is speculation that China's moderating inflation and growth will lead the Government to loosen policy. Citigroup believes a cut in banks' reserve requirements may come as soon as this month.

"We would suggest that the inflation bubble in China last year is well and truly burst, and the policy easing can accelerate," said Gerard Lane, equity strategist at Shore Capital. "This would be beneficial for the likes of miners and other emerging market related stocks."

Song Yu, an economist at Goldman Sachs, suggested that the nation will still see a sizeable trade surplus for the full year as the deficit in early 2012 is largely seasonal.

Data in January and February was distorted by the timing of the New Year holiday, which fell in January this year and February last year.

The Daily Telegraph, London



Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/business/world-business/china-suffers-biggest-trade-deficit-in-20-years-20120312-1ut5z.html#ixzz1oqvZZGTL

Saturday 4 February 2012

Chinese save four times as much as Britons


The average household in China has four times more savings than the average household in the UK, new research shows.


Chinese save four times as much as Britons
Currently, Britons save around 7 per cent of their disposable income. This compares with 47 per cent in China Photo: ALAMY
According to Lloyds TSB, the typical British household has £5,000 in savings and investments. This compares to over £19,000 in China.
German households, meanwhile, have average savings of almost £9,000.
The bank said that the “remarkable” findings reflect the fact that there is no “social safety net” in China, such as state pensions and benefits, meaning that families must provide for themselves financially.
Lloyds TSB also said that the so-called savings ratio in the UK – that is a person’s savings as a proportion of their disposable income – has been falling over the last decade.
Currently, Britons save around 7 per cent of their disposable income. This compares with 47 per cent in China.
Greg Coughlan, head of savings at Lloyds TSB, said: “Despite significantly higher income levels, today’s British and German households are both being roundly beaten in the savings stakes by urban Chinese households.”
Dr Karl Gerth, author of As China Goes, So Goes the World: How Chinese Consumers are Transforming Everything and a lecturer in modern Chinese history at Merton College, Oxford, said that Chinese people save out of necessity because they have to pay for healthcare, education, housing and their retirement.
“It has nothing to do with ancient Confucian wisdom and all to do with contemporary realities,” said Dr Gerth.
He said that savings levels among young Chinese people are far lower than among their parents’ generation.
“In China, young people are learning to spend,” he said.
Lloyds TSB’s findings were based on over 3,000 interviews with adults in the UK, China and German.

Friday 30 December 2011

Buffett: My job is to take advantage of the craziness of Mr. Market; whacking him when he gets way out of line



March 31, 2008

Question: What are your thoughts about the Chinese Stock market?



Buffett:


The Chinese stock market? I don’t know what markets are going to do.  When I was over in China they were bombarding me with questions about the market and of course you have these A shares, including Petro China, which was going public in China.  Petro China and others were trading at twice the price within China (at that time Chinese people were not permitted to buy shares in Hong Kong or in the United States) than outside China.  This was really extraordinary.  If you knew these restrictions were going to break down it would have been great to short the stocks in China and buy them elsewhere around the world.


But the Chinese stock market has 1.2 billion people waking up to the stock markets and having an investing or gambling urge.  The stock market was becoming wildly popular as we know in China.  Petro China at one time, based on the Chinese prices, was the most valuable company in the world, and was selling for over 1 trillion dollars, whereas Exxon was only worth 500 billion.  This made Petro China twice as valuable as the largest company in the world. 


I have no idea why and where that many people were relatively new to the market and were very excited about stocks.  You do know in the end you have to buy things on a basis of when you get a value for what you pay.  This seemed to lose relevance in a market like China.  They had a situation like that in Kuwait 20 years ago.  When a whole society, and a rich society, (certainly far richer than 15 years ago), a huge market opened up for them.  I have no idea whether the people get friendlier or crazier.  That is not my game.


My game is simply to buy something worth a dollar for 50 cents.  Then if they go crazy in the right direction it helps me and if they go crazy in the other direction I  just buy more.  


