7 July 2015

Asia’s Biggest Worry Isn’t Grexit

July 06, 2015
http://thediplomat.com/2015/07/asias-biggest-worry-isnt-grexit/

A potential meltdown closer to home has regional investors far more concerned.

Greece’s financial meltdown has sent shockwaves throughout the world, sending markets tumbling and wiping billions of dollars off equity valuations. Yet for the Asia-Pacific region, the biggest economic threat lies closer to home.

Asia awoke Monday morning to news that the Hellenic Republic had voted in a referendum to reject bailout terms demanded by creditors. This followed reports last Wednesday that Greece had become the first developed nation to default on a loan to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), with the IMF confirming that Greece had joined Cuba, Zambia, and others in the defaulters’ club after failing to make a 1.5 billion euro ($1.7 billion) payment to the Washington-based institution.

Greece and its Eurozone creditors had failed to agree on further Greek economic reforms, which would have unlocked an extra 7.2 billion euros, the last of 240 billion euros in aid offered to Athens by the IMF, European Central Bank, and the European Commission since the global financial crisis.

The result of referendum has intensified speculation over Greece’s pending default and potential exit from the Eurozone (known as “Grexit”), and has sent shudders across financial markets worldwide. In Asia, stock markets across the region posted significant losses early in the week, before recouping some ground midweek. This morning, though, Australian stocks saw $22 billion in value wiped out in just 20 minutes of trading, on news of the referendum.

“Greece A Sideshow”


In China this morning, the Shanghai Composite Index was rallying in early trading after authorities in China adopted extraordinary measures over the weekend to stem steep recent declines, which analysts have described as a “savage fear-fueled sell-off.”

Recent economic news coming out of China has been mostly dispiriting. The China’s Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) did stay above the key 50 level in June, but new domestic and export orders fell in June, while a separate survey of smaller, private sector companies showed worsening conditions for Chinese manufacturers, amid the “sharpest rate of job shedding across the sector since early 2009.”

Commenting on the PMI, ANZ Research said real activity indicators “remained sluggish” in April and May, with China potentially missing its 7 percent GDP growth target in the second quarter.

“The softness in the manufacturing sector remains, requiring more policy calibration…After the [recent] rate cut, the one-year lending rate has been lowered to 4.85 percent, the lowest level in the past two decades, clearly signaling that monetary policy stance has become more accommodative. In addition, we see that the fiscal policy should take the driving seat to help restore the market confidence over the economic outlook,” said ANZ economists Liu Li-Gang and Zhou Hao.

China’s latest data has highlighted the fact that Asia-Pacific nations are far more closely tied to the fate of the world’s second-biggest economy than they are to Greece, a nation of 11 million that accounts for just 2 percent of Europe’s GDP and ranks as the world’s 44th biggest economy, smaller than the Australian state of Victoria.

After previously noting in Pacific Money the risk of China’s $7.7 trillion stock bubble busting, the Chinese bourse has seen its worst declines since 2008, including its biggest one-day loss in seven years. The People’s Bank of China has been forced to cut interest rates again – its fourth reduction since November – to record lows.

Chinese equities “are in a bubble,” according to analysts at Bank of America, BlackRock and Credit Suisse, with the median stock on mainland exchanges at one point priced at 73 times earnings, a higher level than the market’s previous peak in October 2007.

According to Bloomberg News, the risk of a market crash has been exacerbated by increased margin lending to Chinese investors, which has the effect of amplifying profits as well as losses.

“Sometimes when the market is good, I would make profits enough to buy an Audi in just a week or two. However, when the market is down, it’s also possible to lose half an Audi very quickly,” Zhang Minmin told the financial news service.

Chinese brokers have reportedly extended $339 billion of margin finance to investors, double the amount at the start of 2015, with another 1.7 trillion yuan said invested in stocks from other sources, according to Bloomberg. In the event of a crash, the unwinding of such share buys would further depress stock values.

China’s position as the world’s largest consumer of resources has also made the machinations in Greece a virtual sideshow for commodity markets, despite “the potential to boost some safe-haven demand for gold and possibly other commodities,” according to Reuters columnist Clyde Russell.

“The real news is that the world’s largest commodity producer, consumer and importer appears to be taking more determined steps to boost its flagging growth rate,” Russell said, although he noted that for many commodities, “it seems unlikely that even if Chinese economic growth does start to reaccelerate, it will be enough to rally prices.”

Yet should China’s moves fail to steady stock prices, the global fallout could dwarf the Greek crisis, according to Bloomberg’s William Pesek.

“The world, after all, has had a few years to contemplate a Greek exit from the euro. But if the world’s biggest trading nation suddenly hit a wall, it would be a catastrophe of a different order, wreaking havoc on economies near and far,” he said.

“At the very least, it would kill Japan’s nascent recovery, push Australia into its first recession in a quarter century, send shockwaves through South Korea, Indonesia and India, and devastate commodity-exporting nations everywhere.”

Asked the biggest concern for Australian investors, fund manager Paul Moore put China well ahead of Greece.

“Look at the size of the Greek economy – it’s a speck. China’s not a speck,” he told the Australian Financial Review.

There may even be a silver lining for Asia-Pacific financial markets in the Greek crisis. According to Brisbane’sCourier Mail newspaper, more than A$1.1 billion ($826 million) has been transferred from Greece to Australia since 2010, with the value of Greek investment increasing by 75 percent since the end of 2012.

More than 10,000 Greeks have reportedly migrated or moved back to Australia since the crisis began in 2010, with the eastern city of Melbourne already hosting the largest expatriate community outside Greece.

According to global bond investor Bill Gross, a Grexit or China “surprise” could possibly trigger a global bond sell-off, with the risk that “all investors cannot fit through a narrow exit at the same time.”

Grexit or China risk? For the Asia-Pacific, the clearest and present financial danger lies far from Europe’s shores.

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