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November 13, 2007


TUE
13
NOV
2007

October CPI inflation rose to 6.5%

By Michael Pettis

Finally the numbers are in.  China’s CPI was up 6.5% in October, up from 6.2% in September.  This matches CPI inflation for August and, with that exception, is the highest monthly CPI inflation number since the 7.0% recorded in December 1996.

 

On the one hand October inflation slightly exceeded the consensus forecast of 6.3-6.4%, but on the other hand it is below the 6.8-7.0% that some people (including me) were worrying about. (However you can read my previous entry to see why I think October inflation may actually be over 7 %.)  This is the third month of inflation over 6%, and I think that given the recent cut in fuel subsidies it is hard to see what can drive CPI inflation below 6% for the rest of the year.

 

I think by now it is pretty clear that this is no longer just a food thing, although some analysts continue to say that it is.  For example they argue that the non-food component rose just 1.1% last month from a year earlier, the same pace as it did in September, whereas food prices were up 17.6%. 

 

That suggests that food is still the primary force driving prices upward, although in a poor country where one-third of the CPI basket is food, I would think that rising food prices must affect wages and, through wages, the rest of the economy.  More to the point today we were also told that PPI was up 3.2% in October, compared to 2.7% in September (and 2.6% in August, 2.4% in July, and 2.5% in June).  Food prices were a big part of that, but oil and raw materials were up 4.8% and mining was up 5.4%, (4.5% and 1.2% in September), and this doesn’t fully take into account the 8-10% increase in gasoline and diesel prices that was passed late last month.

 

There is a lot of disagreement on where this will go.  Goldman Sachs have just changed their 2008 inflation forecast from 4.0% to 4.5%, whereas Credit Suisse keeps saying that it is going to be very hard to bring inflation down next year.  In explaining their forecast, Goldman said to its clients in a note today that “We believe the central bank will likely respond with additional tightening measures including strict control on bank lending and two more rate hikes before the end of this year.”

 

I have a great deal of respect for my Goldman Sachs friends, but I have to go with Credit Suisse’s Dong Tao on this one. Goldman, and everybody else for that matter, is right in saying that the high CPI inflation number is likely to lead to additional tightening measures, but given China’s monetary policies I cannot see how these tightening measures will work to reduce inflation.  The whole point of tightening will be to reduce consumer demand as a way of putting a lid on inflation.  But if consumer demands moderates, what will that do to the trade surplus? 

 

Of course it will rise even faster, and as the PBoC is forced to purchase the additional inflow, China’s money supply will expand even more quickly.  In addition, whether or not you believe that speculative inflows are a serious problem for China (I think they are), it is hard to argue that raising interest rates won’t have at least some positive effect on inflows.  PBoC tightening, in other words, is likely to increase current and capital account inflows.  The only market tools they have to attack inflation will, perversely enough, increase monetary expansion, and if you believe as I do that the root cause of Chinese inflation is excess money growth, that cannot be a viable solution.

 

I think China is stuck and can do nothing about domestic inflation without fixing the currency problem.  This gets to the nub of the reason why I think China will be forced into a maxi-revaluation (or at least a significant speeding up of the daily appreciation).  The authorities have no control over monetary policy and never will until they address the currency regime.

 

This pessimism of mine was confirmed, I think, by other October data.  M2 was up in October by 18.5%, a very high number, and more or less in line with monthly growth over the past four or five months (and at record levels since 2003).  Bad as this is, it was exceeded by the 22.2% growth in M1 in October (also at or near record levels since 2003).  With M1 growing faster than M2 every month since November of last year, (before than for several years either the two grew at near-identical rates or M2 grew substantially faster) depositors seem to be shifting money into more liquid facilities so causing money velocity to rise.

 

Logan Wright, of Stone & McCarthy, in a recent uncirculated report finds even more to worry about in looking at October numbers for the composition of bank portfolios.  Not only is loan growth at near-record levels on a seasonally adjusted basis (loan growth in October tends to low or even negative, whereas this year it is up by RMB 136 billion), but banking deposits actually declined in October.