My job is to take advantage of craziness.  And that goes back to Ben Graham’s Intelligent Investor chapter 8.  If you are going to invest based on value with a partner (lets say Mr. Market) - let’s say you each own half of a McDonalds stand.  Every day he quotes a price at which he either wants to buy me out or sell me his interest.  If he hears a bad rumour he low-balls it, so I buy.  Other days he is all excited about some Burger King burning down and seeing some line ups and decides to give a high offer, so I sell.

If I’m going to have a partner like that what kind of partner do I want?  I want a psycho.  The stupider he gets the better I am going to do.  I don’t want some cool, calm rational partner.  I want somebody with huge ups and downs - a manic depressive.  Basically that’s what you get in the stock market some times.  As long as you realize he is there to serve you, and not to instruct you, you can make a lot of money.  You can’t listen to Mr. Market and think he must be right.  Only listen to what he says in the context of: when this guy gets way out of line I am going to whack him.  And basically that’s what you get in the stock market.

In China you can’t tell how far the markets will go to extremes.  You can’t tell that, I have no idea where the markets are going to go tomorrow or the next day or the next month or the next year.  I do know that in the end stocks tend to sell for what they are worth.  At least in the range of what they are worth.   They go all over the place in between - but tend to true value in the end.




A Discussion of Mr. Warren Buffett with Dr. George Athanassakos and
Ivey MBA and HBA students
Omaha, NB, March 31, 2008, 10:00 am - 12:00 pm

http://www.bengrahaminvesting.ca/Resources/Interviews_Notes/Buffett_March_31_2008.pdf

Friday 4 November 2011

Chinese rich are keen to emigrate

Chinese rich are keen to emigrate
Updated: 2011-11-03 11:35

By Shi Jing and Yu Ran (China Daily)






Chinese rich are keen to emigrate





SHANGHAI - About 60 percent of the rich Chinese people, each of whom has a net asset of at least 60 million yuan ($9.44 million), said they intended to migrate from China, a report has found.

About 14 percent of them have either already migrated from China or have applied for migration.

The three most favored destinations by the Chinese rich are the United States, Canada and Singapore. The US is the first choice of some 40 percent of the people interviewed, according to a white paper jointly released by Hurun Report and the Bank of China (BOC) on Saturday.

According to US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), the number of Chinese applicants for investment immigration has exceeded applications from any other country or region.

Last year, the USCIS issued 772 EB-5 visas, meant for investor immigrants, to Chinese people. They account for 41 percent of the total EB-5 visas issued by the agency.

"Among all the destinations in terms of investment immigration, the US always outstand all other options as the country does not impose any quota," said Jiao Lingyan, a client executive of the investment immigration department of the Beijing-based GlobeImmi International Education Consultation Co.

"The minimum amount required for investment immigration to the US is $500,000. But it should be noted that this applies to investments in projects recommended by authorities in the US. People considering these projects should take into account that they may not make profits," Jiao said.

"It is worth noting that the minimum amount for investment immigration will be raised in the coming years, because the number of rich people in China is rapidly growing," she said.

Among the 980 people interviewed by Hurun Report and the BOC, one-third said they have assets overseas, which on an average account for 19 percent of their total assets.

While 32 percent of the interviewees said they have invested overseas with a view to immigrate, half of them said they did so mainly for the sake of their children's education.

Zhang Yuehui, a Beijing-based immigration expert, said children's education is also the top concern among those who want to immigrate.

"A growing number of parents in China have realized that children growing up in the examination-oriented education system in China will find it hard to compete in an increasingly globalized world," Zhang said.

Wang Lilan, 38, a mother of two who immigrated to Australia from her home province of Fujian two years ago, was one of those parents.

"My 12-year-old elder daughter used to do her homework very late into the night. But here in Australia, she does quite a lot practical assignment, in a playful way. And she has more spare time to do the things she likes," Wang said.

"I feel very delighted to see my children having fun while studying," Wang said.

