Chinese Economics Thread

Norfolk

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"
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", Li Xiaochao, National Bureau of Statistics of China, 2008-04-16 (Quoted from the web site of the National Bureau of Statistics of the People's Republic of China,
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According to preliminary estimation, the gross domestic product (GDP) of China in the first quarter of this year was 6,149.1 billion yuan, a year-on-year increase of 10.6 percent, which was 1.1 percentage points lower than that in the same period last year. The value added of the primary industry was 472.0 billion yuan, up by 2.8 percent, or down by 1.6 percentage points; that of the secondary industry was 3,077.8 billion yuan, up by 11.5 percent, or 1.7 percentage points lower; and that of the tertiary industry was 2,599.3 billion yuan, up by 10.9 percent, down by 0.4 percentage point.
and:
5. Prices were on a higher level and the sales prices of housing continued to rise. In the first quarter of this year, the consumer price index went up by 8.0 percent (8.3 percent growth in March, the month-on-month change was down by 0.7 percent), 5.3 percentage points higher than that in the same period last year. The price rose by 7.8 percent in cities and 8.7 percent in rural areas.

More at the link. In short, the NBS Quarterly Report was quite positive, noting of course, that inflationary pressures persist and indeed have increased somewhat.

"
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", Forbes Staff, Forbes, 04.16.08:
HONG KONG -
The People's Bank of China ordered all Chinese lenders to set aside more reserves in an ongoing attempt to clamp down on excess lending, after the country reported on Wednesday that its inflation rate remained above 8% in March.

The central bank on Wednesday lifted the country's bank reserve ratio by 0.5%, the third such hike in this year. Banks will now be required to hold 16.0% of their deposits in reserve, effective April 25.

More at the link. Food prices were 21% higher in March than they were a year earlier; yet the GDP increased by 10.6% to 6.2 trillion yuan or US$ 886.6 billion. There are potentially serious problems to be sure, but a lot of countries would consider themselves fortunate to have these sorts of problems. Note the concluding paragraphs of the article.

"
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", by Cary Huang, South China Morning Post, Wednesday, April 16, 2008 (via LexisNexis News):
Zeng Liying, deputy director of the State Grain Administration, told this year's China Grain and Oil Market Outlook Conference that shortfalls in the production of some grains, rising costs and fluctuations in the international market would put pressure on domestic grain prices. The conference was organised by the State Grain and Oil Information Centre, the official China Securities Journal reported yesterday.

Ms Zeng said domestic production still could not meet demand, though the shortfall had been reduced from more than 50 million tonnes in 2003 to below 15 million tonnes last year after four consecutive bumper harvests in key grain-planting regions.

The agency is predicting that wheat production will rise for a fifth consecutive year, and that grain output will total 500 million tonnes.

More at the link. Even as food prices go up, farmers' rising production costs are nevertheless discouraging further planting.

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", by Stephen Foley, The Independent, Wednesday, April 16, 2008 (First Edition) (via LexisNexis News):

It was a neat coincidence that Alistair Darling, the Chancellor, was in Beijing yesterday for what was being billed as a China-UK "economic and financial dialogue". Because yesterday was the day that it emerged there has been a bit of dialogue going on between the Chinese government and BP, the jewel in the crown of the British oil industry. China's central bank, it seems, has amassed a £1bn stake in BP, giving it about 1 per cent of the company and underscoring, as if it were needed, the growing financial power of the Chinese state and the "sovereign wealth" that it is putting to work around the globe.

In many quarters in the West, the emergence of sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) from the developing nations of the Middle and Far East has been met with alarm, and by alarmist political rhetoric. In the US, for example, it is also being met with real political resistance, and even out-and-out protectionism.

More at the link. This is a story that has really caught peoples' attention in the UK (and elsewhere). Britain is openly gunning to attract Chinese investment, particularly by taking advantage of the increasing protectionist sensibilities in the US and the EU. The question is, though, with Chinese investment heavily weighted towards resources (and where possible, high-tech as well), just how open to Chinese investments will Britain be, and for how long?
 

Norfolk

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", by Michael Pettis, The Wall Street Journal, April 17, 2008:

It might be unreasonable to expect 6% deflation in the prices of nonfood items tracked in the CPI, but certainly China does have a recent history of price deflation in many goods. Prices do take time to adjust – a phenomenon economists call "sticky" prices. Still, even if deflation of this magnitude were unrealistic, sharply rising food prices should nonetheless have put real downward price pressure on the nonfood sector, and this downward pricing pressure should have had at least some material impact on actual price performance.

But so far, it hasn't. Between January and March this year, the price of nonfood items tracked in the CPI increased to 2.2% from 1.6%. This is not at all consistent with the argument that inflation is a temporary food-supply problem.

More at the link. If non-food items are indeed increasing in price and at an increasing rate, then as Pettis posits, even if inflation in the prices of food-items falls considerably, the non-food items will continue to substantially increase anyway. So far, the dramatic inflation that has affected food items has only served to obscure the real source of inflation, inadequate monetary policies and measures (and foreign financial disasters).
 

