Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Evergrande. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Evergrande. Sort by date Show all posts

Saturday, September 25, 2021

A peep over the China Wall

Whether we like it or not, China is a key factor in India’s policy making function. The China factor materially influences our economic policies, foreign policy, and defense policy. This may be true to a material extent for US, Japan and Korea policy making functions also.

Inarguably, the Chinese economy has been one of the key driving forces for the global economy in past three decades. Chinese have labored hard for over five decades, since beginning of cultural revolution in 1966, to emerge as a potent global force. In past three decades they have subsidized the global economy by providing cheap labor and capital; and funded a large part of the US and EU fiscal deficits since early 2000s. The Chinese support was a key factor in keeping the global market afloat during the global financial crisis. It would not be entirely wrong to say that China also helped the developed economies in protecting “their environment” by letting them relocate most of their polluting industries to China.

In the process, China perhaps digressed a little too further from its core ideology of Marxism. The selective capitalism allowed many “depravities of the West” to permeate the Chinese system, e.g., rampant corruption, flagrant inequalities and conspicuous consumerism. “Growth at any cost”, has perhaps costed too much to the Chinese society and the system. There have been reports of growing dissent amongst citizens for a variety of reasons. The citizens exposed to the global economy and society naturally desired more freedom (especially of expression) tat was denied. The demographic control policies (one child, immigration to cities etc.) also created imbalances and dissent.

In past few years, the Chinese government has sought to change the course of its polices to address some of these issue. For example, -

First, China sought to move into higher orbit by asking to be treated at par with developed countries. They claimed global acceptability for their currency; bigger role in the multilateral institutions like World Bank; dominant role in global trade and commerce through “Belt and Road” and other Initiatives; bigger role in global geopolitics etc. Besides, China has also made substantial strategic investments in Asia, Africa, Latin America and European continents to garner wider support.

USA, that has been dominating the world since the collapse of USSR, obviously did not like the idea and an overt trade war ensued.

Second, China cracked down massively on its polluting industries by shutting huge capacities. This impacted the global supply chains and forced the global corporation to seek alternative supply sources. (India has been one of the major beneficiaries)

Third, to correct its growing demographic imbalances, China abolished its one child policy and allowed upto 3 children per family.

Fourth, Chinese authorities made a paradigm shift in policy towards businesses; and took punitive/restrictive actions against likes of Internet major Alibaba, food delivery leader Meituan, ride hailing app Didi, popular micro blogging app Weibo, and numerous private tuition entities to signal the change in the direction of of winds in China.

Fifth, it prescribed strict financial prudence norms for its real estate sector to ensure that there is no hard landing of the economy. Many prominent developers failed to meet these norms and were forced to take corrective action.

Sixth, and most important, the premier Xi Jinping, proposed a new economic policy framework (“New Development Concept”), comprising of three key concepts –

(i)    “Dual circulation economy,” which seeks to reduce China’s future dependency on export-driven growth, and instead have Chinese domestic consumer demand become the principal growth driver;

(ii)   “Common Prosperity,” which emphasizes income redistribution away from China’s billionaire class to low- and middle-income earners;

(iii)  New “industrial policy,” led by a revamped state-owned sector, giving top priority to new technology platforms as the drivers of the 21st century global economy, including semi-conductors, artificial intelligence, quantum computing, and new forms of advanced manufacturing.

The changes obviously would have far reaching impact on China, as well as the global economy. There are many popular view prevalent about the nature and extent of this impact. One popular view is that like Japan in 1980-1990, China will allow systematic undisruptive dismantling of the froth that has developed in its economy (soft landing). The other view is that 2020-2030 will be the decade of socio-economic revolution in China, as against the decade of cultural revolution (socio-political) during 1966-1976.

In my view, China is working on a new model in which the core ideology of Marxism (uncorrupted and equal society) shall become a guiding force; communist party will remain fully in control of markets; and China becomes a great global power. Arguably, it will involve significant geopolitical and trade conflict. Signs iof which are clearly visible to us in China Sea, Afghanistan, and Ladakh.

It remains to be seen how far Xi Jinping would be successful in implementing this new design. Nonetheless, the actions so far speak of the full commitment to the new policy framework. It is in this background that we need to assess the recent developments in China and global markets.

Evergrande – scarecrow or black swan?

One of the basic law of physics is that the higher an object is propelled into the atmosphere, the faster it returns to the earth; unless the propeller lends enough velocity to the object to help it transcend beyond the gravitational orbit of the Earth.