Chinese immigrants are also getting younger, with the largest group aged between 25 and 30, compared to the 40-45 age group in the past, Zhang said

http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/business/2011-11/03/content_14028075.htm

Tuesday 15 February 2011

Weaker trade surpluses is what the Chinese government is aiming at.

China's selfish currency policies have attracted criticisms from all counters. But the dragon nation seems to have done well for itself by managing to contain its currency appreciation. Lower inflation and higher imports in an attempt to reduce the economy's dependence on exports have worked in this direction. China's imports rose 51% YoY in January 2011. To put things in perspective, this brought down the country's trade surplus from US$ 13 bn in December to US$ 6.5 bn in January 2011. This data may be colored with seasonal impact due to the New Year festivities. However, weaker trade surpluses is what the government is aiming at. Notwithstanding the fact that it is coming at the expense of other economies. The G-20 nations have expressed displeasure over China's trade and currency policies in the past. But given its apex position in global trade, it seems that China will have its way longer than expected. 

Tuesday 18 January 2011

China stocks dive 3 pct after bank reserve hike

China stocks dive 3 pct after bank reserve hike
Written by Reuters
Monday, 17 January 2011 14:52

SHANGHAI: Chinese shares fell more than 3 percent on Monday afternoon, Jan 17, led by banking and property stocks, after a rise in lenders' reserve requirements and talk of a property tax in Shanghai kept bank and developer stocks under pressure.

The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index fell to 2,704.5 points by 0640 GMT, dropping far below the crucial 125-day moving average at 2,779. The index lost 1.7 percent last week amid lingering fears over monetary tightening steps.

The property sub-index fell 5.7 percent.

The PBOC announced a 50-basis-point RRR hike for all banks after Chinese markets closed last Friday, which will take effect on Thursday and will drain an estimated 360 billion yuan ($55 billion) from the market.

Shanghai's mayor said on Sunday that one of the city's main tasks this year would be to prepare for the trial run of a property tax to curb speculative investments in the real estate sector.

Top lender ICBC dropped 3.9 percent, while the biggest listed property developer China Vanke tumbled 7.7 percent. - Reuters

Friday 19 November 2010

Inflation does matter in China and the world

Inflation does matter in China and the world
By Huang Shuo (chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2010-11-15 16:58

The growth rate of China's consumer price index (CPI) was 4.4 percent year-on-year in October, a 25-month high. The rate is up 0.8 percentage points from September. This is an alarming statistic for a country that for the past three decades has had steady economic growth. Inflation risks do matter for China.

In particular, the new factor of a rise in prices, main promoter for CPI growth, took up 3 percentage points of the 4.4 percent surge. Prices of agricultural products and food have been playing major roles in contributing to the CPI hike. Food prices surged by 10.1 percent compared with the same period of last year as a result of the price hike in international agricultural products, and the recent flood in South China’s Hainan province affected vegetable prices and oil prices, adding to the product costs, said Sheng Laiyun, spokesman for the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

In addition, daily essentials such as eggs and vegetables are leading the price increases in China's consumer market, followed by meat, oil and white sugar.

As the industry generally expected that about 4 percent would be the proper answer for CPI, the final data released by the NBS on Nov 11, 2010, was 0.4 percentage points higher than estimated, which astonished the public and drew lots of attention from domestic and foreign experts.

Consumer prices associated with social stability are the top concern of the public in China. The increase of CPI indicates that the surge in commodities prices is ongoing in the consumption market, closely linked with the daily lives of ordinary people. China’s income per capita still lags behind the United States, the European Union, and even some other emerging economies. How to increase income and stabilize or lower the prices in the market, especially for daily essentials, should be attached great importance by the government.

Livelihood is like the basis for constructing a building, which lays the firm foundation for a harmonious society. Whether people can lead a good life decides the quality of governance by central and local authorities. High consumer prices pose an unstable economic factor to improving the living standard of people.

