By Valentin Schmid, Epoch Times | September 23, 2015
Last Updated: September 23, 2015 11:02 am
James Chanos of Kynikos Associates speaks at the 2011 New York Historical Society History Makers Awards at The Waldorf Astoria in New York, on Nov. 7, 2011. (Andy Kropa/Getty Images)
James Chanos of Kynikos Associates LP first noticed China’s real estate bubble in 2009. He has then correctly anticipated the slow-down in the Chinese economy, which started in 2010. Now he has more bad news for people banking on reforms to save the day.
“The trend is unmistakable. It’s down. Surprises are going to be on the downside,” he said at a panel discussion at The China Institute in New York on Sept. 22.
He convincingly dispelled notions theeconomy is transitioning from an investment led growth model to a consumer-driven one.
They’ll have to go through their credit event.
— James Chanos, Kynikos Associates
“China is reforming and they are going to transition … to a consumer economy. I’ve been hearing that for five years.” he said, pointing out the investment component of GDP has only fallen by 2 percentage points since 2010. “Just saying it will happen doesn’t mean it will happen.”
Too Much Debt
Chanos is also cautious on China’s ability to escape the middle-income trap through innovation. “We are still waiting for that one on China,” he said.
His main thesis has always been that China uses too much debt to fund growth, without paying attentions to generating returns. “Any entity that is growing rapidly but below its cost of capital is headed for an iceberg … Returns are less than economic,” he said.
“They’ll have to go through their credit event,” says Chanos.
James Chanos of Kynikos Associates (L) speaks at a panel discussion with Ted Wang of Puissance Capital (M) and Mary Darby (R) at The China Institute in New York, on Sept. 22, 2015 (Valentin Schmid/Epoch TImes)
“If [the U.S. economy] was growing its credit by 30 or 40 percent per year, we’d be growing high single digits ourselves,” he said, discrediting the view China’s historic growth has been an economic miracle: “There is not a lot of magic here if you can borrow the money.”
However, this does not mean the economy faces complete collapse tomorrow, according to Chanos.
The Chinese stock market “is like a pig on LSD, you don’t know where it’s going to run.”
“This is going to be a slow motion unwind, very similar to Japan but on steroids. This is not smoking ruins tomorrow. This is going to take a lot of work by the Chinese leadership to work through.”
Stock Market Mismanagement
As for the stock market, Chanos recommends to stay away from themainland A-Share market altogether. He quoted a friend saying the Chinese stock market “is like a pig on LSD, you don’t know where it’s going to run.”
It has very correlation with the underlying economy and Chanos’ firm Kynikos doesn’t take positions in the market. Part of the reason is the heavy-handed intervention by Chinese authorities.
“It has given a lot of observers pause as to how sophisticated the technocratic elite is, which was a given prior to 2015,” he said. Many people got burned trusting the government to put money into the market.
“When things fell apart you saw different policy responses. There was an underlying view if the government encourages me to put the money into the equity market, I can’t lose money.”
Are Chinese stocks trading on overseasexchanges like Alibaba Inc. any better? Yes, but you still have to be cautious.
“You don’t own the operating assets of the company if you own the stock through a Western exchange. You own the company somewhere in the Caribbean that has an operating agreement with the company on the mainland that controls the assets. You don’t actually have recourse to the assets in the mainland,” he says.
Despite the short-term gloom, Chanos still thinks China will be an “amazing place” long term— after it gets rid of its debt addiction.
http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/1766492-famous-china-bear-chanos-says-nothing-has-changed-economy-still-trending-downward/