2011年11月17日星期四

麥嘉華預警:中國市場遲早崩盤 不願加碼 房市率先泡沫

素有「末日博士」之稱的國際經濟投資分析大師麥嘉華今(16)日表示,世界經濟力量正快速由西方轉移自東方,中國無疑是即將崛起最重要大國,不過他悲觀認為,「中國經濟恐將崩潰」,尤其房市將率先泡沫。
麥嘉華明確表示,「不願加碼投資中國市場」,更認為中國政府可能學習美國印鈔票模式擺脫經濟發展困境,但中國經濟趨緩是事實,也許3個月、也許3年,但中國經濟崩潰總有一天將發生。

麥嘉華指出,中國經濟現前非常脆弱,面臨金融信用泡沫壓力,同時中國不動產交易量持續下降、建商開始降價求售,中國房地產股價走跌,來到2008年10月低點,雖可能如中國經濟學家所稱,僅是中期房市修正,但也可能成為中國經濟崩潰的引爆彈。
麥嘉華進一步指出,相對於美國商品及服務業軟性消費面占GDP比重高達7成,不需高度使用原物料發展經濟,中國工業生產對原物料需求太大,若中國經濟真的崩潰,將連動全球原料生產大國經濟大幅崩落,全球經濟將成一惡性循環。

另外,麥嘉華說,中國經濟崛起也為政治角力戰產生後遺症,中國需要原物料勢必確保來自中東的石油供給,但中國周圍皆有美國軍事基地監視,中國為確保中東石油可順利運達中國北方港口,在政治上與巴基斯坦合作以對抗美國及印度的包夾,也因此,未來中東地區發生動亂的機率將持續增加,成為全世界最大的火藥庫。

A scary prediction for the collapse of paper money

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/commentary/neil-reynolds/a-scary-prediction-for-the-collapse-of-paper-money/article2237056/

NEIL REYNOLDS | 
OTTAWA— From Wednesday's Globe and Mail
What should U.S. Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke do next? London-based economist Detlev Schlichter says, succinctly: “Abdicate.”What should U.S. President Barack Obama do next? Mr. Schlichter says, succinctly: “Abdicate.” With Mr. Schlichter, you aren’t left with much doubt about his position. He says the world’s major currencies are destined to crash. “The dollar, the euro and the yen are locked in a race to the bottom,” he writes on his website, papermoneycollapse.com. The only question is which one crashes first.

Mr. Schlichter argues that we are only part of the way through the market meltdown – and that the worst is still to come. How much worse? Considerably worse, he says, than the Great depression.
U.S. industrial production is 12 times higher now than it was in 1929, he says; but the amount of U.S. dollars in circulation is 200 times higher.
The U.S. net debt was 150 per cent of GDP in 1973, when then-president Richard Nixon took the country off the gold standard; yet its net debt reached a record high in 2010: 370 per cent. The United States will fall further, Mr. Schlichter insists, because it has further to fall.
Mr. Schlichter is the German-born, British-based author of a provocative and disturbing new book, Paper Money Collapse: The Folly of Elastic Money and the Coming Monetary Breakdown. An investment manager with JPMorgan, Merrill Lynch and Western Asset Management for 20 years, he quit to write his stern warning of an impending dollar doom.
From his own melancholy perspective, he thinks the crisis will come a little later on – because, he says, the central banks still imagine that they can keep the printing presses running indefinitely. The longer the presses run, Mr. Schlichter says, the more calamitous the crash. And Mr. Bernanke has hardly begun.
Mr. Schlichter recalls Mr. Bernanke’s famous assertion in 2002 that, with the world’s largest printing press, the Federal Reserve can produce “as many dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost.” Mr. Schlichter says: “Within the logic of the present system, the next step [by central banks] must involve the use of the printing press to fund further state expenditures, to fund corporate spending and, ultimately, to fund consumer spending.” In other words, the central banks won’t stop printing money until they’ve quantitatively eased people’s car loans and people’s credit cards.
Mr. Schlichter’s analysis rests on an Austrian-school interpretation of things. (“There is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought about by credit expansion,” Ludwig von Mises wrote in 1949 inHuman Action. “The alternative is only whether the crisis should come sooner ... or later as a final and total catastrophe of the currency system involved.”) The essential premise of the Austrians is that paper dollars get depreciated, sooner or later, “to a dime a dozen.”
Paper Money Collapse traces the history of paper currencies that weren’t at least partly guaranteed by a fixed-quantity commodity (which, for all practical purposes, means silver or gold). The Chinese invented paper and ink in the year 1000, Mr. Schlichter notes – discoveries that led quickly to paper money. He tracks China’s paper money through a number of dynasties. His conclusion: All of these experiments ended with worthless currencies. The Chinese abandoned paper money in 1500 (returning to it, under Western influence, in the 1800s).
Paper currency, he says, hasn’t fared any better in the West. He defines hyperinflation as a monthly rise in consumer prices of 50 per cent or more; the 20th century, he says, witnessed 29 such hyperinflations involving “elastic money.” Mr. Schlichter thinks that the collapse of U.S., European and Japanese currencies will be the worst in history. It will be a collapse “of epic proportions.”
Mr. Schlichter does not recommend an investment strategy for “the coming monetary breakdown.” And gold, he insists, should not be regarded as an investment. Gold, rather, is simply money, a medium of exchange – and the most successful form of it in history. But the cash in your pocket doesn’t pay interest or dividends and the gold in your pocket doesn’t, either.
“A collapse of paper money will be a momentous event,” he writes. “It will produce a transfer of wealth of historic proportions.” But it does not mean the end of civilization. All wealth is not illusion. And real wealth will survive.