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Global markets stabilise but risks increase
By Nick Beams
24 June 2006
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Money markets have stabilised over the past week following
a sharp downturn, but nervousness is on the rise throughout the
global financial system amid concerns over rising inflation rates,
tightening monetary conditions, the prospects of an economic slowdown
and potential problems in the Chinese economy.
In an interview this week, International Monetary Fund director-general
Rodrigo de Rato repeated earlier warnings that the risks of a
downturn in the global economy had increased.
The IMF still held to its prediction of 5 percent growth for
2006, he said, but the recent market turbulence was the result
of uncertainties which signify that the risks to the future
outlook are larger.
Earlier this month, de Rato told the National Press Club in
Australia that the imbalances between the United States and the
rest of the world, chiefly the US balance of payments deficit,
were not sustainable and could result in a disorderly
adjustment if they were not reduced.
The latest data from the US show that the current account deficit
fell to an annual rate of $835 billion in the first quarter of
this year, a decrease of 6.5 percent or $58 billion on the previous
quarter. While the result reflected the impact of a decline in
the dollarone of the measures favoured by the IMF and other
economic institutionsit was still the second worse on record.
And there are fears that the deficit will widen again because
of the impact of higher oil prices.
Next week all eyes in the financial markets will be on the
US Federal Reserve Boards open market committee, which meets
to decide whether to lift interest rates. While it is generally
agreed that another rise of 0.25 percentage points is coming,
the crucial question will be whether the accompanying statement
gives an indication of future increases. There are fears that
if rates rise too high they could bring about a recession.
In a report from UCLA Anderson Forecast this week, economists
warned that the US could see a combination of increased inflation,
because of oil price hikes, and a slowing economy, triggered by
a fall in the housing market. Andersons senior economist,
David Shulman, described the central bank as being in a box. For
the first time in several years, the Fed will soon be faced with
rising measured inflation alongside weakening economic growth,
sort of a low-grade stagflation.
Globally, monetary conditions continue to tighten with the
European Central Bank (ECB) making clear that it plans more rate
increases even if this has an adverse impact on economic growth.
The ECB has raised borrowing costs three times since last December
to 2.75 percent and there are predictions of a further rise of
0.5 percentage points this year.
In an indication of further rises, ECB president Jean-Claude
Trichet told a European Parliament committee that the bank was
not satisfied with what we are observing with regard to
inflation in our own area and would continue to do
all thats necessary to counter inflationary risks and anchor
inflationary expectations. This is a clear warning to financial
markets of further interest rate rises.
Credit tightening has also extended to China where the central
bank is endeavouring to bring an investment and property boom
under control without provoking a crisis. This week the bank announced
that it was raising the required reserve ratio for commercial
lenders by half a percentage point to 8 percent. The move came
less than two months after the bank lifted interest rates 0.27
percentage points at the end of April.
Monetary data show the reasons for the banks move. Chinas
money supply at the end of May was 19.1 percent higher than a
year earlier3 percentage points above the central banks
target. Loans for the first five months of the year were almost
three quarters of the banks target for the entire year.
Over the same five months, investment in fixed assets in urban
areas jumped 30.3 percent from a year ago.
The bank said its measures would further curb excessive
loan growth, control rapid investment growth,
strengthen management over liquidity in the banking system
and continue to guide commercial banks in keeping the pace
and scale of their medium- and long-term loans at a reasonable
level. It affirmed its commitment to policies that will
promote stability in the financial markets and overall economic
stability.
How successful it will be is another question. Long-time China
observer Stephen Roach, the chief economist at Morgan Stanley,
cast doubt on whether the latest measures would prove sufficient,
not least because of the rapid growth in the Chinese economy.
In the period from 2000 to 2005, he noted, Chinese fixed investment
surged from about $400 billion to $1.1 trilliona growth
rate that dwarfs anything the world has seen in recent years.
The very size of the Chinese economyit is 35 percent larger
than in 2004 when similar cooling measures were undertakensuggested
that Chinese policy makers need to do more if they are to
succeed in containing the excesses of their overheated economy.
If Chinese authorities tighten too hard, however, they risk
bringing about the collapse of shaky enterprises dependent on
the supply of cheap credit. The Fitch credit rating agency estimates
that Chinese lending institutionsthe four state-owned banks,
city commercial banks and rural cooperativeshave a combined
total of $206 billion in non-performing loans as well as $270
billion in other loans that could go bad. A collapse of the investment
bubble would have enormous social consequences, as millions of
workers were made unemployed.
In a recent comment on China, the US thinktank Stratfor noted:
What must be understood is that China now is moving from
an economic problem to a socio-political one. The financial problem
is a symptom; the fundamental problem is that tremendous irrationality
has been built into the Chinese economy. Enterprises that are
not economically viable continue to function through infusions
of cash. Some of the cash comes from borrowing, some by exporting
at economically unsustainable prices.... If interest rates were
to rise and lending were to become disciplined, many of Chinas
enterprises would fail.
So far the central bank has been able to sustain the boom and
prevent the social and political upheaval that an economic collapse
would bring. However, it was one thing to carry out this task
under the easy money regime that has prevailed over the past five
years. It is quite another to maintain economic balance as financial
conditions begin to tighten globally.
See Also:
Global market slide may have further
to go
[17 June 2006]
Global growth rates rise,
but the foundations are shaky
[25 April 2006]
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