China’s Evergrande’s Fall & What it Means Now

Video Statistics and Information

Video
Captions Word Cloud
Reddit Comments
Captions
[Music] Consuelo Mack: This week on WEALTHTRACK, financial  thought leader James Grant on trends in debt,   inflation and interest rates. James Grant: Interest rates are at  the ground level, at lawn level --   we see the manifestations of inflation.  I think we see it in the morality of our   public finances. I think we see it on the  balance sheet of the Federal Reserve Bank   of New York. The Federal Reserve Bank of New  York is leveraged 300-and-some times to 1. Consuelo Mack: The Editor of Grant's Interest Rate  Observer this week on Consuelo Mack WEALTHTRACK Announcer: Funding provided  by ClearBridge Investments,   Morgan Le Fay Dreams Foundation,  First Eagle Investment Management,   Royce Investment Partners, Matthews  Asia and Stategas Asset Management. Consuelo Mack: Hello, and welcome to this edition  of WEALTHTRACK. I'm Consuelo Mack. It can take a   long time for a bubble to burst. Four years ago,  in 2017, Grant's Interest Rate Observer, a highly   regarded financial newsletter, wrote an article  about the now infamous China Evergrande Group. Back then, it was anything but a familiar name,  except in China and among some institutional   investors. The article was titled Ever  Higher as Grant’s published a chart showing   the extraordinary rise in China Evergrande stock  price on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange that spring. As Grant’s noted then, we call the attention  of the readers of Grant’s to this situation   because in the first place, everything about  Evergrande is incredible. The board of directors   in 2016 earned 46.5 million dollars, JP Morgan  reports. And secondly, because we suspect that   the company will one day become proverbial  like Bank of United States or Hindenburg. We'll fast forward to 2021. And indeed,  Evergrande, once the world's most valuable   property stock, has become famous as the  world's most heavily indebted property company,   with an estimated 300 billion dollars  in debt. It also could become Asia's   largest bankruptcy as China's government seems  less and less likely to come to the rescue. Well, why should US investors care? What, if any,  significance does it have outside of China? That   is where financial thought leader, journalist,  sleuth and historian James Grant comes in.   Grant is the founder and editor of Grant's  Interest Rate Observer, a twice monthly journal   about all interest sensitive investments,  which pretty much covers the waterfront. It is considered a must read by professional  investors at leading hedge funds,   private equity and investment firms.  Grant is also the author of 9 books,   including several financial histories. One  particularly relevant to the Evergrande situation   is Money of the Mind: Borrowing and Lending in  America, from the Civil War to Michael Milken. It's about the forces that led up to the  credit binge of the 1980’s, one of America's   biggest speculative booms at that time. I  started today's discussion with Evergrande,   why it warranted Grant's reader's attention  back in 2017 and what it represents now. James Grant: Evergrande over leveraged,  preposterously unnecessarily diversified.   The guy who ran it seemed as if he were like one  Jeff Bezos, about four Elon Musks. An amazing   ambition, which was fine, but the  ambition was to build apartment buildings,   many of which would remain unoccupied. They were for speculative purposes and not for  dwelling. Stock resembled as we imagined the Bank   of United States from 1930. That one that didn't  do well. Or maybe the airship Hindenburg or some   looming disaster. And needless to say,  this was not the time to have said that. Like six months ago, would have been good, the  stock went straight up. Also, the Evergrande was   characteristic of the Chinese economy broadly.  The Chinese economy is enormously leveraged.   Here's an amazing statistic that   Chinese banking assets represent something  like 53 percent of the estimate for 2017 world   GDP. Not Chinese world GDP, but world  GDP, slightly more than half of world GDP. Consuelo Mack: Wow. That was in 2017? James Grant: No. Well, this is right now. Consuelo Mack: Right now? James Grant: Yeah. Consuelo Mack: Okay. James Grant: In 2017, Chinese banking  assets were also fantastically large   in relation to everything, including the  world. So this seemed to us, the perfect   model of what was wrong with China and  what's at risk with respect to China. Consuelo Mack: What's its significance now?  I mean, you saw this coming. You figured   it would have to happen. But now what? James Grant: Something like 22 percent   of Chinese residential real estate is unoccupied.  