This principle of physics can be applied to the businesses also. A business that is propelled higher using the fuel of debt, risks crashing down to the ground zero, if the business model is not strong enough to take the business out of the debt spiral and place it in the orbit of sustainability. However, in cases where the fuel itself is contaminated (unsustainable debt); the fuel tank (management) is leaking, or the velocity is inadequate (unsustainable business model), the chances of business crash landing increase manifold.

In past one decade, we have seen many examples of this phenomenon in India. The businesses that grew remarkably in the decade of 2000s with the help of easily available credit, but had leaking tanks (unscrupulous management,) contaminated fuel (unsustainable debt) and/or inadequate velocity (poor business models) came crashing down in the decade of 2010s. JPA Group, Suzlon, ADAG, DHFL, Yes Bank, SREI, Bhushan Steel, are only few example. Globally, Lehman Brothers, which crash-landed in 2008, has become epitome of this phenomenon.

Chines real estate sector – symbol of malaise

The Chinese real estate development sector has been under scrutiny for more than a decade now. The sector has been at the core of phenomenal growth of Chinese economy in general and the financial sector in particular for past two decades. The real estate sector development apparently contributes more than one fourth of GDP of China and constituted over three fourth of the Chinese household wealth.

Nonetheless, numerous fables of ghost towns, unsustainable debt, window dressing of lenders’ books have been very popular in the past decade or so. Most bankers, investors and money managers have been worrying about this; though not many might have taken steps to reduce their exposure to Chinese enterprises materially. Perhaps, they were too confident that the Chinese authorities would not let any large business fail, lest it may deter the global investors from investing in Chinese businesses.

The things however have begun to change dramatically since past one year, with the Chinese authorities making a paradigm shift in its policy towards businesses. Though, the punitive/restrictive actions of Chinese authorities against likes of Internet major Alibaba, food delivery leader Meituan, ride hailing app Didi, popular micro blogging app Weibo, and numerous private tuition entities have been signaling the change in the direction of of winds in China, the scare of failure of real estate major Evergrande has drawn greater attention of the entire global markets towards the developments in China.

Evergrande in that sense has become the symbol of malaise prevalent in China, just like Lehman symbolized the malaise in US financial sector during the global financial sector.

For an Indian investors, it is pertinent to understand the Evergrande episode independent of the price action of the past week in the stock markets. Remember, panic is more likely to mislead than guide to a safe haven.

What is Evergrande?

Evergrande, a Guangzhou based real estate developer founded in 1996, is one of the largest real estate developer in China. As per the website of the group, it owns more than 1300 real estate projects (about 780 under construction) in close to 300 Chinese cities; has interest in many other businesses, including sports, media, electric mobility etc.

Evergrande, with over US$300bn in assets (close to 2% of Chinese GDP) is also one of the world’s highest indebted developers with more than US$300bn in dues to lenders and operating creditors. Out of this about US$129mn in interest was due for payment this week and US$850mn of principal repayments are due in next 3months.

Reportedly, the Chinese government has chalked out a bail out for Evergrande. In the arrangement, Evergrande may be virtually nationalized. This should provide some immediate relief to the markets, but it is not important in a larger context. This arrangement just kicks the can a little further to allow soft landing.

What’s the problem?

The rating agency Fitch recently downgraded a host of Chinese developers, including Evergrande; and warned about a “probable default” by the troubled developer. This warning has sent shock waves across the markets, as it was feared that a default by Evergrande may impact the entire real estate development and financial sectors in China directly; and commodities and consumer sectors indirectly.

It is estimated that a crash in real estate sector may hurt lot of homebuyers who have made substantial part payments, and thus impact their financial status materially. It is also estimated that material slowdown in real estate sector, may slow down overall Chinese economy materially, leading to substantially lowered demand for industrial commodities like steel and copper. This may have serious repercussions for global commodities markets; and also impact the consumption demand for things like iPhones in China.

The stocks and bonds of Evergrande and other major real estate developers like SIMIC crashed by 35% to 80%. While the Chinese homebuyers might lose money, if Evergrande projects are not completed in time or are abandoned completely; the global investors who had invested in stocks and bonds of Chinese developers have already lost substantial money. In that sense, the global investors are equally part of this problem.

In fact, the current problem may be more intense for the global investors who are over leveraged in the Chinese high yield bonds and have large unhedged exposure to Chinese real estate developers and their lenders, than for the Chinese enterprise and Chinese authorities themselves.

What caused the problem?

Prima facie, managing US$1bn of Evergrande’s payments due in near term, was never a material problem for Chinese government, which virtually owns the entire banking system and has huge surplus in reserves. After all, Indian government with almost one sixth GDP of China, and much smaller banking sector, could manage much larger problems (IL&FS and Yes Bank) with relative ease.