More regulations are expected for the soaring Chinese CPI. As to that situation, the People’s Bank of China, the central bank of China, has noticed and adopted a measure increasing the required reserve ratio by 50 basis points and coming into effect on Nov 16, 2010, in order to ease the pressure from the second round of quantitative easing policy (QE2) by the Federal Reserve of the US and increasing liquidity caused commodity prices to rise in China. But is it enough to merely depend on national economic regulatory authorities?

Every economy released loose monetary policies to conquer the challenges brought by the international financial crisis in 2008 and get out of the recession. But side effects are inevitable. Rising inflation is one of the consequences. As a result, countries with expansion policies on issuing more currencies should work together and reach agreements to confront the emerging side effect -- inflation.

The author can be reached at larryhuangshuo@gmail.com.

http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/business/2010-11/15/content_11552427.htm

China rate rises no panacea to curb inflation: PBOC adviser

China rate rises no panacea to curb inflation: PBOC adviser
(Agencies)
Updated: 2010-11-18 11:06

China should not solely rely on interest rate rises to curb inflation, an academic adviser to the People's Bank of China said in remarks published on Thursday.

Zhou Qiren, who is also a professor at Peking University, said the government must take steps to tackle supply-side strains that have been a key factor pushing consumer prices.

Loose monetary policy in 2009 has created excessive liquidity and helped fuel prices of various products, he said.

"Much liquidity and fewer goods are the reasons behind inflation. Raising interest rates cannot change such a situation," he was quoted by the China Securities Journal as saying.

Zhou warned that liquidity had been channeled from the real estate market to other sectors of the economy, after Beijing took harsh measures to prevent a property bubble.

China's CPI hit a 25-month high of 4.4 percent in October, fuelling expectations of further tightening measures.

The PBOC has ramped up its efforts to tighten monetary conditions in the past month, increasing bank reserve requirements and surprising markets on Oct 19 by announcing the first rate rise in nearly three years.

http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/business/2010-11/18/content_11570306.htm

Related readings
:China rate rises no panacea to curb inflation: PBOC adviser Gold drops on China interest rate hike rumor, stronger dollar
China rate rises no panacea to curb inflation: PBOC adviser Stocks down on mainland rate worries
China rate rises no panacea to curb inflation: PBOC adviser Rising food costs boost China's inflation rate to 25-month high
China rate rises no panacea to curb inflation: PBOC adviser Oct consumer confidence falls due to inflation, rate hike

Rise of the middle class

Rise of the middle class
By Tang Jun (China Daily)
Updated: 2010-11-18 15:12

Society will be more stable when one third of the Chinese population has material means to become social backbone

Many scholars and individuals are showing concern about what kind of social structure will bring the best stability.

According to sociological theories, a modern society can be divided into four ranks: the wealthy, the middle class, labor and the disadvantaged. The middle class creates the ladder between the well-to-do and the poverty-stricken, thus easing the antagonism between them, by granting those at the bottom the hope of rising to a higher level.

Generally speaking, in a modern society, the middle class contains 60 to 70 percent of the population, leaving about 15 to 20 percent at either end of the ladder. Such a large middle class ensures stability for a society.

How do we define the middle class? There are three standards: material wealth, job status and self-identity.

Concerning material wealth, a middle income, sufficient to maintain a comfortable but not luxurious lifestyle, is the first pursuit of the middle class. In the present social situations, a typical middle-class family tends to own a car and a house, together with certain financial products.

The xiaokang (literally moderate prosperity) standard introduced by the government is essentially the Chinese version of the middle class. Sufficient wealth accumulation is the first prerequisite to be xiaokang.

Job status is another essential. In this society, a salary is still the most important income source for most individuals; therefore a stable job is the pursuit.

With the rise of knowledge capital, intellectuals and technicians are taking more pride in gaining a position through their knowledge or technical skills.

Self-identity is also indispensable. Being middle class means having access to a decent and relatively comfortable life and having the will to strive forward. This is beneficial to both the people and society.