And again, Evergrande is certainly worrisome   enough in its own right, but more so as  indicative of the state of overleverage   and rampant speculation that characterizes and  infuses the vast Chinese real estate business. The Chinese economy, to an important extent,  is driven by real estate speculation. Local   government finance earns much of its tax  take on land sales. So Evergrande, again,   is a thing in itself, and then it is a  symbol besides, and both are worrisome. Consuelo Mack: Do you think it's going to be,   basically, isolated within China or  does it have greater ramifications? James Grant: I'm in the  greater ramification camp. Not   so much because of the dollar denominated debt.  It's a small portion of Evergrande’s overall   liabilities. But again, because it speaks to  the real estate speculative development model   that is at the very center of the  second largest economy in the world. And President Xi, the Eternal President  of now the People's Republic of China,   is lowering the boom on an enterprise broadly in  China and finance particularly and Evergrande’s   failure or near failure, depending how  it plays out, will not brighten his mood. Consuelo Mack: Describe the forces  that are driving this overleverage   that we're seeing now is a global phenomenon. James Grant: Yeah, we live  in a most remarkable time.   This year, Consuelo, marks two important  financial anniversaries. One is the 50th   anniversary of the abrogation of Bretton Woods.  That's President Nixon preempting the Great   Horse Opera bonanza in August 15, 1971 saying  that henceforth the dollar would be a piece   of paper and not exchangeable into gold at the  previously lawful rate of 35 dollars to the ounce. So that was one anniversary. We've had  that one 50th and we are now about ready   to mark -- some of us -- the 40th anniversary  of the peaking of bond yields in 1981.   So bond yields have been falling for 40  years, and the dollar has been increasingly   plentiful, shall we call it, owing to  its detachment from its golden anchor. This is the 50th year of that separation.  What characterizes our finance   in this country and broadly, the world over,  is a lot of paper money, a lot of liberality   in lending and borrowing it. And interest  rates that are so tiny that it seems as if   one could accumulate debt more or less without a  worry. That's the broad backdrop of where we are. Consuelo Mack: How concerned are you  about the amount of debt that you're   seeing in this country and globally? And  what does it portend for bondholders? James Grant: Well, Consuelo, that's such a  great question, and it's such an interesting   and paradoxical fact that the more debt we  have seen, the more better it has become for   the bondholders. The US reached its first trillion  dollars in sovereign debt, and I think about 1981,   if memory serves, which it infrequently does.  And today we're up to what? 28 or something? Consuelo Mack: Is 28 trillion  in US government debt? James Grant: About. Yeah, it’s about  that. That's the gross debt. Yeah,   and very gross. The move from one trillion to,  let's call it, 28 trillion has been accompanied   in the decline of the long bond yields from 15  percent to 2 percent. So a visitor from Mars   would be hard pressed to understand why a lot of  debt is bad for bond prices or interest rates.  So that's been the perplexing and most  interesting paradox in our -- we can   agree -- state of over leverage is that up until  this point, it’s kind of been more than okay.   But I think common sense tells you that a lot of  debt is fine and unobjectionable until such time   as the as the holders of that debt decline  to roll it over and buy some more or   until such time as the borrower finds it too  inexpedient to pay the principal and interest. Consuelo Mack: Yes, and inexpediency could be  encouraged by rising interest rates, right? James Grant: Yes. Consuelo Mack: Suddenly, it becomes very  expensive to finance and carry that debt. James Grant: Right, which so we have been speaking  with regard to Evergrande, is credit risk. Is   the risk of the credit worthiness of the borrower.  With regard to US treasuries, the looming risk   is interest rate risk as that risk is derived from  inflation and the expectations is for the same. So in the past couple of days, as we're talking  now, interest rates have most unexpectedly,   the 10-year Treasury have gone from 125 to 145  -- 20 whole basis points up, which seems like   nothing, but it has been enough to rattle a lot of  people. What's going on? And what may be going on   is an inflation that is proving more persistent  than transitory. That's what may be going on. Consuelo Mack: The outcome of this paradox  that we've been talking about. Does it all   rest in the laps of the FOMC with Fed officials? James Grant: That, too, is an interesting.  