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Shahla Money Managing Guru

Joined: 13 Nov 2004 Posts: 3324
Cash Points ££ 126163.28
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Posted: Tue Feb 13, 2007 6:35 am Post subject: Irrational Exhuberance In China's Stock market |
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Recently voiced concerns from the Chinese government that their surging domestic stock market was crossing into bubble territory helped to set off last week's sharp decline, including a single day plunge of 6.5% (the equivalent of more than 800 points on the Dow Jones.) While a bubble may indeed be forming in Chinese stocks, my guess is that there is room for a lot more air before it finally pops.
In fact, the recent warnings in China are reminiscent of Alan Greenspan's infamous “irrational exuberance” speech in December of 1996. As history has shown, the Chairman was correct (perhaps for the only time in his tenure), but Greenspan failed to comprehend just how much irrationality the markets would bear before they finally gave in. In fact, after nearly four more years of unprecedented market exuberance, Greenspan himself took the “new era” bait hook, line and sinker. Surprisingly, he became one of the market's greatest cheerleaders. My guess is that before a similar peak is reached in China, officials there will be snared on the same line.
Just as the bubble in U.S. stocks resulted from the inflationary monetary policies of the Fed, the bubble in Chinese shares is being created by the inflationary policies of the Bank of China. However, as Chinese authorities are creating yuan mainly to buy U.S. dollars, the Fed is in effect the driving force behind this bubble as well. As we export our inflation to Asia, the Chinese stock market bubble may be one of the few things in Asia that was actually “Made in the U.S.A.”
One major difference between the rise in the Chinese market in 2007 and the U.S. in 1997 is that much of the rise in China is actually justified by the fundamentals. Unlike the U.S., not all of the liquidity is the result of inflation. Much of it comes from the savings of millions of under-consuming Chinese workers, whose combined sacrifice has enabled business to finance capital investment that has led to enhanced productivity, greater earnings, and higher share prices. Liquidity produced by savings is genuine and the fact that it fuels legitimate investment is one of its primary benefits.
However, liquidity provided by central banks is false as it produces only malinvestment which must be liquidated in the busts that inevitably follow inflationary booms. The fact that inflation sometimes lifts asset prices before lifting consumer prices is one of the main reasons that it is so intoxicating and so dangerous.
Perhaps no one expressed it better than Alan Greenspan himself, when in 1996 he wrote the following with respect to U.S. Fed policy during the 1920's.
http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article341.html |
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Quinn Saving Enthusiast


Joined: 06 Feb 2005 Posts: 181
Cash Points ££ 2817.02
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Posted: Mon Feb 19, 2007 2:59 am Post subject: |
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I agree china is way overbought and headed for a decline - hopefully a good buying opp  |
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