During the past 30 years, a middle class has come into being in China. According to Professor Lu Xueyi of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, 23 percent of the population belong to the middle class; five years ago it was 18 percent. He estimates that the number will increase by 1 percent every year. If that growth rate can be maintained the middle class could reach 40 percent of the population by 2020.

However, that will not be achieved without problems. Ever since reform and opening-up in late 1970s, our changes in social structure have lagged 15 years behind economic development; that's the origin of many of our social problems.

The middle class, with a strong sense of social responsibility, should be the backbone of society. The awareness of being a responsible citizen offers strong support for society. However, the middle class in China is still immature in this respect and society needs them to meet their social obligations.

Of course, the rise of the middle class in any society is in dire need of rational support from the government. On their road to industrialization and modernization, many developed countries offered support or subsidy to blue-collar workers, helping them to own and accumulate capital. After World War II, many countries also used the policy "houses for residents", which proved very successful.

Owning a house has long been considered a prerequisite of entering the middle class, and when more and more people find it hard to reach this standard, it is impossible for them to remain silent.

The present tendency of economic growth is unfriendly to many people, especially to the supporting pillar of industry - migrant workers, whose number has reached 200 million. We hope the "inclusive growth" in the 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-2015) will solve these problems.

Three decades ago, Deng Xiaoping said: "Let one part of the people get rich first." Today might we make a similar statement for the 12th Five-Year Plan period - let one third of the Chinese people become middle class first.

The author is a researcher and secretary general of the Social Policy Research Center of the China Academy of Social Sciences.

http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/business/2010-11/18/content_11571957.htm


Related readings
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Rise of the middle class Second-hand fashion revives virtues in China's middle class
Rise of the middle class Enigma of the middle class

Thursday 18 November 2010

Chinese shares continue to drop over tightening policy concerns



(Xinhua)
Updated: 2010-11-17 15:57

BEIJING - Chinese equities continued to drop for a second day in a row Wednesday as investors feared prospects of higher interest rates and inflation control policies would hurt earnings.

The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index shed 1.92 percent, or 55.68 points, to close at 2,838.86.

The Shenzhen Component Index dropped 2.45 percent, or 299.78 points, to end at 11,917.49.

Combined turnover shrank to 288.4 billion yuan from 398.13 billion yuan the previous trading day.

US stocks slide as global fears hit

US stocks slide as global fears hit
November 17, 2010

US stocks fell nearly 2 per cent on Tuesday as the prospect of more European bailouts and worries China will rein in inflation prompted investors to abandon risky assets.

The developments, especially questions about Ireland's financial stability, caused a spike in the US dollar, which hit commodity prices. That in turn sent equities lower, with natural resources companies leading the way down.

What you need to know

The SPI was 67 points lower at 4646
The $A was down at 97.66 US cents
The Reuters Jefferies CRB Index was down 3.2%

"Is (US) dollar strength just a correction in a larger trend of dollar weakness, or are we beginning to turn around here?" said Bill Strazzullo, partner and chief investment strategist at Bell Curve Trading in Boston.

"If it looks like the US dollar is finally stabilising here and gaining its footing, we're going to have a good-sized pullback in equities and commodities markets."

Asset classes have become increasingly entwined since investors placed bets ahead of the Federal Reserve's announcement of further quantitative easing. Now, many investors that bet on Fed stimulus are unwinding those risky positions.

One result was a slide in resource stocks, such as Alcoa Inc, which fell 2.8 per cent to $US13.03, and Exxon Mobil Corp, which dropped 2.2 per cent to $US68.94. US crude oil futures settled 3 per cent lower at $US82.34 a barrel, gold and metal prices fell and the US dollar index jumped 0.9 per cent.

The S&P materials sector gave up 2.2 per cent. Tech shares also stumbled, falling 1.9 per cent, as investors fled for safety.

The Dow Jones industrial average dropped 178.47 points, or 1.59 per cent, to 11,023.50. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index shed 19.41 points, or 1.62 per cent, to 1178.34. The Nasdaq Composite Index gave up 43.98 points, or 1.75 per cent, at 2469.84.