The Fed seems to be under the impression   that it is in charge of events. But Consuelo,  my kind of subversive idea is that events will   be increasingly in charge of the Fed is a huge  generation gap. I mean, everywhere, of course.  Perennially there is the young people  just will not stop walking on the lawn.   But on Wall Street, there is the interesting  generation gap opened between those who   formerly young have still the most vivid  recollections of the inflation of the 70s,   which, by the way, did not start in the 70s. It  got up and running in 1965 and by 1967, William   McChesney Martin said that the horse of inflation  is out of the barn, so that's one generation. Consuelo Mack: Right. And he  was the Fed chair at that time. James Grant: Correct. And the younger generation,  which many of us would not mind being a part of   except for their blindness with respect to this  thing that's happening to us now. If you have   been in the business for the past 40 years,  you have seen nothing except falling rates   and very little except for a flatlining  rate of inflation as measured. So there is general incredulity among  the people who are very active on Wall   Street now. What is happening? Huh? They  just refuse to credit the possibility   that inflation is, as William McChesney Martin,  the former chairman, says the horse of inflation   said he, in the fourth quarter of 1967, 4  years before price controls came in. The   horse inflation is out of the barn. And that  may or may not be true, but it's a possibility. Consuelo Mack: Right. So if you were to look  back to the 1960s before the horse of inflation   got out of the barn, I mean, you know, it's like  asking a baseball analogy, what inning are we in? James Grant: I would say that the Fed that is  doubling its balance sheet in 18 months, that   a Treasury that is issuing trillions of dollars  of debt, the proceeds of which are paying people   not to work. The breakdown in supply chains, the  constellation of these episodes and phenomena,   make me wonder, what did you expect? World about inflation,   I don't know, but there is a great debate and  formidable intellects are on the other side   of this argument, and I have been arguing  the inflation side for more years. And I   will confess to the viewers of WEALTHTRACK, I  have been R-O-N-G and I am [inaudible 0:13:20].   Consuelo, one of the things about inflation  is it's unpredictable. It just happens. Consuelo Mack: Well, no, Jim. It   didn't just happen. Which is what you  said. What did you expect? It has been   creeping up on us for a long time. You’ve  been writing about it for a long time. James Grant: I know. Let me try to explain  myself a little bit. In 1965, suddenly,   a 1 percent rate becomes a 2-½ -- I forget --  2-½ or 3 percent rate. Now, inflation in 1960,   ‘61, ‘62, ‘63, and ‘64 have been  running at less than 2 percent about.   Less than the rate at which  the Fed would now panic. When I say it's unpredictable, nobody  issued a press release and there were none   of the excesses then evident that are so much  on our front pages now. And yet inflation popped   and persisted and accelerated  for the next 15 years. And yet the history of this  is very tricky, and dogmatism   is a very hard thing to sustain in this particular  period of hours when everything is unexpected. For   example, the economy is snapping back such that  personal income is up in the year of a pandemic. Consuelo Mack: Jim, you wrote a  recent lead article in Grant's   titled The True Measure of Inflation.  What is the true measure of inflation? James Grant: I think at one important level,  inflation is a moral issue. The underlying   moral problem with inflation is something for  nothing. It is a form of theft, it is a form of   unlegislated tax. That's one aspect of inflation.   An inflation aspect of it is the intuitive  phenomenon of redundancy of dollars. There's too many. I mean, there's an obscure Fed  function called the reverse repo operation. And we   can simplify it. What it does is soak up unwanted  dollars from money market mutual funds and banks. Dollars that can't find a home in the money  market because there's no demand for it   because there are simply too many of these  green pieces of paper. There's a 1 trillion   300,000 every day seeking refuge in the Fed,  so that's a measure of the redundancy of money. Consuelo Mack: That’s money  inflation, plain and simple. James Grant: And then there's the statistical  representation of inflation that we know is   the CPI. And 30 percent of that is housing  costs. It's the cost of shelter, it's not   house prices, it's a very important  distinction. House prices are up like   18 percent year over year, but that too  isn't. How can that not be inflation? Interest rates are at the  ground level, at lawn level,   and so we see the manifestations of inflation.  