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China-Japan-Koreas
Kyle Bass: China is already out of money
2016-02-11
I don't know much about economics, and I don't know who Kyle Bass is, but this doesn't look good.
Texan hedge fund manager J. Kyle Bass, the founder of Dallas-based Hayman Capital, sent out a big letter to investors explaining why he thinks China has a problem much larger than the 2008 subprime crisis.

China has been burning through cash of late as it manages the devaluation of its currency, and there is a big debate over exactly how much money it has to burn.

Bass notes that many folks look at the foreign-exchange (FX) reserves of $3.2 trillion and think that China will be just fine.

It's really not enough, though, based on Bass' calculations. According to Bass, the country is out of money today. In other words, China no longer has enough liquid reserves.

The letter said, with Bass' emphasis:

Responses we receive when discussing the FX reserve levels of China are filled with reverence: 'No country in the world has ever achieved $4 trillion in FX reserves by running such enormous trade surpluses with the rest of the world.' While true, this analysis fails to frame the proper context of the larger situation. When a host country has a large industrial base, enormous money supply (M2), and large import/export business, there is a certain amount of liquid reserves that are required to run the day-to-day operations of the country (think working capital). Over the years, the IMF has fine-tuned the formula used to calculate this 'reserve-adequacy' metric. It can be best calculated as follows:

Minimum FX Reserves =
10% of Exports + 30% of Short-term FX Debt + 10% of M2 + 15% of Other Liabilities

For China the equation is as follows:
10% * $2.2T + 30% * $680B + 10% * (RMB 139.3T / 6.6) + 15% * $1.0T
= $2.7 trillion of required minimum reserves

Hayman Capital estimates that China's FX reserves right now are in a range of $2.1 trillion to $2.2 trillion if you take commitments to various bodies like China's sovereign wealth fund (CIC) into account.

According to Bass, China's reserves are "already below a critical level of minimum reserve adequacy."

"In other words, China is CURRENTLY out of the required level of reserves needed to safely operate its financial system," Bass wrote. "The view that China has years of reserves to burn through is misinformed. China's back is completely up against the wall today, which is one of the primary reasons why the government is hypersensitive to any comments regarding its reserve levels or a hard landing."

Bass is among a handful of hedge fund managers betting against China's currency, the yuan. Much of Hayman Capital's fund right now is devoted to the yuan short.
Posted by:gorb

#8  Maybe Taiwan should attempt a buy-out. Re-unification only backwards.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2016-02-11 18:41  

#7  Euro banks are already shaky.
Posted by: Sven the pelter   2016-02-11 15:20  

#6  Bad loans at the banks are the main problem. China will have to devalue the Yuan, but that will make paying back USD denominated loans almost impossible.

I can see a China banking crisis bringing down banks across the world. It could get very ugly.
Posted by: phil_b   2016-02-11 15:17  

#5  this is a Communist political system run by oligarch who are also plutocrats.

Let's see... They're plutocrat oligarch communist mandarin mafioso aristocrats.

And WE'RE stuck with Fredo.

Damnit.
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain   2016-02-11 15:08  

#4  In the last month: a Chinese company bought GE's appliance division.

In the last week: they spent a billion buying Norwegian software company "Opera."

They're not acting like they're out of money.
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain   2016-02-11 15:04  

#3  If Michael Lewis is following him around with a notebook, watch out.
Posted by: Shipman   2016-02-11 14:37  

#2  Despite all the external similarities to Western economic systems (which in their own right are little more than a house of cards reliant on no catastrophic swings in demand or supply of consumer funding) this is a Communist political system run by oligarch who are also plutocrats. Do we really think traditional economic rules apply, instead of just outright lies, intimidation, and Weimar style printing?
Posted by: NoMoreBS   2016-02-11 12:59  

#1  China is on vacation this week. Their stock markets are closed. I think when they open Monday there's gonna be a big drop to catch up to the rest of the world's markets that have tanked this week.
Posted by: BrerRabbit   2016-02-11 12:33  

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