Norfolk

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", by Enoch Yiu, South China Morning Post, Tuesday, April 22, 2008 (via LexisNexis News):

The stock exchange will proceed with a controversial plan to make companies report earnings every three months instead of twice a year, shrugging off stiff opposition from some of the city's biggest companies.

A regulatory source said quarterly reporting was expected to be in place by 2011 but to appease critics, who complain the move will boost costs, it would be introduced in stages.

The plan has drawn fire from corporate heavyweights including HSBC, CLP Holdings, Cheung Kong (Holdings) and Air China, which say it will not only be more costly but make investors focus on short-term profit.

More at the link. More regulation is not always bad, particularly when it comes to the financial sector. But is will be resisted tooth-and-nail, of course.

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", by Anthony Hilton, The Evening Standard, Wednesday, April 23, 2008 (via LexisNexis News):

Two years ago, in a book called The Bill from the China Shop, Charles Dumas of Lombard Street Research spelled out before even Ben Bernanke of the US Federal Reserve had seen the danger, the threat to the world economy that would be caused by the huge accumulation of dollars by China.

These were flowing in as a result of the imbalance of trade between it and the US; flowing back as Chinese investments in US Treasury bills and directly fuelling what we now know to be the credit bubble.

More at the link. A rather short article, and the title is a poor choice; it should rather read "The Debt Threat" or the "Balance of Payments Threat". But a satisfactory article just the same.

"
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", by Charlotte So, South China Morning Post, Wednesday, April 23, 2008 (via LexisNexis News):

China Cosco Holdings, the country's largest shipping conglomerate, saw net profit soar 873.5 per cent last year to 19.47 billion yuan ($21HK.72 billion) and sales rise 47 per cent to 93.9 billion yuan on higher shipping rates and robust export growth.

Earnings per share rose to 41.81 fen from 32.99 fen the year before, the group said in an announcement filed with the Shanghai Stock Exchange last night. It declared a final dividend of 18 fen per share.

Last year, China Cosco raised 28.1 billion yuan from an initial public offering and a placement in the A-share market.

More at the link. Good news, well, GREAT news - 47% rise in sales, and an astounding 873% net profit increase. But...the outlook for next year is not so sanguine, thus the company's decision to have its ships reduce transit speed by some 10% in order to conserve on fuel costs.

"
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", Lloyd's List, Wednesday, April 23, 2008 (via LexisNexis News):

CHINA increased its reliance on Angola and the Middle East to feed its burgeoning appetite for crude oil in March, while some raw materials demand appeared to soften, writes Michelle Wiese Bockmann.


Oil demand in March grew the fastest in more than two and a half years, according to Reuters' analysis. Apparent demand leapt 8.1% to 7.26m barrels per day compared to the same period last year.

More at the link. Hardly unexpected, and China has been making new friends in the ME in recent years, while Angola of course is an old friend. China is going to have lots of new friends as well as old ones pretty soon, the common denominator amongst them being that they have natural resources aplenty. China's stated policy of non-interference in other countries' internal affairs, as well as willingness to export arms, are major attractions in the other direction, besides the hard currency earnings themselves. Yes, all very shocking, I know.:rolleyes:

"
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", by Emma Graham-Harrison, The International Herald Tribune, Tuesday, April 22, 2008 (via LexisNexis News):

The rise of oil to more than $117 a barrel Monday from $30 in 2003 has certainly been aided by surging Asian demand. But lately traders have also taken notice of flat or declining output from non-OPEC producers like Mexico and Britain, a worrying sign for future supplies.


In Russia, the world's No. 2 producer after Saudi Arabia, output failed to grow for a third month in a row in March.


But in China, where a decline might be expected at old fields like Daqing, growth has been small but steady. Output climbed 2.2 percent in the first quarter, data showed last Thursday.

More at the link. Let's face it, China pays attention to what it will concretely need, and then goes after it. It is not given to profit expansion or speculation for its own sake, nor is it hesitant to put its good money down in order to provide for production increases. OPEC and Saudi may be reluctant to invest in production expansion, but China cannot afford the luxury of equivocation. As the article quotes one of the research heads at Societe Generale, "its' a national security issue". Investment returns versus national security; quite the difference in motivations.

"
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", by Vince Chong, The Straits Times, Tuesday, April 22, 2008 (via LexisNexis News):

BEIJING - RETAIL investors in China, reeling from savage sell-downs in recent months, got a much-needed confidence booster yesterday.


The authorities have moved to curb the sale of huge amounts of shares that have just emerged from lock-up periods.


Analysts said this could be the first salvo in much-needed efforts to help prop up mainland share prices.

More at the link. Even if the material results of this move are mixed, the psychological effect is still important; investors know that the Government will by no means stand idly by while investments and savings go to the dogs.

"
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", by Jasmine Wang, South China Morning Post, Monday, April 21, 2008 (via Lexis Nexis News):

Both China Foods and China Agri-Industries are Hong Kong-listed subsidiaries of the mainland's biggest food importer and exporter - China National Cereals, Oils & Foodstuffs Import & Export Corp (Cofco). Whereas the former was shunned by analysts, the latter won their kudos after both announced final results last week.