I think we see it in the morality of our public   finances. I think we see it on the balance  sheet of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York,   the Federal Reserve Bank of New York  is leveraged 300-and-some times to 1.   There's 4-¼ trillion dollars’ worth of  assets, there is 13-½ billion of capital. Consuelo Mack: That is scary. James Grant: Well, yes and no. Well,  it's scary, except the Treasury   backs it up. See? The Fed is unanchored.  Therefore, it's undisciplined. Therefore,   it is managed like an over-endowed economics  department at some university. It's not   a banking institution, as it ought to be.  As I'm guessing, this is sermonizing now, Consuelo Mack: No, but it isn't. I mean, and  that's new in this era. That would not have   been the correct right now on your Volcker.  This is a whole new ball game which you've   written about. I want to nail down inflation.  I know it's really easy for you to do, Jim.   So inflation, how real a threat is it  and how does the interplay between,   4000 year lows in interest rates and rising  inflation? I mean, how does that work   as far as the financial markets are concerned,  as far as the impact on the bond market, James Grant: Well, inflation is the  greatest single risk that the viewers   of WEALTHTRACK confront. And it's not just  that they're going to be skinned alive at   the grocery store. It is that interest  rates are key determinants in the   valuation of every single earning  asset -- stocks, bonds, real estate. Interest rates discount future cash flows. They  help us calibrate credit risk and set investment   hurdle rates. They are the critical prices in  capitalism, and they have been suppressed. They   are suppressed by central bank action. So to an  important degree, the valuation of everything   in the portfolio of your viewers hangs by the  thread of the lowest interest rates in 4000 years. Rates, which are not anything -- I say I,  but the product of central bank manipulation   to the downside so. Now, what changes  the structure of rates, what lifts them   could be again, could be -- not to not  to dogma ties because it's unseemly. What   that could be is, is an inflation  that persists, that frightens the Fed. It should frighten the Fed and  they start to move rates up.   And stock prices fall, and the Fed says -- the  Fed is a very low threshold of financial pain,   so what then? Rising rates of  inflation and a falling stock market. Consuelo Mack: Right, what then? James Grant: Yeah. So this is a whole new  panorama of possibility. It's quite exciting   to think about. It's better to think about than  to sleep on. But this is the kind of thing that   I think people ought to be thinking about is  what happens when the unscripted occurs. The   unscripted in this case being a rate of inflation  that rises and persists and does not yield to the   wishes and the press conference verbiage of  the chairman of the Federal Reserve Board. Consuelo Mack: Right. At some point, it  gets bigger than they are -- at some point. James Grant: At some point again, at some  point they don't control events. In the 1970’s,   the Fed was at the mercy of Mr.  Market, Mr. Currency Market. Consuelo Mack: Why hasn't gold responded? James Grant: Gold is a deep disappointment  to its current fans. For background,   the price of gold is up 50 times in 50  years. Consuelo, isn’t that a cool fact? Consuelo Mack: That's a cool fact.  Put it into context, though, whereas   the S&P 500 is up like or whatever you want to do. James Grant: But gold isn't meant to be  a stock. It's inert. It is non-yielding. Consuelo Mack: Is it meant to be an investment in  your point of view or it's just a store of value? James Grant: I think it's a store of value. But,   one hopes it really goes up like a rocket.  I own, for me, enough of it. A lot of it,   enough. And it's deeply frustrating that  of all the commodities that one could own,   gold is the least responsive to this  monetary problem. It's inexplicable to me. Consuelo Mack: Okay, it is inexplicable. I was  just going to say, is there any rationale for it?   It's just the way it is in recent history, because  prior to this, it would have been going up. James Grant: It's just what is I mean, I think  some of the oxygen in the room of gold has been   stolen by the cryptocurrencies, the NFTs. There  are other speculative play things that people,   I think, are banking on to protect them  against a debauchery of the currency. I   think we're disappointed in that. I think  cryptocurrencies are not for the ages.   