BSL 3.05% $21.58 bluescope steel limited

markets in danger

  1. 112 Posts.
    THERE ARE SOME QUITE DISTURBING REPORTS COMING OUT RECENTLY REGARDING THE DANGER OF STAYING IN THE STOCK MARKET IN THE NEAR FUTURE. I HAVE COPIED IN ONE FROM FN ARENA FROM TODAY. IT SEEMS TO INDICATE COMMODITIES TO DROP AND CHINA TO SLOW ETC.
    Bluescope would also be seriously affected by any bubbles bursting etc.
    My experience suggests that once this type of talk starts then eventually things start to happen and they tend to happen in a big way.

    China Overheating?
    March 19 2007 - Australasian Investment Review – (AIR)

    It didn't take long for the Chinese Government to act to
    try and further control an economy which is starting to
    look like it is getting out of hand.
    Interest rates have been increased to an eight year high
    after a string of official figures last week revealed an
    economy growing much faster than the eight per cent
    target suggested by the government at the recent
    People's Congress.
    Last week we had strong retail sales figures for the
    country for January and February, news that the trade
    surplus in February skyrocketed to more than $US23
    billion (the second highest on record) and then a report
    revealing that industrial production also rose sharply
    in the first two months of the year.
    We've had a nasty stockmarket bubble which is worrying
    countries around the world, inflation is now above the
    authorities' comfort zone and even though industrial
    investment seems to be easing, the government Friday
    revealed the third increase in official interest rates
    in a year.
    (A bit like Australia and New Zealand, except the
    magnitude of the situation in China is many times larger
    with faster growth and a much larger economy: what could
    be on the verge of being the world's third largest
    economy in the next couple of months.)
    China's one-year benchmark lending rate will be raised
    to 6.39 per cent - the highest in almost eight years -
    from 6.12 per cent with the high rate kicking in
    immediately.
    The move follows similar announcements in April and
    August of last year. Last month it also ordered banks to
    set aside more money as reserves for the fifth time in
    eight months to rein in the money supply and cut back
    lending for new business investment.
    Commodity prices will take a hit from the news after a
    very sharp rise in copper prices on Friday as world
    stocks continued to fall on renewed Chinese buying of
    the metal.
    Normally a rise in copper prices would be bullish for
    the Australian market with BHP Billiton and Rio the
    leading stocks to benefit: but the rate rise in China
    and the continuing signs of an economy starting to get
    out of hand, will force some analysts and companies to
    have a second look at the situation.

    China is still growing but there are now concerns that
    it is growing too quickly for the country's economic
    health and for trade and political reasons: there are
    growing suggestions the Democratic-controlled US
    Congress is becoming more protectionist and might start
    pushing for levies and other trade barriers on imports
    from China.
    The final straw seems to have been figures late last
    week showing that the country's industrial production
    accelerated in the first two months: production rose
    18.5 per cent in January and February, according to
    China's National Bureau of Statistics. That was after a
    14.7 per cent increase in December.
    The trade surplus rose from $US2.5 billion in February
    2006 to a massive $US 23.8 billion last month and second
    only to the record of just over $US24 billion last
    October.
    The growth in China's money has jumped to its highest
    rate in half a year and inflation hit an annual rate of
    2.7 per cent in February from 2.2 per cent the month
    before.
    The big fear is that the Chinese economy has moved into
    hyper drive and the only way it can be slowed is by an
    officially engineered crunch.
    But the odds of the three rate rises being enough to do
    that are not good. There's a bubble in industrial
    investment, a bubble in the stockmarket and both place
    added pressure on the government's ability to rein in
    the madly charging growth machine.
    There's growing concerns the higher trade surpluses are
    being recycled back into China to finance the expansion
    in investment (a glut in capacity in many industries is
    looming) and the surge in the stockmarket, especially
    since January (and including last month's sharp fall).
    Official figures released a couple of weeks ago show
    that an estimated 60 per cent of 600 consumer items in
    China are in oversupply because of too much production,
    not too little demand.
    Consumers it seems are just being overwhelmed and the
    surplus is being shoved on to the export market to try
    and clear inventories.
    Is China's economy getting out of control and starting
    to overheat?
    Copyright Australasian Investment Review.
    AIR publishes a weekly magazine. Subscriptions are free
    at www.aireview.com.au




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