The irony with China Foods, Cofco's unit that makes and distributes consumer-pack edible oil, wines, beverage and confectionery, is that despite accounting for 42.7 per cent of total revenue for the year to December, its packaged edible oil division took an operating loss of $19HK.8 million and net loss of $21HK.5 million.


The gross margin for consumer edible oil eroded to 7.1 per cent from 8.8 per cent the year before. By contrast, the gross margins of its other lines were as high as 52.5 per cent and 27 per cent, respectively.

More at the link. A sad reality of the food business: the money's at the value-added end, not the raw commodity end (let alone the production - farmer - end). And when the Government has to put price controls on basic foodstuffs in order to restrain inflation, things get that much worse.

"
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", by Tracy Quek, The Straits Times, Monday, April 21, 2008 (via LexisNexis News):

BEIJING - CHINA yesterday released a detailed draft of the country's first food safety law, under which hefty fines for a range of offences will become legally enforceable.


The regulation, expected to be enacted later this year, is the first comprehensive nationwide law on food quality. It is aimed at beefing up a weak regulatory system which has been blamed for serious problems in China's food industry.

More at the link. It's one thing to enact new laws and regulations. It's quite another to enforce them, and this is where it's going to be very hard.

"
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", by Lydia Chen, Shanghai Daily.com, Wednesday, 23 April, 2008:

CHINA'S State Council today slashed stamp duty on stocks from the previous 0.3 percent to 0.1 percent, starting tomorrow to restore investor confidence after the recent market sell-off seem to have been heard.

This was the country's ninth adjustment of the stamp duty in its history.

More at the link. Well, at least the Shanghai Composite is up a little, and over the 3,000 mark again.

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", Xinhua, English Eastday.com, 23/4/2008:


The nation's entire coal reserves slumped to 46.69 million tons as of April 20, down 12 percent from 53 million tons in the early March, said Wang at a news conference on Tuesday.
The national stockpile was only sufficient for 12 days of consumption, three days fewer than the March record. Coal inventories for plants in Anhui, Chongqing and Hebei were only enough for less than a week, he said.

More at the link. This is very unsettling news.
"
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", by Katherine Ng, The Standard, Wednesday, April 23, 2008:

China Merchants Bank (3968) said first- quarter profit jumped 157 percent on the back of widening interest margins, improving fee income and a lower income tax rate.

Net profit in the first three months at the Shenzhen lender jumped to 6.32 billion yuan (HK$7.08 billion), from 2.46 billion yuan a year earlier, according to unaudited figures based on China accounting standards.

More at the link. Good news, though there seems to be a little over-optimism on the point of no further interest rate increases being needed in order to restrain inflation. Hmmm...

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", by Michael Pettis, China Financial Markets, 2008-04-21:

No matter how you look at it, even if we make relative generous guesses about declines in April and May inflation, to get inflation for all of 2008 to come in under 7% we are going to need a very sudden and sharp decline in the inflation rate. This is of course possible, but I think it is going to be hard for CPI inflation to start the year at nearly 13% nonetheless to finish the second half of the year at well under 4%. I also think it would be inconsistent with the kinds of GDP growth rates that everyone expects. Such a dramatic decline would almost certainly come with a very sharp economic slowdown, right? I am having trouble accepting the consistency of inflation and GDP projections.

More at the link. Now, for something a little diffferent from Michael Pettis' views on inflation, here's something he's toying with right now:

"
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", by Michael Pettis, China Financial Markets, 2008-04-22:

I noted in particular a comment by John Tamny, at
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, in which he claims that in the US “empirical evidence suggests that economic slowdowns correlate far more with rising, rather than falling, prices.” This is because, he argues, inflation is monetary, and not necessarily affected by changes in aggregate demand.

Since much of the tightening focus here in China is in the form of loan caps, administrative measures, and a more rapid appreciation of the currency, and the last of these simply means more hot money inflows and so more monetary expansion, one could make a very plausible case that the tightening can cause an economic contraction while having no impact on inflation, which would continue to rise. Stagflation is not only possible, but in certain fairly plausible scenarios it is very likely.

More at the link. So, if you thought Pettis was cheery in his writings about inflation, you'll find him positively blissful on the subject of Stagflation.:eek::rolleyes: Check out the Shanghai Securities News statement that he cites.
 

Norfolk

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", by Nick Westra and Ren Wei, South China Morning Post, Friday, April 25, 2008 (via LexisNexis News):

Investors went on a frenzied chase for mainland stocks yesterday on news of a cut in the stamp duty on share transactions, lifting A shares to near their intraday trading limit and taking the Hong Kong market along in the rally.

The Shanghai Composite Index shot up 304.70 points, or 9.29 per cent, to 3,583.03 for its largest single-day gain since October 23, 2001.

Given a rare reprieve from heavy selling pressure, nearly 500 stocks - more than half the benchmark's total members - hit the 10 per cent daily trading limit.

More at the link. Good news; hope it lasts, but I won't bet on it. Check out the bit on "a correction looming"...:(

"
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", by Simon Rabinovitch, The International Herald Tribune, Friday, April 25, 2008 (via LexisNexis News):

Headlines about Chinese companies going under as the world economy slows have alarmed investors. Yet the latest evidence from Beijing shows an economy as resilient as it is roaring.