Ireland, which is grappling with a battered banking sector, said it was discussing stabilization measures with its European partners, while China is expected to unveil food price controls and crack down on commodity speculation to contain inflationary pressure.

The Chinese media reports increased expectations that China will further tighten monetary policy to help fight inflation.

The S&P found support around the 1176 level, which is roughly the 23.6 per cent Fibonacci retracement of the benchmark's recent rally from the 2010 low in July to its more than two-year high hit earlier this month.

After rallying nearly 13 per cent through September and October, the S&P 500 has given up nearly 4 per cent since November 5.

"If we don't see the S&P back above 1200 in the next couple days, then I think we're potentially putting in some sort of top here," said Strazzullo.

Continued speculation over whether the Federal Reserve will spend all of the $US600 billion it had earmarked for its latest round of quantitative easing also pressured the market.

St. Louis Fed President James Bullard said in an interview with Bloomberg Radio the central bank would scale down its planned purchases of Treasury bonds only if there was a strong improvement in the US economy.

Global developments overshadowed a favorable US corporate picture as Wal-Mart Stores Inc and Home Depot Inc raised their profit forecasts for the year.

The two companies were the only Dow stocks to rise. Wal-Mart added 0.6 per cent to $US54.26 after it also forecast positive same-store sales for the holiday season, and Home Depot rose 1 per cent to $US31.71, though it cut its full-year sales outlook.

Reuters

http://www.watoday.com.au/business/markets/us-stocks-slide-as-global-fears-hit-20101117-17w7w.html

Wednesday 17 November 2010

China needs to raise rates to cope with QE2

China needs to raise rates to cope with QE2
(Agencies)
Updated: 2010-11-05 11:04

BEIJING - China needs to increase interest rates to curb capital inflows driven by US monetary easing, an official newspaper said in an editorial on Friday.

Although such a move would increase the rate differential between China and the United States, which might by itself attract further cash from abroad, the China Securities Journal argued that raising interest rates would provide a net benefit by cooling domestic asset prices.

"We must not forget the Japan lesson. We must tighten internal policies to deal with external easing so as to avoid the formation of asset bubbles," the leading financial newspaper said in a front-page editorial.

It said that Japan's interest rate cuts in the 1980s inflated asset prices and led to deflation when the bubbles burst.

China needs to be wary about asset bubbles because food-driven inflation pressure is on the rise and efforts to ward off hot-money inflows are less effective since other developing countries, including Brazil, South Korea and Thailand, are also trying to impose capital controls, it said.

"From this perspective, it's necessary for our country to enter a cycle of interest rate rises," it suggested. "The process of our capital account opening should also be controlled."

The editorial does not necessarily represent official policy, but it does reflect widespread worries in China about how to cope with a rise in international liquidity after the US Federal Reserve unveiled a fresh round of quantitative easing this week.

China raised interest rates last month for the first time in nearly three years, although the jury is out among economists about whether the next rate rise will come before the end of this year.

http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/business/2010-11/05/content_11507379.htm

Quantitative easing a form of currency intervention

Quantitative easing a form of currency intervention
By Wang Guanyi (HK Edition)
Updated: 2010-10-20 06:58


The recent dispute in currency policies between export-oriented economies and developed economies can be traced back to the 2008 financial crisis. Developed economies have chosen to print money in order to claw the effects of the 2008 financial collapse.

Quantitative Easing (QE) was introduced in early 2009 by the central banks in hope to jump start their domestic economies. This helped restore confidence in the financial markets but never accomplished its purpose of boosting their own countries' economies. None of the G7 countries have been able to regain GDP growth close to that of pre-crisis levels. Hoping to boost business activity, central bankers printed money, but commercial banks were unwilling to lend, which resulted in massive liquidity directed elsewhere. Through the highly efficient network of investment banks, most of the extra liquidity injected indeed flew into the financial systems and once again boosted prices of various financial assets, while at the same time causing the US dollar to depreciate significantly over the past six months.

