On Friday, alongside China's announcement that it had
bought over 600 tons of gold in "one month", the PBOC released
another very important data point: its total
foreign exchange reserves, which declined by $17.3 billion to $3,694 billion.
We then put China's change in FX reserves alongside the
total Treasury holdings of China and its "anonymous" offshore
Treasury dealer Euroclear (aka "Belgium") as released by TIC, and
found that the dramatic relationship which we first discovered back in May, has
persisted - namely virtually the entire delta in Chinese FX reserves come via
China's US Treasury holdings. As in they are being aggressively sold, to the
tune of $107 billion in Treasury sales so far in 2015.
We
explained all of his on Friday in "China Dumps Record $143 Billion In US
Treasurys In Three Months Via Belgium", and frankly we have been surprised
that this extremely important topic has not gotten broader attention.
Then, to our relief, first
JPM noticed. This is what Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou, author of Flows and
Liquidity had to say on the topic of China's dramatic reserve liquidation
Looking
at China more specifically, it appears that, after adjusting for currency
changes, Chinese FX reserves were depleted for a fourth straight quarter by
around $50bn in Q2. The cumulative
reserve depletion between Q3 2014 and Q2 2015 is $160bn after adjusting for
currency changes. At the same time, a current account surplus in Q2
combined with a drawdown in reserves suggests that capital outflows from China
continued for the fifth straight quarter. Assuming a current account surplus in
Q2 of around $92bn, i.e. $16bn higher than in Q1 due to higher merchandise
trade surplus, we estimate that around
$142bn of capital left China in Q2, similar to the previous quarter. JPM conclusion is actually quite stunning:
This brings the cumulative capital outflow over the
past five quarters to $520bn. Again, we
approximate capital flow from the change in FX reserves minus the current
account balance for each previous quarter to arrive at this estimate (Figure
2).
Incidentally,
$520 billion is roughly triple what
implied Treasury sales would suggest as China's capital outflow, meaning that
China is also liquidating some other USD-denominated asset(s) at a
feverish pace. So far we do not know which, but the chart above and the
magnitude of the Chinese capital outflow is certainly the biggest story surrounding
the world's most populous nation: what is happening in its stock market is just
a diversion.
At this point JPM goes into
a tangent explaining what the practical implications of a massive capital
outflow from China are for the global economy. Regular readers, especially
those who have read our previous piece on the collapse in the
Petrodollar,
the plunge in EM capital inflows, and their impact on capital markets and
global economies can skip this part. Those for whom the interplay of capital
flows and the global economy are new, are urged to read the following:
One
way that slower EM capital flows and credit creation affect the rest of the
world is via trade and trade finance. Trade finance
datasets are unfortunately not homogeneous and different measures capture
different aspects of trade finance activity. Reuters data on trade finance only
aggregates loan syndication deals, which have mandated lead arrangers and thus
capture the trends in the large-scale trade lending business, rather than providing
an all-inclusive loans database. Perhaps the largest source of regularly
collected and methodologically consistent data on trade finance is credit
insurers (see “Testing the Trade Credit and Trade Link: Evidence from Data on
Export Credit Insurance”, Auboin and Engemann, 2013). The Berne Union, the
international trade association for credit and investment insurers with 79
members, includes the world’s largest private credit insurers and public export
credit agencies. The volume of trade credit insured by members of the Berne
Union covered more than 10% of international trade in 2012. The Berne Union
provides data on insured trade credit, for both short-term (ST) and medium- and
long-term transactions (MLT). Short-term trade credit insurance accounts for the
vast majority at around 90% of new business in line with IMF estimates that the
vast majority 80%-90% of trade credit is short term.
One
way that slower EM capital flows and credit creation affect the rest of the
world is via trade and trade finance. Trade finance
datasets are unfortunately not homogeneous and different measures capture
different aspects of trade finance activity. Reuters data on trade finance only
aggregates loan syndication deals, which have mandated lead arrangers and thus
capture the trends in the large-scale trade lending business, rather than
providing an all-inclusive loans database. Perhaps the largest source of
regularly collected and methodologically consistent data on trade finance is
credit insurers (see “Testing the Trade Credit and Trade Link: Evidence from
Data on Export Credit Insurance”, Auboin and Engemann, 2013). The Berne Union,
the international trade association for credit and investment insurers with 79
members, includes the world’s largest private credit insurers and public export
credit agencies. The volume of trade credit insured by members of the Berne
Union covered more than 10% of international trade in 2012. The Berne Union
provides data on insured trade credit, for both short-term (ST) and medium- and
long-term transactions (MLT). Short-term trade credit insurance accounts for
the vast majority at around 90% of new business in line with IMF estimates that
the vast majority 80%-90% of trade credit is short term.
Figure
4 shows both the Reuters (quarterly) and the Berne Union (annual) data on trade
finance loan syndication and trade credit insurance volumes, respectively. The
quarterly Reuters data showed a clear
deceleration this year from the very high levels seen at the end of last year.