''Export growth should continue to slow, but it should be offset by more domestic activity,'' said Paul Cavey, Macquarie's chief China economist in Hong Kong. To be sure, slumping sales to the United States are a drag.

China's trade surplus narrowed in the first quarter and analysts expect it to shrink further over the rest of the year, potentially shaving about two percentage points off gross domestic product growth. Last year, net exports accounted for more than a quarter of China's 11.9 percent GDP expansion. The home front, though, is helping to fill the gap.

More at the link. As the article states, export earnings only account for 10% of China's GDP. A question, however, is whether that 10% is simply icing on the cake, or a margin of safety within an economy that however dynamic, is nevertheless vulnerable to internal inflationary pressures and stock market volatility.

"
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", Lloyd's List, Friday, April 25, 2008 (via LexisNexis News):

IT WOULD be ironic if the US financial crisis hurts China badly enough to kill, or at least badly damage, its rapacious demand for coal in two years' time.

For that would mean the $1bn Port Waratah Coal Services post-2010 expansion plan, unveiled this month and aimed at enabling coal output from its Newcastle operation to be boosted by 40%, would come under heavy pressure for a rethink.

While such speculation may amuse global economy pessimists, it cuts no ice at PWCS which sets great store by its long-term expansion strategy, which has already seen $1bn committed to its Kooragang Island site since 1999.

More at the link. China uses coal to compensate for petroleum whenever practical; if this project were to fail as a result of international financial conditions, then obviously the shortfall will have to be made up from somewhere else, and of course quite possibly from ever-more expensive oil.

"
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", by Helen Yuan, Shanghai Daily.com, 2008-4-26:

BAOSTEEL Group Corp, China's biggest steel maker, may sell shares in New York, London or Hong Kong to help raise 60 billion yuan (US$8.6 billion) to increase capacity by a third in the world's fastest-growing major economy.

Baosteel may seek to raise 30 billion yuan through loans and stock sales for the Zhanjiang project in the southern Guangdong Province, Chairman Xu Lejiang said in a Bloomberg Television interview in Shanghai broadcast yesterday. The state-owned company, which produces 5.8 percent of China's steel, needs to expand to meet rising demand from car makers and shipbuilders.

More at the link. This is fairly aggressive, but given that the economy is
transistioning to value-added goods and shipbuilding orders remain strong, should be readily achievable.

"
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", by Michael Pettis, China Financial Markets, 2008-04-25:

This is exactly what I was worried about. After a strong start this morning on the back or yesterday’s furious rally the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock markets suddenly turned negative and ended the day lower, with the SCI dropping by 0.71%. It is widely known among financial market experts that governments can have powerful impacts on the market by signaling their intentions, but the more often they do it by pure signaling (i.e. with measures that have no fundamental impact) the less credible their signaling becomes over time. In other words the more you intervene to control the market the more empty your intervention becomes – this is a weapon whose greatest power lies in the rarity with which it is used.

I suspect we may be about to prove this yet again. For the past year we have seen a whole series of interventions designed explicitly to manage market prices – and although they have worked well, they have done so with decreasing success. The market surged 9.3% yesterday when the tax authorities announced that they were cutting the stamp tax, but everybody bought just because they expected everyone else to buy. There was no real conviction.

More at the link. Compare today's blog post by Michael Pettis to yesterday's, and the
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's before that. This may turn out to be a fun ride.:eek:
 

yongke

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Every time the market goes on a roller coaster, I kick myself for not selling and buying at the right time...
 

Norfolk

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Every time the market goes on a roller coaster, I kick myself for not selling and buying at the right time...

Yeah, after I received my last RRSP statement last week, I felt like engaging in a little self-punishment myself.:(

"
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", by Candy Wong, South China Morning Post, Saturday, April 26, 2008 (via LexisNexis News):

China Railway, the largest railway construction contractor on the mainland, reported net profit increased 18.4 per cent to 2.42 billion yuan last year on revenue of 173.75 billion yuan, up 13.1 per cent.

However, its four main businesses - infrastructure construction, consulting services, engineering equipment and property development - all posted lower gross profit margins.

More at the link. Even China Railways is being forced by materials costs to seek "efficiencies".:(

"
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", by Vince Chong, The Straits Times, Saturday, 26 April, 2008 (via LexisNexis News):

BEIJING - TRADE representatives from Europe and China yesterday appeared to have patched up relations which soured after their last meeting in Beijing.

Mr Peter Mandelson, European trade chief, said the latest discussions were 'more rigorous' and 'realistic' than any other set of talks he has had in previous visits.

He spoke to the media after officials from both sides held the maiden session of a so-called High-Level Economic and Trade Dialogue Mechanism, which advanced trade and economic dialogue between the two to a new milestone.

To be convened annually, the dialogue is aimed partly at addressing one of Europe's top economic concerns - China's widening trade surplus, which grew to almost 160 billion euros ($340S billion) last year from more than 130billion euros the year before.

More at the link. This is better news; but given the rise of European concerns vis-a-vis China's domestic policies as well as the competition for market share that Chinese imports create, this is not solid. Firmer, but by no means written in stone.

