Having just given the banks another drubbing, it can't be
long
before the market turns on resources stocks with a vengeance.
After all both are at the, er, coalface of the credit
crisis.
Despite taking a direct hit, the banks are valiantly fighting
back with a 9.5percent annual jump in their fees and charges.
But the bigger problem is that China is becoming more
vulnerable.
Certainly if the experience of Sydney, Athens and the other
Olympic cities is any guide, when the games are over it will have a
huge hangover, apparently without any fun to earn it.
In all the twists and turns of the credit crisis, one surprise
is how China gets away with a rickety banking system. If ever there
were a banking collapse waiting to happen, outside the US that is,
it would have to be China.
The other day the Bloomberg news wire reported one of the
country's biggest banks, the Agricultural Bank of China, lifted its
first-half profit by 39percent - adding, only as an afterthought,
that 23percent of its loans weren't being paid.
For all the talk about the impact on China's exports of a US
recession - which officially hasn't happened, by the way - the
credit crisis is still the thing to watch out for. After all, the
most globalised sector is the financial system.
So how has China escaped the credit crisis? Maybe it hasn't;
it's just not as obvious because of the closed economy caused by a
fixed exchange rate and having state-owned banks.
In fact there are already rumblings because the biggest banks
invested in, of all things, sub-prime loans in the US.
The yuan is pegged to the US dollar, which keeps it so low that
China's current account surplus is almost 8percent of gross
domestic product. That's created a flood of money - making it hard
for a bank to go broke despite its best, or rather worst, efforts -
which has also been set loose in the world.
But it'll eventually stop the hurtling growth rate in its
tracks.
Interest rates - while still too low - and petrol prices have
risen, lending is slowing as banks are forced into loss-making
investments in low-paying bonds, inflation is running at 7percent
and labour costs are rising to the point where factories are
closing as foreign investors move on.
Values on the Shanghai Stock Exchange, China's only legalised
casino, have been slashed almost in half this year, partly on fears
of a looming power shortage. And that's before the inevitable
post-Olympic slump.
If the marauding hedge funds and money speculators can't see an
opportunity there, then it can only be a matter of time.