Looking at the first two quarters of the year, Reuters volumes were down by 25% vs. the 2014 average (Figure 4). The
more comprehensive Berne Union annual volumes are only available annually and
the last observation is for 2014. These data showed a very benign trade finance
picture up until the end of 2014. Trade finance volumes had been trending up
since 2010 at an annual pace of 8.8% per annum (between 2010 and 2014) which is
faster than global nominal GDP growth of 6% per annum, i.e. the trend in trade
finance had been rather healthy up until 2014, but there are indications of material slowing this year. This is also
reflected in world trade volumes which have also decelerated this year vs.
strong growth in previous years (Figure 5).
Summarizing the above as
simply as possible: for all those
confounded by why not only the US, but the global economy, hit another brick
wall in Q1 the answer was neither snow, nor the West Coast strike, nor some
other, arbitrary, goal-seeked excuse, but China, and specifically over half a
trillion in still largely unexplained Chinese capital outflows.
But wait, because it wasn't
just JPM whose attention perked up over the weekend. This morning Goldman Sachs
itself had a note titled "the
Curious Case of China's Capital Outflows":
China’s balance of payments
has been undergoing important changes in recent quarters. The trade surplus has
grown far above previous norms, running around $260bn in the first half of this
year, compared with about $100bn during the same period last year and roughly
$75bn on average during the previous seven years. Ordinarily, these kinds of numbers would see very rapid reserve
accumulation, but this is not the case. Partly that is because
China’s services balance has swung into meaningful deficit, so that the current
account is quite a bit lower than the headline numbers from trade in goods
would suggest. But the more important
reason is that capital outflows have become very sizeable and now eclipse
anything seen in the recent past.
Headline
FX reserves in the second quarter fell $36bn, from $3,730bn at end-March to
$3,694bn at end-June. While we estimate that there was a large negative
valuation effect in Q1 (due to the drop in EUR/$ on the ECB’s QE announcement),
there was likely a positive valuation effect in Q2, which we put around $48bn. That means that our proxy for reserve
accumulation in the second quarter is around -$85bn, i.e. the actual “flow”
drop in reserves was bigger than the headline numbers suggest because of a flattering
valuation effect. If we put that number together with the trade surplus
in Q2 of $140bn, net capital
outflows could be around -$224bn in the quarter, meaningfully up from the first
quarter. There are caveats to this calculation, of course. There is
obviously the services deficit that we mention above, which will tend to make
this estimate less dramatic. It is also possible that our estimate for
valuation effects is wrong. Indeed, there is some indication that
valuation-related losses in Q1 were not nearly as large as implied by our
calculations. But even if we adjust for
these factors, net capital outflows might conceivably have run around -$200bn,
an acceleration from Q1 and beyond anything seen historically.
Granted, this is smaller
than JPM's $520 billion number but this also captures a far shorter time
period. Annualizing a $224 billion outflow in one quarter would lead to a
unprecedented $1 trillion capital outflow out of China for the year. Needless
to say, a capital exodus of that pace and magnitude would suggest that
something is very, very wrong with not only China's economy, but its capital
markets, and last but not least, its capital controls, which prohibit any
substantial outbound capital flight (at least for ordinary people, the Politburo
is clearly exempt from the regulations for the "common folk").
Back to Goldman:
The big question is obviously what is driving these
flows and how long they are likely to continue. We
continue to take the view that a stock adjustment is at work, although it is
clear that the turning point is yet to come. We will look at this in one of our
next FX Views. In the interim, we think an easier question is what this means
for G10 FX. This is because this shift
in China’s balance of payments is sure to depress reserve accumulation across
EM as a whole, such that reserve recycling – a factor associated with Euro
strength in the past – is unlikely to be sizeable for quite some time.
In other words, for once
Goldman is speechless, however it is quick to point out that what traditionally
has been a major source of reserve reflow, the Chinese current and capital
accounts, is no longer there.
It also means that what may
have been one of the biggest drivers of DM FX strength in recent years, if only
against the pegged Renminbi, is suddenly no longer present.
While the implications of
this on the global FX scene are profound, they tie in to what we said last November when explaining the death
of the petrodollar. For the most part, the country most and first impacted from
this capital outflow will be China, something its stock market has already noticed
in recent weeks.
But what is likely the take
home message for non-Chinese readers from all of this, is that while there has
been latent speculation over the years that China will dump US treasuries voluntarily because
it wants to (as punishment or some other reason), suddenly China is forced to
liquidate US Treasury paper even though it does not want to, merely to fund a
capital outflow unlike anything it has seen in history. It still has a lot of
10 Year paper, aka FX reserves, left: about $1.3 trillion at last check,
however this raises two critical questions: i) what happens to 10 Year rates
when whoever has been absorbing China's Treasury dump no longer bids the paper
and ii) how much more paper can China sell before the entire world starts paying
attention, besides just JPM and Goldman... and this website of course.
Finally, if China's selling
is only getting started, just what does this mean for future Fed strategy.
Because one can easily forget a rate hike if in addition to rising short-term
rates, China is about to dump a few hundred billion in paper on a vastly
illiquid market. Or let us paraphrase: how soon until QE 4?
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-07-21/chinas-record-dumping-us-treasuries-leaves-goldman-speechless
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