 

More alarmingly from the perspective of the central bank is the data on banking system deposits, which reveal that absolute levels of overall deposits in the banking system fell on a month-on-month basis for the first time since July 2001. Renminbi deposits in the banking system fell by 449.8 billion yuan, and total deposits fell by 434.2 billion yuan. Renminbi deposit growth fell sharply to 14.9% year-on-year from 16.8% in September and 16.5% in August…

 

…Household deposits are now rising at only a 3.7% rate year-on-year, and these deposits have traditionally been the primary source of banking system liquidity. Interestingly, enterprise deposits, which have been rising much more rapidly in recent years, declined month-on-month as well, by 194.7 billion yuan. Enterprise deposits are still growing at a 22.7% rate year-on-year, and this constitutes the bulk of the growth in banking system deposits throughout 2007, meaning that the banking system is becoming even more dependent upon the profits of Chinese enterprises and the macroeconomy as a whole. We should caution that this is only one month of data, and a somewhat distorted one at that, being October, but the central bank is unlikely to be pleased with the flows of deposits out of the banking system and into the equity market, given its previous statements about the importance of maintaining positive real deposit rates.

 

It is hard not to look at all of this and not conclude that the fears that some of us had as far back as 2003 – that China’s currency regime was locking it into a monetary trap – were unjustified.  Monetary conditions have played out almost exactly as expected.  In my opinion, as this thing continues to unfold the logic of a maxi-revaluation will only become clearer, but it is probably too late to undo all the damage.

 

1:29 AM | Permalink | 3 comments


Comments (3) for "October CPI inflation rose t...
Unknown
There is a report in the FT.com about loan freezing in China now. Is that actually reducing supply of goods and making inflation rate higher?
By fatbrick - 11/13/2007 6:29 AM
isaac
Household deposit growth of 3.7% is very dangerous indeed and some more inflation related social scare might finally force the government abandoning the crawling peg vs. USD, even sticking to their official line " referencing basket and maintain effective rate basic stable" entail dramtic Rmb appreciation vs. USD, maybe in the range of 10%.

PBOC latest monetary policy report, increasingly stress importance of appreciation of Rmb to curbing inflation from terms of trade angle, but more fundamental issue is to reduce intervention and restore control on money-credit growth
By isaac - 11/13/2007 8:23 AM
Michael Pettis
Isaac, I think there is an argument between the PBoC and the NDRC about what the recent infation numbers mean. The PBoC seems convinced that there is a risk of inflation spreading, while the NDRC seems equally convinced that CPI inlation is limited to food and will be contained. I guess the impact on the RMB depends on who wins the argument.

Fatbrick, I think the intention of freezing loans is to slow overinvestment, and so slow industrial production but I don't think it has been effective so far.
By Michael Pettis - 11/13/2007 3:31 PM
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Biography

 

Michael Pettis is a professor at Peking University's Guanghua School of Management, where he specializes in Chinese financial markets.  He has also taught, from 2002 to 2004, at Tsinghua University’s School of Economics and Management and, from 1992 to 2001, at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Business.   He is a member of the board of directors of ABC-CA Fund Management Co., a Sino-French joint venture based in Shanghai.

 

Pettis has worked on Wall Street in trading, capital markets, and corporate finance since 1987, when he joined the Sovereign Debt trading team at Manufacturers Hanover (now JP Morgan). Most recently, from 1996 to 2001, Pettis worked at Bear Stearns, where he was Managing Director-Principal heading the Latin American Capital Markets and the Liability Management groups. He has also worked as a partner in a merchant banking boutique that specialized in securitizing Latin American assets and at Credit Suisse First Boston, where he headed the emerging markets trading team. Besides trading and capital markets, Pettis has been involved in sovereign advisory work, including for the Mexican government on the privatization of its banking system, the Republic of Macedonia on the restructuring of its international bank debt, and the South Korean Ministry of Finance on the restructuring of the country’s commercial bank debt.

 

Pettis is a member of the Institute of Latin American Studies Advisory Board at Columbia University as well as the Dean’s Advisory Board at the School of Public and International Affairs.  He is the author of several books, including The Volatility Machine: Emerging Economies and the Threat of Financial Collapse (Oxford University Press, 2001).  He received an MBA in Finance in 1984 and an MIA in Development Economics in 1981, both from Columbia University.

 

He can be contacted at michael@pettis.comOpen in a new window.