Thursday, February 16, 2012

Chinese Credit Growth Slows

From MacroBusiness:

A week ago Phat Dragon was oozing calm in relation to what the January credit figures would say about the economy. Either an even 1 trillion yuan would be disbursed (the consensus), which would been fine, or a larger number would print, which would mean that the turnaround in monetary policy, as expressed through bank lending, was unambiguously here. Having now seen the new lending figure – a genuine tiddler at just 738 billion – (if that were a hooked fish, you’d throw it back in disgust) that state of calm has rapidly evaporated. The last time that a January month produced a smaller nominal new lending flow was in 2007. The economy has expanded by 77% since that time. Unless new lending jumps sharply in February – and by sharply Phat Dragon means a lift beyond even the extravagances of 2009 – then an annual loan supply north of 8 trillion yuan (and thus a total social financing provision that keeps pace with nominal GDP) is under serious threat. A huge problem with relying on that to happen is that February lending has exceeded January lending exactly … let me just count this on my talons , … exactly, … bear with me … – exactly never. If an appropriate credit supply is not forthcoming, downside risks to already decelerating aggregate demand will emerge swiftly. In sum, Phat Dragon will reconsider his baseline 2012 forecasts if February loans do not break all sorts of records in addition to the Sinitic laws of seasonal motion.

http://www.macrobusiness.com.au/2012/02/phat-dragon-sees-choked-credit/

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