On the other hand, emerging market economies, which at one point relied heavily on exports, are suddenly witnessing significant appreciation pressure on their own currencies. Many of these economies acted, through tax or other forms of capital control, to maintain the stability of their own financial systems from the flooding of currencies such as the yen and the dollar. From the perspective of emerging economics, QE is a form of currency intervention, and a way of exporting inflation. The developed countries are trying to walk out from the gloom of deflation by transporting inflationary pressure on others through currency depreciation.

China has always been responsive and takes part in its fair share of global social responsibility. The country chose not to appreciate the yuan in the 1998 Asian crisis, which made life for all the Southeast Asian countries easier during the period. However, the impact and implications of further yuan appreciation on the country's 1.3 billion citizens will be drastic and must be handled carefully by the country's leaders. Because of the scale of such a move, China needs to consider all measures in handling the matter and this is an issue on which it will not easily give way.

Over the past two years, Beijing has worked hard to stimulate its domestic consumption in order to push GDP expansion and find other ways of continuing its economic growth without relying too heavily on exports. However, this is no easy task and such a change will take a longer time to implement in an economy as large as China's. Moreover, manufacturers in China are already pressured by surging labor and commodity costs. A rapid surge in the yuan will not only be catastrophic to exporters but could also lead to a huge surge in unemployment and subsequently social instability. On the other hand, if the yuan appreciates at a healthy pace, this would allow the restructuring of the Chinese economy to take place and the gradual transfer of wealth from exporters to households. Additionally, emerging Chinese consumers may eventually be able to provide employment opportunities to help alleviate western unemployment problems.

The Chinese Central Government clearly has a road map on internationalizing the yuan and ultimately making it a free-floating currency. However, the road map would clearly rely on when the infrastructure, legal framework, domestic banking and financial systems are ready. The actions from the Plaza Accord and the bitter lessons that the Japanese learned after appreciating the yen is well remembered. It might be in the interest of China to lend to the US for consuming more Chinese goods. It will never, however, be in the interest of China to jeopardize the well being of its manufacturers, to inflate property and stock markets with hot money, and to risk wiping out the wealth accumulated by hard working. Everyone knows that when hot money retreats, bubbles will burst and this is something China is taking very seriously.

The author is a visiting professor at the Asian International Open University, an international financial commentator at NOW business news channel and founder of www.wongsir.com.hk.

(HK Edition 10/20/2010 page2)


http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/hkedition/2010-10/20/content_11431630.htm

Tuesday 16 November 2010

QE2 may have 'catastrophic consequences' for global economy


By Ren Jie (chinadaily.com.cn)

Updated: 2010-11-12 10:54



QE2 may have 'catastrophic consequences' for global economy

 Cheng Siwei
The US Federal Reserve's recent move to issue $600 billion for restoring a foundering US economy may have catastrophic consequences for the global economy, according to Cheng Siwei, economist and former vice-chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress.
Cheng made the remarks at "A World Summit: The Ascent of China's Capital Markets" in Beijing on Wednesday.
Emerging-market stocks rose and prices of bulk commodities surged significantly last week following the US Fed's announcement on Nov 3 that it will buy $600 billion in Treasury bonds to boost the US economy, in a move known as "quantitative easing" (QE2), which triggered global debate. Many economists say they believe that the policy's effectiveness is uncertain.
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Cheng said the US QE2 may trigger inflation in global markets, adding that the move will lead to an inflow of hot money to some countries and put appreciation pressure on the currencies of those countries.
Cheng also said there are many ways for hot money to enter in China, especially since the country's central bank is raising interest rates. He said busting underground banking rings will help the country curb hot money inflows.
Cheng also said he is a "prudential optimist" and is confident in the performance of Chinese stocks in 2011. He admitted that the A-shares are still in a bear market, but said the worst part of it is over. Chinese capital markets will gradually enter in a bull market next year as the nation's economy growth remains stable.


http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/business/2010-11/12/content_11541106.htm