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Showing posts with label BRIC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BRIC. Show all posts

Monday, July 11, 2011

China’s Cities Digging Up Mountains of Debt - NYTimes.com

Building Boom in China Stirs Fears of Debt OverloadJuly 6, 2011

WUHAN, China — In the seven years it will take New York City to build a two-mile leg of its long-awaited Second Avenue subway line, this city of nine million people in central China plans to complete an entirely new subway system, with nearly 140 miles of track.
And the Wuhan Metro is only one piece of a $120 billion municipal master plan that includes two new airport terminals, a new financial district, a cultural district and a riverfront promenade with an office tower half again as high as the Empire State Building.
The construction frenzy cloaks Wuhan, China’s ninth-largest city, in a continual dust cloud, despite fleets of water trucks constantly spraying the streets. No wonder the local Communist party secretary, recently promoted from mayor, is known as “Mr. Digging Around the City.”
The plans for Wuhan, a provincial capital about 425 miles west of Shanghai, might seem extravagant. But they are not unusual. Dozens of other Chinese cities are racing to complete infrastructure projects just as expensive and ambitious, or more so, as they play their roles in this nation’s celebrated economic miracle.
In the last few years, cities’ efforts have helped government infrastructure and real estate spending surpass foreign trade as the biggest contributor to China’s growth. Subways and skyscrapers, in other words, are replacing exports of furniture and iPhones as the symbols of this nation’s prowess.
But there are growing signs that China’s long-running economic boom could be undermined by these building binges, which are financed through heavy borrowing by local governments and clever accounting that masks the true size of the debt.
The danger, experts say, is that China’s municipal governments could already be sitting on huge mountains of hidden debt — a lurking liability that threatens to stunt the nation’s economic growth for years or even decades to come. Just last week China’s national auditor, who reports to the cabinet, warned of the perils of local government borrowing. And on Tuesday the Beijing office of Moody’s Investors Service issued a report saying the national auditor might have understated Chinese banks’ actual risks from loans to local governments.
Because Chinese growth has been one of the few steady engines in the global economy in recent years, any significant slowdown in this country would have international repercussions.
As municipal projects play out across China, spending on so-called fixed-asset investment — a crucial measure of building that is heavily weighted toward government and real estate projects — is now equal to nearly 70 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product. It is a ratio that no other large nation has approached in modern times.
Even Japan, at the peak of its building boom in the 1980s, reached only about 35 percent, and the figure has hovered around 20 percent for decades in the United States.
China’s high number helps explain its meteoric material rise. But it could also signal a dangerous dependence on government infrastructure spending.

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Gold falls most since July on commodities rout | Reuters

Gold falls most since July on commodities rout

Photo
3:59pm EST
By Frank Tang
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Gold suffered its biggest fall in four months on Friday, tumbling 3 percent as Chinese rate-hike talk, eurozone debt worries and weaker Treasuries prices triggered widespread unwinding of risk in commodities.

After holding firm this week in the face of the dollar's best gains in three months, gold buckled mid-morning as the euro cut gains in tandem with falling U.S. Treasuries prices, when the first day of heavy purchasing by the Federal Reserve failed to jump-start wider demand for debt.

Spot silver tumbled almost 7 percent, its biggest one-day loss since February and second major slide this week, as investors liquidated more positions in heavy trade after the exchange raised margins by 30 percent earlier this week.

In a week marked by disrupted correlations and extreme volatility, dealers said precious metals were caught up in near indiscriminate selling across the commodity spectrum rather than suffering from any bullion-specific bearishness.

Spot gold slid 3.3 percent to $1,362.66 an ounce at 2:09 p.m. EDT (1909 GMT), having earlier hit a one-week low at $1,359.70 an ounce. It was the biggest one-day fall since July 1.

U.S. gold futures for December delivery settled down $37.80 an ounce at $1,365.50.

The Reuters/Jefferies CRB .CRB index dropped almost 4 percent, its biggest daily loss in a year and a half, after a sell-off triggered early by fears of a Chinese interest rate rise snowballed through the rest of the session. Copper and oil fell 3 percent, wheat dropped 5 percent and sugar 12 percent. 


"We have a liquidation pattern across the board in every commodity market here," said Adam Klopfenstein, senior market strategist with MF Global's unit Lind-Waldock.

"Gold and other commodities are going to suffer in the short run as a result of the change in the opinion in the marketplace that China might not be able to grow as fast if it is going ... to rein in ... inflation or to curb fast money that has been spurring the economy," Klopfenstein said.
China stocks fell more than 5 percent on Friday for their biggest percentage loss in over a year, sparking a global commodities sell-off on speculation the central bank will raise interest rates to tackle inflation.
China this week raised bank reserve requirements, boosted yields on new government bills, and introduced new rules to curb money inflows. Those moves came ahead of Thursday data showing Chinese inflation at a 25-month peak, and spurring speculation that an interest rate hike will follow soon.
Other commodities extended losses at midday after the Fed bought $7.23 billion in Treasury paper on Friday under its $600 billion bond-buying program announced last week to stimulate the economy. Treasuries prices hit session lows after the Fed completed its purchases, with both seven-year notes and 10-year notes trading a full point lower in price.

"People are worried now about China tightening. China has been driving a lot of commodities and so fears of further interest rate rises in China ... will have an impact on buying," said David Thurtell, a London-based analyst for Citigroup.

