Entries from Chemicals & The Economy tagged with 'credit bubble'

London's £300m house

Blog readers are often very successful people. So the blog thought you might like to know that the London house above is now on sale. A bargain at just £300m ($480m), the Financial Times reports it has 45 bedrooms on...

'Waiting for Bernanke' is hottest show on Wall Street

'Waiting for Godot', the great play by Irish writer and Nobel Literature Prizewinner, Samuel Beckett, deals with the meaning of existence. Written just after the Second World War, its two characters wait endlessly for the arrival of Godot. US financial...

China's leaders mark time till power handover

How many more empty cities like Ordos does China really need? Are 64.5m empty apartments enough, or should there be more? Should we build more steel mills, to add to the current 220MT of over-capacity? These are the questions facing...

China battles economic slowdown

Wenzhou in coastal Zhejiang province was the first city to encourage private enterprise when China began opening its economy in 1978. Its growth accelerated after China joined the World Trade Organisation in 2001, attracting 2.8 million migrant workers to join...

PE demand decline highlights China risks

China's slowdown is continuing to gather pace. Polyethylene (PE) demand has been a very reliable leading indicator for the economy. Its 50% growth between 2008-10 highlighted the overheating economy, as the government stoked a credit bubble, even whilst official GDP...

A China 'hard landing' gets closer

China's leadership remain preoccupied with the transition to a new politburo in October, and the continuing fallout from the Bo Xilai affair. Equally, April's 7% rise in food price inflation remains a major issue for a country where 96% of...

China lending jumps to hit $380bn Q1 target

China's leaders have a lot to worry about. The purge of Bo Xilai has now been followed by news of his wife being suspected of murder. This makes the run-up to October's leadership transition even more difficult. Only 3 months...

A China 'hard landing' may be unavoidable

Saturday's blog post highlighted the risk of a hard landing in China. This risk is very real, and is centred on the government's need to achieve a difficult balance between reducing today's high rate of food price inflation, whilst not...

The banana skin risk

This week's news provided more evidence to support the blog's fear that the global economy is close to recession: • The German economy, Europe's motor, saw negative growth in Q4 • US retail sales grew just 0.1% in December, despite...

China's producers lose pricing power

China's economy is slowing rather fast. That's the only conclusion to be drawn from the above chart. It shows a major collapse in producer price inflation (PPI), from July's 7.5% peak to just 2.7% in November. The decline from September's...

China's Minsky Moment may be starting

Long-standing readers may remember the video posted in January 2010 showing 'China's empty city'. This was the new city being built in Inner Mongolia, to help ensure local officials met China's GDP growth target. Unlike the West, GDP in a...

China's debt problems multiply

It seems increasingly clear that China's economic policy took a wrong turning 10 years ago, when it joined the World Trade Organisation. 2001 was also the year when the Western BabyBoomers (those born between 1946-70), began to leave the peak...

China's lending continues to tighten

Financial bubbles are like balloons. Only instead of air, they need to be constantly pumped up with new lending. Otherwise they begin to deflate, and the Minsky Moment occurs. The above chart of China's bank lending shows, as discussed last...

China's power consumption hits new record

China's growth in electricity consumption is a much better guide to its economic growth than the published GDP figures. This was confirmed by likely next premier, Li Keqiang. It has been a major reason for the blog's long-standing focus on...

China's bank lending nears its Minsky Moment

China's credit bubble is one of the largest the world has ever seen. This is true not only of its total size, but also in relation to GDP. The history of credit bubbles is very clear about what happens next....

China's inflation at new high, bank lending slows

The blog continues to worry about signs of a slowdown in China. Major commodity trader, Glencore, said this week "we see a pullback in China and it will continue". This challenges the views of Dow CEO Andrew Liveris last month,...

US Fed's QE2 programme hits consumer confidence, raises mortgage rates

Last November, the Chairman of the US Federal Reserve justified his $600bn QE2 programme to boost financial markets by claiming "higher stock prices will boost consumer wealth and help increase confidence", whilst also leading to "lower mortgage rates". And stock...

China's women believe housing essential for marriage

70% of China's women regard "housing, a stable income and some savings" as vital for any man wanting to get married. And they probably don't regard architect Dai Haifei's $300 Beijing 'egg house' (pictured) as their ideal. The data comes...

China's bank lending falls 43% in Q1

There are increasing signs that China is getting serious about tightening its lending policies. The above chart, from China's central bank, shows how lending has fallen since January. Then, it was 14% down versus 2009. But by the end of...

China's housing market "a wild tiger"

More evidence is emerging of the real estate bubble that China's easy money policy has created over the past year. Wen Jiabao, China's premier, has described property markets in some cities as now being like a "wild tiger". And new...