"
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", by Will Clem, South China Morning Post, Saturday, 26 April, 2008 (via LexisNexis News):

The mainland's top universities could be among the best in the world within a generation, the head of a leading US university has said.

Speaking in Hong Kong last Saturday, Stanford University president John Hennessy said the rise in prominence of Chinese universities would drive up competition internationally in terms of hiring the best academics.

"Quality is definitely on the upswing," Professor Hennessy said, citing Tsinghua University, Peking University, Shanghai Jiaotong University and Fudan University as examples.

More at the link. Once China' s universities ascend to the top tier, the potential for not only China's population to access the finest-quality education right at home, but for students from around the world to come to China to seek said, may become possible. If this were to come to pass, and China played its cards right, it could displace Europe and the United States by century's end as the centre of learning in the world. What a stunningly profound shift in thinking that might result in.

News blurbs from Shanghai Daily.com:

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", by Maggie Zhang, 2008-4-28
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", 2008-4-28
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", by Josephine Lau, 2008-4-28
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", by Zhao Yidi, 2008-4-28

News from English.eastday.com:

"
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", 26/4/2008
"
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", 26/4/2008

"
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", 27/4/2008
 

Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
Buried in the avalanche of statistic We all forget that it is people that eventualy make the prosperity. For years the natural talent of Chinese people was stunted by goverment. Now that it has been unleashed we all can see the result. No one I say no one can beat the enterpreneurial spirit of the Chinese Nation

Horatio Alger Multiplied by 1.3 Billion
By JOE NOCERA

April 26, 2008

“My generation is very lucky,” said Feng Jun.

Mr. Feng, the chief executive of Aigo, a large Chinese consumer electronics company, is a classic Chinese entrepreneur: starting with $31 in his pocket, he has built a business whose products are a staple of urban China, including digital cameras, MP3 players and a new iPhone-like all-in-one device. Before telling me his Horatio Alger story, though, he had something he wanted me to understand.

“My mother and father went through the Cultural Revolution,” Mr. Feng said. “They had no chance.”

He continued: “When I was in grammar school, the Cultural Revolution ended. When I graduated from university in 1992, that was the year of real reform. Deng Xiaoping encouraged students to go into business and become entrepreneurs. Before then, if you wanted to be an entrepreneur, you would sink like a stone. But after that, anyone could be an entrepreneur.”

I spent two weeks in China, hardly enough time to begin understanding the place — as if a country as vast and varied and complex as China can ever be truly understood by a foreigner. But as I headed back to New York, Mr. Feng’s quote stuck with me. It resonates with so much else I saw and heard.

First, it helps explain why most of the Chinese chief executives I met — every one a company founder — were in their 30s. Though Mr. Feng began his company 16 years ago, he is just 39, and absolutely brimming with entrepreneurial enthusiasm.

You hear constantly that China is a country of young people — the average age is 33 — but you really see it in business, where just about everybody seems to be under the age of 40. For people over the age of 50, sadly, as Mr. Feng said, they had no chance. The risk-taking impulse, and so much else, was crushed by the Cultural Revolution.

Secondly, it’s a reminder just how quickly China’s economic rebirth has taken place. Mao Zedong died in 1976. Four years later, the country’s first special economic zone, explicitly created to encourage entrepreneurial capitalism, was established in the southern city of Shenzhen. What China has done in less than three decades is nothing short of astonishing. As Byron Wien, the chief investment strategist for Pequot Capital Management, wrote last summer, “Nothing I have read, heard or seen will dissuade me from my view that China has made more economic progress in the last 30 years than any country in history.” It is impossible to visit today’s China and disagree.

Third, modern China surely shows that trickle-down economics is not just supply-side propaganda. Deng Xiaoping, the driving force behind the move to capitalism after Mao’s death, famously said, “To get rich is glorious.” And goodness knows, lots of people have gotten rich.

But look at what else happened: motivated by the prospect of wealth, people started companies. And as those companies succeeded, millions of new jobs were created. In Shanghai — a place with more entrepreneurial energy than any place I’ve ever visited, including Silicon Valley in the 1990s and Houston during the 1980s oil boom — you can practically see wealth being created before your very eyes. If Shanghai doesn’t make you a believer in the power of capitalism to improve lives, nothing will.

Yes, in much of China, the deal is still a pretty raw one for most laborers, who live far from their families, working under arduous conditions for low wages. And like most first-time visitors, I was appalled by the pollution, especially in Beijing. (Are they really going to run a marathon there?) But even these problems are beginning to get attention, as the country moves to higher-value products, and as the environment becomes a public policy priority, thanks in part to the Olympics.



But can it last? There are, undeniably, signs of a bubble economy — wheeler-dealers everywhere, Internet companies with no real business models, private equity and venture capital rushing in helter-skelter, rising inflation, a volatile stock market that moves on rumors and hot tips.

There is a gold rush mentality, a powerful sense that you have to do a deal right this second, or somebody else will snatch it out from under you. These are attributes I also saw in Houston and Silicon Valley — and, well, you know how those booms turned out.

