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Economic and financial outlook for the US and China
Global financial markets have been performing impressively, but there are risks ahead. Investors should remain alert.
There are currently a lot of uncertainties confronting our economy
and our financial markets. Those that stand out are the economic
and financial outlook for Mainland China and the US, our two largest
markets.
In
the US, the sub-prime crisis persists. The use of the word "crisis"
is not my choice. This was the word frequently used in
international meetings on financial stability that I attended in the
past two months. A sharp spike in the delinquency rate of sub-prime
mortgages in the US has led to great tension in the money markets of
Europe and the US, and a general credit tightening. Much time is
now being devoted in the developed markets to containing the damage
and returning things to normal, achieving a clear understanding of
the causes of the crisis, identifying the weaknesses that need to be
addressed and putting together longer-term remedies. Meanwhile,
tight credit conditions are threatening to slow down the US economy
and lead to further downward pressure on property prices. With a
low household savings rate and high loan-to-value ratios of
residential mortgages, the mortgage delinquency rates of not just
the sub-prime market but also the much larger, more normal, market
may go up. The possibility of a recession in the US cannot be ruled
out. A recession in the largest economy in the world would
obviously have adverse implications for everybody. And the scope
for introducing appropriate monetary responses is constrained by the
prospects of higher inflation, as oil prices surge and productivity
gains arising from advances in information technology begin to
recede.
In
Mainland China, although the economy continues to grow at a fast
pace, the macro monetary conditions are causing considerable
concerns. The current-account balance-of-payments surplus continues
to be large, putting upward pressure on the renminbi exchange rate
and sustaining large capital inflows. Large accumulation of foreign
reserves continues, requiring "sterilisation" by the Peopleˇ¦s Bank
of China to prevent the monetary base from growing to such an extent
as to encourage excessive credit creation and inflation. This
requires increasing the reserve-requirement ratio for the banks to
historically high levels and very substantial issues of central-bank
paper to absorb the excess liquidity in the banking system. Both
actions put pressure on the profitability of the banks, since the
banksˇ¦ required reserves held with the PBoC earn interest of 1.89% a
year and the yield of the one-year central-bank paper is only around
3.5%. To protect the banksˇ¦ profitability, the net interest margin
(the difference between interest charged for loans and paid on
deposits) will need to be maintained or widened, and this has
adverse implications for the efficiency of financial intermediation
through the banking system. Meanwhile, inflation has been climbing
to uncomfortable levels, requiring interest rates to be raised to
contain it, but at the same time attracting more capital inflows.
With plans to encourage the orderly outflow of capital by allowing
residents to invest outside the Mainland not yet implemented, and domestic
savings continuing to accumulate, the imbalance in the supply of and
demand for financial instruments other than bank deposits persists,
leading to prices being much higher than would otherwise be the
case, and causing concerns about the possibility of a stock-market
bubble. It is not clear how this scenario might develop. The
inevitable market adjustment, if sharp and destabilising, would
have serious implications for monetary and financial stability, not
just for the Mainland but also for others, including of course Hong
Kong.
In
both jurisdictions, developments in the next few months will be
crucial. In the US, there is hope that normal money-market
conditions will return shortly, limiting the adverse impacts on the
economy and the housing market there. On the Mainland, there is
hope for more concerted and effective macro-economic adjustment
measures, now that the Party Congress is over. But there are
structural issues in the financial system that will need to be
addressed to make it conducive to promoting sustainable economic
expansion. Against this complex background, we in Hong Kong have to
be cautious about our short-term economic prospects, despite the
different and bullish signals that our financial markets are sending
us. Perhaps there are factors that I have failed to see.
Irrational exuberance or not, investors should act with caution.
Joseph Yam
25 October 2007
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