If only because there's going to be a  better cryptocurrency than the one you own. Consuelo Mack: It just hasn't been invented yet. James Grant: Well, cryptocurrency is  technology. However, clever are the ones   now in circulation, you know, there's  going to be something more clever.   However, gold is not going to  be improved upon as an asset. Consuelo Mack: What do we do as investors? How do  we protect ourselves as investors or counter this? James Grant: I'm going to give you a  couple of thoughts and a couple of tickers.   One ticker is INFL, which is  a very well-considered ETF   by the Horizons kinetic people. And it is,  as the ticker suggests, it's meant to be   a collection of equities that will do well because  they have pricing power in a time of inflation. Consuelo Mack: Right. Formal name  is inflation beneficiaries ETF. James Grant: Correct. Consuelo Mack: Right. James Grant: And the other  ticker is PFIX, which is -- Consuelo Mack: Simplify interest rate hedge ETF. James Grant: Thank you, Consuelo. Yes. Consuelo Mack: One Investment for a long  term diversified portfolio that would help us   in a time like this where  we're seeing inflation pick up. James Grant: I pick as my one and only   portfolio item for a time of inflation. I pick  this underperforming work-at-home, lazybones   person called gold, which has refused to perform  as it ought, but I have every confidence it will.   It is an investment in monetary disorder.  I think of it that way more than as an   inflation hedge. It is investment and  monetary disorder of which we have a lot. Consuelo Mack: And final question  for you, Jim, and that is you told me   on the phone recently that that one should  invest in something you don't believe in. James Grant: This is 50 years  of experience talking, Consuelo.   Of course, it's a funny way, I hope, of expressing  the imperative doctrine of diversification.   I look back on the things that I knew so well,  wouldn't work or didn't belong in any thoughtful   person's portfolio. And lo and behold, many  of them did just fine, including bonds. Over the past 40 years, I have been  mostly a believer in other things. So   older, certainly wiser is, I guess, a matter  for others to determine, but humbler, I hope,   after all these years. And my expression  of my humility before Mr. Market is to own   something you think is not going to work. Consuelo Mack: Thank you. James  Grant. Thanks, Jim, for joining us. James Grant: You're welcome.  Consuelo, I thank you. [Music] Consuelo Mack: At the close of every WEALTHTRACK,  we try to give you one suggestion to help you   build and protect your wealth over the long  term. This week's Action Point is read Jim   grants Money of the Mind: Borrowing and Lending  in America from the Civil War to Michael Milken. First published in 1992 is a history of how  two long running trends the democratization   of credit and the socialization of risk converged  in the 1980s to create one of America's greatest   speculative booms. As Ron Chernow wrote in his  Wall Street Journal review of Money of the Mind, “It is a brilliantly eccentric,  kaleidoscopic tour of our credit lunacy.   A fitting epitaph to the credit binge of the 80s.   Unfortunately, we are living with the legacy  of that credit lunacy today, magnified many   times over. One can only hope that understanding  how we got here might help us find a way out.” I will also add that reading anything Jim Grant  writes, is an intellectual and literary treat.   Well, next week, in a WEALTHTRACK exclusive, great  investor and small cap stock pioneer Chuck Royce   discusses the historic opportunities  available in this underrated asset class. In the meantime, in this week's  extra on www.WEALTHTRACK.com,   Jim Grant discusses his latest literary project,   a deep dive into 18th century finance through  the lives of two brilliant eighteenth century   orators -- Edmund Burke and Charles James  Fox, who were also perennially broke. Please follow us on Facebook,  Twitter and our YouTube channel.   Thank you for spending time with  us, no matter what the format.   Enjoy your weekend and make the week ahead  a healthy, profitable and productive one.
Info
Channel: WealthTrack
Views: 84,814
Rating: 4.8949456 out of 5
Keywords:
Id: LiWe96aAtrw
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 26min 32sec (1592 seconds)
Published: Fri Oct 01 2021
Related Videos
Note
Please note that this website is currently a work in progress! Lots of interesting data and statistics to come.