Yet who can really argue against China’s continued growth? It’s been mainly the coastal cities that have prospered so far. There are hundreds of millions of people in other parts of China where capitalism is just starting to take root. In a country of more than 1.3 billion people, “only” 162 million use the Internet (as of 2007) and what they see there is strictly censored. In a country with 20 percent of the world’s population, China accounts for only 2 percent of world consumption. Forget about exports — the growth of the domestic economy alone should keep China’s economy from stalling out.

Plus, of course, China has well over $1 trillion in foreign reserves — most of it in dollars, thus propping up our own consumption habits, thank you very much — which it can spend to unleash entrepreneurial instincts in the rest of the country. The government defines progress almost entirely in economic terms. Surely, such progress will leach beyond the big coastal cities, as the prospect of “glorious” riches loom.

Here’s another impression I came away with. Inch by inch, the intellectual property situation seems to be improving.

Admittedly, this is hardly obvious. Counterfeit goods are everywhere; even at the Great Wall, I was offered some great deals on fake Rolex watches. Cheap, pirated CDs and DVDs are equally ubiquitous. It doesn’t take more than a few days in China to see why Western movie and music company executives tear their hair out.

On the other hand, in the last few years the government has issued edicts calling on companies and government agencies to use — and pay for — licensed software. Lenovo, the Chinese company that makes the ThinkPad laptop, has been a leader in pushing the government to do more in this regard.

Alas, enforcement is still lax, but about a year ago, the government also mandated that computer manufacturers preload a licensed operating system instead of simply taking it; many of the big manufacturers now do so. Indeed, a number of big, publicly held Chinese companies, which five years ago would have used pirated software, now buy legal, licensed products from software vendors.

Including, of course, Chinese software vendors, like Caxa Technology, the company I mentioned in last week’s column. Do potential customers sometimes steal Caxa’s software? Yes, said Yi Lei, the chief executive. But most big customers are buying his product, and using it legally. “The rapid growth of Caxa shows that we are succeeding,” Mr. Yi said.

Hence the real reason that China is likely to start respecting intellectual property: China now has some skin in the game. More and more, it is not just Western companies with intellectual property to protect; Chinese companies like Caxa and Lenovo also need to have their intellectual property protected.

In addition, many Chinese companies talk about wanting to instill a culture of innovation, rather than slavishly copying the innovations of others. But innovation is impossible without intellectual property protection. After all, what’s the incentive to invent something new if your competitor can steal it with impunity?

I saw recently that Gucci won a big lawsuit — in China — against a Chinese company that was using its logo illegally. And Andrew Rothman, a China analyst with the investment firm CLSA, noted in a paper last September that “last year, China passed the U.S. to become the world’s most litigious country in terms of intellectual property disputes.” Most of the lawsuits, he added, were brought by Chinese companies against other Chinese companies. I never thought I’d see the day when an uptick in litigation was a sign of progress, but there you go.



My last interview in China was with a teacher-turned-businessman named Michael Yu. He is the founder and chief executive of New Oriental, a Kaplan-style company that he began in 1993 and has since become the largest private education company in China. In 2006, it went public, transforming Mr. Yu into a billionaire. On the day I met him, he was wearing a flannel shirt, jeans and sneakers. At 45, he was the oldest chief executive I met in China.

The interview was one of the most enjoyable hours I spent in China. Mr. Yu, it turned out, had been through a lot to get to this point — he’d been run out of Beijing University after a public humiliation, had struggled to get a government license to start his first school and had had to slay many dragons along the way. His was hardly a get-rich-quick story, and Mr. Yu told it without an ounce of braggadocio. “Michael built a business before he did an I.P.O,” said New Oriental’s chief financial officer, Louis T. Hsieh.

Though he professed to be a poor manager — “that’s why I hired these guys,” he laughed, pointing to Mr. Hsieh and another executive — Mr. Yu had the qualities you yearn to see in any company leader. He clearly cared deeply about his company and its mission. He wanted to see his employees succeed. He was straightforward and charismatic.

“We didn’t just do this to get rich,” he said. “We are doing it to enrich other people’s life. The I.P.O. is a dot on the road. You do not change your road because you have money or because you have an I.P.O.”

China has plenty of problems: Tibet, pollution, political repression, the Great Firewall, you name it. Even so, it is hard not to be optimistic when you meet someone like Mr. Yu. If he is the future of Chinese business, then that future is very bright.

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Norfolk

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"
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", by Joshua But, South China Morning Post, Monday, 28 April, 2008 (via LexisNexis News):

A government proposal to criminalise internet streaming technology is a bid to fill a legal loophole in copyright law, an official has revealed.

This month's proposal aims to make the use of streaming for unauthorised distribution of copyrighted content - whether or not it is for commercial purposes - illegal.

That would mean uploading of music or television programmes without authorisation by copyright owners for webcasting on personal blogs would be a criminal offence.

Viewing such copyright-infringed material might also be made subject to civil liability, the official said.

More at the link. The latest proposed Government effort to crack down on intellectual-property theft. Good news.

