A Beautiful Deleveraging with Chinese Characteristics?
Last week, China's leadership—including President Xi Jinping, the Politburo, the CSRC, and the PBoC—clearly 1) announced a reflationary barrage of fiscal and monetary policies and 2) made statements in support of free markets as a big step?to end the deflationary deleveraging and to stimulate creative productivity. That happened at the same time as 3) Chinese?assets were (and still are) very cheap, so it was a combustible combination of influences that set the markets on fire. It was a big week. In fact, I think that it was such a big week that?it could go down in the market-economic history books as comparable to the week Mario Draghi said that he and the ECB would "do whatever it takes,”?if China’s policymakers, in fact, do what it takes, which will require a lot more than what was announced.
I will now be more specific.?
What a Beautiful Deleveraging Looks Like?
In my 55 years as a global macro investor, I have seen, traded through, and studied many big debt crises (48 are covered in my book, “Principles for Navigating Big Debt Crises.”) It is that perspective that leads me to believe that?China is at a fork in the road and can either:
a)??????? deal with its debt crisis well by engineering "a beautiful deleveraging, " which acceptably reduces debt burdens or spreads them out so China won't have a debt crisis and will be energized to be productive.
or,
b)?????? deal with the debt crisis in a way that causes it to drag on, leading to an economic and psychological malaise like Japan experienced (until Abe and Kuroda shifted policies).?
In a nutshell, it all depends on whether Chinese policymakers do or don't simultaneously a) restructure bad debts (thus eliminating zombie conditions of their institutions) and b) lower interest rates below inflation and nominal growth rates, or, if that proves impossible, monetize debt to get the rates below the inflation and nominal growth rates while weakening the currency to devalue the debt.
More specifically, for China's policymakers to engineer a "beautiful deleveraging," they have to lower debt burdens by simultaneously
a)??????? doing debt restructurings that clean?the bad debts out of the system (which is deflationary) while also
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b)?????? creating money and credit (which is stimulative and inflationary) in a balanced way so that debt service burdens are reduced and there is neither unacceptable deflation nor unacceptable inflation.
This beautiful deleveraging can only be done in countries that have most of their bad debts denominated in their own currencies and have most of the debtors and creditors as their own citizens, which is the case for China. Doing a deleveraging in this way not only reduces debts without triggering either unacceptable deflation or unacceptable inflation, but it also allows viable businesses to get back to business unencumbered by their old debts and it?eliminates the "pushing on a string" problem of having scared?people, companies, and other entities holding cash in safe banks and government debt assets. It does this by making cash a poorly performing asset class relative to the major alternative asset classes that are doing well because of the reflation. Doing these things starts to rekindle "bottom fishing" and “animal spirits.” We are clearly seeing that happen now.
Also, pro-market and pro-entrepreneurial policies are stimulative and, in this case, especially good because there is such enormous power in President Xi’s policy-indicating statements. In this case, supportive comments came from the highest levels (from?President Xi Jinping, the Politburo, the CSRC, and the PBoC) encouraging officials and people to adopt innovative and bold approaches to support?the economy, and included President Xi reassuring officials that they would not be punished for well-intentioned mistakes made in the process of implementing new policies. These statements matter a lot.
While there’s no doubt that all of this is bullish for the markets, as part of the beautiful deleveraging there will have to be difficult and painful changes in the following areas:?
So, while last week we saw great actions and words that I am sure will be followed by highly stimulative policies that will help a lot and will support asset prices, I think that there are several important other things to keep an eye on to see how well China’s domestic debt-money-economy challenges will be handled.
Of course, these observations are about just one of the five big forces (the debt-money-economy force) in one of the big countries (China), and it’s important to remember that the other big forces (the internal political conflict force, the external geopolitics conflict force, the acts of nature force, and the technology force) are also affecting China, other nations, and the entire world. Last week was filled with comparably important developments pertaining to all of these things, and these developments seem, to me, to be broadly tracking the big cycle that will have big impacts on what the changing world order will look like. I will keep you posted with my thinking about them.
These views are my own and not necessarily Bridgewater's.
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1 个月I like a few of Dalio’s books but can’t help but notice how extremely deferential he is with the CCP relative to his less flowery and much more direct style with western governments. I wonder why he seems so much of an arse kiss with the CCP as if afraid to offend?
Credit Risk Analyst
1 个月By focusing on debt restructuring while simultaneously fostering monetary growth, China can potentially avert the stagnation that plagued Japan. However, the complexities of local government debt and needed tax reforms will require bold and innovative policy decisions. It’s essential to monitor these developments, as they will not only impact China but could also influence global economic dynamics in the coming years.
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1 个月The challenges of dealing with the debt and bankruptcy problems is probably more about whether the legal infrastructure can handle it, rather than whether the economy can handle it. The answer probably is no. "If you lose faith, you lose all." — Eleanor Roosevelt
Principal Broker @blackSquire Mortgage. I'm also a trader in foreign currency options & futures, as well as the equities market @BlackSquire Investing.
1 个月China isn't the U.S. It feels like you're suggesting a western economic mindest to fix its looming debt problems, which may not be what China needs or wants.