The euro rose from a six-week low against the dollar after European leaders sought to reassure nervous bondholders about the value of their holdings, and as Ireland said it has not formally applied for emergency funding from the European Union.

While the inverse link between gold and the dollar weakened significantly this week as investors focused on European risk, it resurfaced part-way through Friday's trade when the euro pared gains as roiling financial markets outweighed a move by European leaders to reassure nervous bondholders.
(Graphic: r.reuters.com/xuc35q)

G20 DISAPPOINTMENT
Analysts said that gold should be supported by underlying safe-haven buying after the G20 meeting highlighted deep divides on currencies and trade imbalances among member countries.
G20 leaders closed ranks on Friday and agreed to a watered-down commitment to watch out for dangerous imbalances, yet offered investors little proof the world was any safer from economic catastrophe.

Interest in investment vehicles such as exchange-traded funds was soft, with holdings of the world's largest gold-backed ETF, New York's SPDR Gold Trust, falling by just under 1 tonne on Thursday.

Among other precious metals, spot silver dropped 6.5 percent to $25.94 an ounce, while platinum fell 4.5 percent to $1,673.24 an ounce and palladium slipped 5.2 percent to $672.72.

(Additional reporting by Jan Harvey and Marie-Louise Gumuchian in London; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

Gold falls most since July on commodities rout | Reuters

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Monday, October 4, 2010

Dilma Roussef, the next president of brazil?

In this 1970 photo released by the Public Archive of Sao Paulo State, Dilma Rousseff is seen in a police photo. Rousseff, who is running for president in Brazil's Oct. 3, 2010 elections, was a key player in an armed militant group that resisted Brazil's 1964-85 military dictatorship, and was imprisoned and tortured for it. She is a cancer survivor and a former minister of energy and chief of staff to the current President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. (AP Photo/Public Archive of Sao Paulo State)



Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Why Africa won’t be the next Bric | beyondbrics | FT.com

Why Africa won’t be the next Bric

August 27, 2010 5:26pm

Prompted by this week’s application from South Africa for Bric “membership”, the man who coined the acronym - Jim O’Neill of Goldman Sachs - asks in today’s FT whether Africa as a whole could become the next Bric.
On several measures he says the continent has a reasonably strong case, but he notes that its biggest economies would still need to raise their games on many fronts - and he misses some more profound weaknesses in the Africa-as-a-Bric idea.
O’Neill created the Bric acronym in 2001 as a neat way of grouping together four countries that shared the potential for generating rapid growth, attracting foreign investment, and reshaping the global economy.
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, managing director at the World Bank, latched onto the idea of Africa joining the group in a speech earlier this year in which she sold it as a “trillion dollar economy”.
It’s high time Africa saw and presented itself as the fifth Bric, an attractive destination for investment, not just aid. This is realistic and within reach. As Nelson Mandela said, “It always seems impossible until it’s done”.
But before you can decide where to squeeze an “a” into the acronym, old Africa hands will jump in to say that it’s nonsense to compare it to a single country: not only is Africa a continent, it’s arguably the most diverse on the planet in terms of economics, politics, culture and the environment.
What’s more, 20 African countries have populations of less than 5m people. O’Neill is alive to that and focuses his discussion on the biggest African economies.
If you … look at the potential of the 11 largest African economies for the next 40 years (by studying their likely demographics, the resulting changes in their working population and their productivity) their combined GDP by 2050 would reach more than $13,000bn, making them bigger than either Brazil or Russia, although not China or India.
But even those 11 are highly diverse - including two of the biggest, Egypt and Nigeria. And due to Africa’s lamentable roads and railways, as well as its internal border restrictions, many of them function as isolated economic islands.
Afro-optimists would say regional trading blocs are changing that, but the reality is that only about 10 to 12 per cent of African trade takes place with other African countries, according to a study from the UN Economic Commission for Africa and others.
For those reasons, it doesn’t make a lot of sense to suppose that Africa’s biggest economies will follow the same development trajectories over the next few years, let alone the next few decades.
Yet it’s worth remembering that the Bric grouping initially attracted flak for not having any coherence either, but its runaway popularity with western businesses and investors has given the four countries more in common than they had before.
Funnily enough, one thing they share is a growing hunger for mineral resources from Africa (notably Nigeria, Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Sudan).
But it’s doubtful whether any country other than South Africa has the right mix of factors to make it an attractive destination for serious western investment, across a broader range of sectors, which could rival that going to the Brics.
Earlier this year Shanta Devarajan, the World Bank’s chief economist for Africa, responded with a dose of scepticism to Okonjo-Iweala’s call:
The distinguishing feature of the Brics is that they are both middle-income and large. So it’s not clear how any individual African country can aspire to being a Bric. Countries such as Malaysia or Chile may be more appropriate models for most African countries.
To achieve their “2050 potential”, O’Neill says African countries need more macroeconomic stability, less external debt, a stronger rule of law, better education, (even) more mobile telephones, and a purge of corruption.
But it’s worth paying more attention to the parallel trends of population growth (seen as a good thing by many investors in India and Brazil) and job creation (a difficult task that most African governments are failing to manage).
Each of the Bric countries have their own pockets of poverty, and in some parts of Africa poverty is actually falling. But too many countries are producing more people than they can employ. And not only does that limit their potential as new consumer markets. It has ugly consequences in terms of crime, conflict and social unrest that can strangle economic growth.
Related reading:
Building Brics, FT
Is Russia the best Bric after all? beyondbrics
Why Africa won’t be the next Bric | beyondbrics | FT.com


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