"
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", by Carol Chan, South China Morning Post, Monday, April 28, 2008 (via LexisNexis News):

China Life Insurance, the mainland's largest insurer, has announced an unexpected 61 per cent dive in first-quarter profit as its investment returns took a hit from the mainland's tumbling stock market.

Net profit for the three months to March fell to 3.47 billion yuan ($3HK.86 billion) from 8.89 billion yuan a year earlier based on mainland accounting standards.

Turnover rose 18.4 per cent to 111.07 billion yuan.

More at the link. This is unpleasant news, and comes as a bit of a surprise to some.

More news from the South China Morning Post (via LexisNexis News):

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", by Jasmine Wang, Monday, 28 April, 2008.
"
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", by Eric Ng, Monday, 28 April, 2008.

News blurbs from the National Bureau of Statistics of China ("Quoted from the web site of the National Bureau of Statistics of the People's Republic of China",
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):

"
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", 28 April, 2008.

"
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", 28 April, 2008.

"
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", 28 April, 2008.


"
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", by Fu Chenghao, Shanghai Daily.com, Tuesday, 29 April, 2008:



BAOSHAN Iron & Steel Co posted a better-than-expected 16 percent rise in quarterly net profit as higher steel prices offset rising raw material costs.


More at the link.


"
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", by Lee Spears, Shanghai Daily.com, Tuesday, 29 April, 2008:



CHINA Railway Construction Corp, builder of more than half the nation's railroads, said its order backlog expanded 58 percent last year as it won contracts overseas and gained the expertise to handle complex projects.


More at the link.


"
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", by Katherine Ng, The Standard, Tuesday, April 29, 2008:



Bank of China (3988), the mainland's third-largest lender by assets, recorded a better-than-expected 85 percent surge in first-quarter net profit, thanks to strong net income growth and lower tax rates.

BOC's net profit was 21.7 billion yuan (HK$24.14 billion), the lender said, as net interest income grew 18 percent and net fee income increased by more than 82 percent. Loan growth was up 8.2 percent to 2.98 billion yuan.

The Beijing lender also said it has further set aside US$203 million (HK$1.58 billion) in the first three months to cover potential losses from subprime-related investments, bringing total provisions to US$1.905 billion.

More at the link. A lot of good news, and a little bad news; the good news of course being that the Bank of China is making lots of money, and the bad news being that potential charges from bad investments remain, if a modest, drain.

"
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", English eastday.com, 29/4/2008:

The third Expo Central China concluded yesterday in Wuhan, capital of central China's Hubei Province, with business people from 113 countries and regions signing agreements with six central provinces on projects valued at more than 300 billion yuan (US$42.9 billion).

Minister of Commerce Chen Deming said at the three-day event that China welcomed business people from around the world to invest in central China and encouraged foreign investors to take over smaller state-owned enterprises there or to help revitalize them through taking stakes.

According to Chen, overseas investors are also encouraged to establish manufacturing bases, investment companies and development and research centers in central China.

More at the link. This is important news, reflecting on a shift that is gaining
momentum, namely the increasing industrialization of the Mainland interior. Easier access to natural resources is one reason of course, but trying to spread development a little more evenly across the whole of China is a long-standing Government objective.


"
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", by Michael Pettis, China Financial Markets, 2008-04-28:



[SIZE=+0]From that it follows that export growth and the trade surplus have probably declined much faster than the small decline in headline numbers suggest. If true, this complicates matters. Thanks to deteriorating global conditions China may actually already be running a narrow trade surplus or even a small trade deficit, which could make the authorities all the more afraid of a maxi-revaluation, and yet for the reasons we have been discussing over the past fifteen months the maxi-revaluation is probably inevitable because of the crazy monetary consequences of hot money inflow. The cost of a maxi-revaluation may be rising even as the cost of steady appreciation is. The longer they wait the worse the options become.
[/SIZE]


More at the link. If "hot money" inflows actually are skewing (and obscuring the real facts of) measures of China's economic growth, and in what areas, then it becomes all the more difficult not only to discourages speculative investment, but to be able to point to clear evidence of emerging economic problems, and then rally public support for measures to deal with such.

"
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", by Michael Pettis, China Financial Markets, 2008-04-29:


The global slowdown and the huge uncertainty it has added to the process of evaluating the policy options available to the Chinese authorities could not have come at a worse time. Exporters are increasingly shrill about the deleterious impact of the rising RMB, although it seems to me that their real problem is partly slowing global growth and partly a domestic trend that is actually very good for China in the medium term – local wages are rising and the former exporting centers of China (i.e. Guangdong province) are shifting rapidly into higher value-added manufacturing and services aimed more at domestic consumption. Still, a lot of exporters are hurting and the appreciating RMB is an easy target, no matter how often it is pointed out that the RMB has not appreciated at all in trade-weighted terms – it has only really appreciated against the US dollar.

More at the link. More good news. Of course.:(
 

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"
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", The Economist, U.S. Edition, 3 May, 2008 (via LexisNexis News):

It is easy to see why the government may be tempted to intervene. Although the stockmarket's drop has not been economically disastrous, it has undermined the country's efforts to improve efficiency through privatisations. It has also affected the bit of wealth that many relatively poor investors had.

More at the link. Indeed, the recent Government intervention on stamp duties probably had at least as much to do with trying to reassure ordinary people that the State would not stand by while their hard-earned savings were lost, as it was to reassure large investors that the Government would not allow the financial markets to crumble. The Government can afford, to a limited extent, the unhappiness of major investors who can afford to lose quite a bit of money; the Government cannot afford to lose the confidence of ordinary people who in turn cannot afford to lose any significant proportion of their savings.

"
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", by Wang Zhen, Caijing Magazine, (English Edition), 30 April, 2008:

The Shanghai Composite Index opened at 3545.57 Wednesday -- the last trading day for a holiday-shortened week in China -- and quickly soared more than 100 points, gaining around 3 percent by mid-morning after two blue chip banks released above-expected first-quarter financial statements.

More at the link. Compare this article to the one above.

"
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", by Yu Dawei, Caijing Magazine, (English Edition), 30 April, 2008:


Coal, a driving force behind global industrialization, meets two-thirds of the energy needs in China, where it's burned in often outdated power plants that emit high levels of greenhouse gases and other pollutants.

Now, as China comes to grips with the public health impact of pollution and its inglorious position as the world's largest emitter of greenhouse gases, policymakers are advocating two “clean coal” technologies for future power plants -- ultra-supercritical power generation and Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC).

Caijing has learned that more than 60 ultra-supercritical generating units ranging from 600,000 kilowatts to 1 million kilowatts are currently under construction in China. Furthermore, the government's chief planning agency, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), says all coal-fired units installed in the future with capacities of at least 600,000 kilowatts must meet ultra-supercritical standards.

More at the link. This technology could prove critical to resolving, or at least significantly mitigating, both China's dramatically increasing needs for more energy, and for environmental degredation. In China, coal is King, and will remain so for well into the foreseeable future.


"
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", by Arthur Sim, The Business Times, Thursday, May 1, 2008 (via LexisNexis News):

'I believe the government's objective is to achieve sustainable growth and if you see what the government has been saying in public, I think they will be comfortable with an annual growth rate of 5 to 10 per cent because it is in line with inflation, GDP growth and it will create wealth for the individual. So prices will continue to rise with GDP growth and inflation.'

Mr Brooke also believes that with continued market volatility, especially in the equities market, investors are more likely to divert cash into real estate. 'There are not many investment products available in China,' he added.

More at the link. With a certain dearth of available investment opportunities, the influx of "hot money" pouring into China flows disproportionately into real estate. For the moment at least, this has halted the decline in real estate values in many areas, whilst maintaining at least slight or modest growth in others.

"
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", by Charlotte So, South China Morning Post, Wednesday, 30 April, 2008 (via LexisNexis News):

China Cosco Holdings, the largest global bulk vessel operator, posted a 6.13 billion yuan ($6HK.84 billion) net profit for the first quarter due to a huge rebound in dry bulk freight rates after China resumed imports of iron ore from Brazil.

Earnings per share were 60 fen, according to a filing with the Shanghai Stock Exchange. No comparative figures were available since it is the first time the company has filed a quarterly report.

Net profit mainly came from the bulk shipping division, which accounted for 87 per cent of its total operating profit last year.

More at the link. These figures reflect the so-far interesting resiliency of the Chinese shipping industry to sustain or recover profitability even in the midst of deepening global economic difficulties. Check out Lloyd's List's article on the same: "
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", Thursday, 1 May, 2008 (via LexisNexis News).

News Blurb from the National Bureau of Statistics of China (Quoted from the web site of the National Bureau of Statistics of the People's Republic of China, at
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", 2008-04-30.



"
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", The Standard, Friday, 2 May, 2008:


China's securities regulator pledged to curb "excessive speculation" in new share sales and give individual investors more access to initial public offerings.

Shang Fulin, chairman of the China Securities Regulatory Commission, said new shares will be reasonably allotted between "online subscriptions" open to all investors and "offline subscriptions" only available to institutional investors.
The new rules became effective yesterday.


More at the link. Good news in theory; hopefully enforcement will not lag.

News from the Shanghai Daily.com:

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", by Janet Ong, Saturday, 3 May, 2008.
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", by Wang Yanlin, Saturday, 3 May, 2008.
"
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", by Leo Zhang, Saturday, 3 May, 2008.

News blurbs from English Eastday.com:

"
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", 2 May, 2008.
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", 2 May, 2008.
"
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", 2 May, 2008.

"
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", by Michael Pettis, China Financial Markets, 2008-05-01:

Even if there is a slowdown in exports, it seems, at least for the time being, that domestic consumption may be taking up the slack. The Purchasing Manager’s Index in March rose to its highest level ever (although it was only started 28 months ago, so this might not be as big a deal as it seems). Most of the increase came from domestic customers, with export orders actually declining slightly for the first time in three months. This is exactly what we want to see – exports decline in importance and domestic demand increase in importance – but of course we shouldn’t get too excited about just one or two data points. We need to see this continue over the rest of the year before we can talk with confidence about a real rebalancing of the economy.

More at the link. Pettis also repeats the warning for State-Owned Enterprises that the next couple years could be tough, and that they must get their debt under control.
 
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