The problem in fact lies in the changing policy paradigm in China.

To implement far reaching reforms in the delinquent real estate sector, the Chinese government outlined three parameters to be followed by all the developers, viz., (i) The liabilities of any developer must not exceed 70% of its asset value (L/A < 70%); (ii) the net debt of developers must not exceed its net worth (net leverage < 100%); and (iii) all developers must have cash which is more than their short term debt (cash to ST debt > 1).

Apparently, the objective of stipulating these conditions was to preempt a systemic crisis that could potentially drag the entire financial system into a deep crisis. Last year a large number of entities failed the test.

The bigger problem was however identified in the business model followed by the developers like Evergrande. They apparently bid for land at very high prices. The local authorities were obviously very happy with these bids as it augmented their revenue substantially. The higher land prices were then passed on to the home buyers with inflated property prices.

This made bankers happy as they could lend more to homebuyers due to higher notional value of the collateral property; but resulted in substantially higher household debt and unaffordable home prices.

The household savings thus got diverted to inflated housing sector rather than the capital starved high technology sector which had to increasingly rely on the foreign capital. It also impacted the private consumption, frustrating the government efforts to make Chinese economy domestic consumption driven from the presently export driven.

To correct all these issues, Chinese authorities took a series of measures, including curbs on VC investment in real estate, and checking the corrupt practices in real estate sector.

Consequently, the real estate developers saddled with unsustainable debt and inflated assets are feeling the pressure. But it is important to note that it is not the real estate alone, but the entire high yielding Chinese debt that is feeling the pain. Also Evergrande may have become face of the problem, but it is certainly not the only one in problem. Many other like it, e.g., SIMIC, Fantasia, Suna, etc are also in trouble.






What are the implications?

A series of defaults in Chinese real estate sector could potentially have multidimensional implications. For example

(a)   It could lead to serious wealth erosion for the Chinese home buyers. To mitigate some of this impact, the Chinese authorities are resorting to transferring the assets of troubled real estate developers to the lenders, who shall get it completed and sell to the home buyers. A variant of this model is being tried in India also with assets of JP Associates, Amarpali, Supertech etc.

As stated earlier, beleaguered Evergrande Group has apparently negotiated a settlement with the lenders for a short tern respite. Besides, the Chinese authorities are ensuring adequate liquidity in the market to stem repeat of post Lehman market freeze and global contagion.

(b)   The bond and stock prices of troubled developers have already seen severe losses. The global investors holding these securities have already weathered the loss. However, it is hard to believe that after having experienced Lehman collapse, these investors had not hedged their risk.

(c)    The developments in Chinese real estate market could lead to material slowdown in the Chinese economy, and therefore the global economy, threatening the fragile recovery from the pandemic. The demand for commodities could collapse leading to sharp correction in prices.

It is pertinent to note that the signs of slowdown in global economy were already emerging  three months ago, with World Bank, ADB, IMF etc downgrading their growth estimates. China had anticipated slowdown in demand for commodity prices and accordingly started liquidating its strategic reserves of steel and copper. The commodity prices mostly peaked three months back. Most central bankers have recognized this trend, terming the commodity inflation as transitory; and refrained from acting on elevated price conditions.

Further, a slower Chinese demand may actually ease pressure on the global logistics and supply chain bottlenecks, thus providing a short term relief to the struggling industries worldwide.



Implications for Indian investors

The Indian investors must see the current developments in Chinese economy and markets as continuation of the trend that started with Trump-Xi trade war. This will only accelerate the move towards China+1 policy of global businesses; which is widely expected to of great benefit for Indian businesses.

In the near term we may see minor outflows from Indian markets, as the global investors with significant exposure to Chinese developers seek to rebalance their portfolios due to losses and redemption pressure. However, in mid to long term this could actually result in higher allocation (China+1) to India by investors also.

The Evergrande episode is expected to refrain the Central Bankers from rushing into monetary tightening; while PoBC continues to ease liquidity. This has obviously alleviated some of the near term concerns of the markets.

The most visible impact for Indian investors would however be the likely easing of inflationary pressures, providing some easing room for RBI.

It is less likely that the Chinese investors would seek to withdraw material investments from India, under the current circumstances, especially when the rules regarding fresh investment from China require much greater scrutiny.

However, beyond the immediate events, we need to keep a close watch on the developments of wider import occurring in China.

Evergrande – scarecrow or black swan?

In media, the Evergrande episode has been termed as sighting of the proverbial Black Swan, a rare event that may disturb the status quo materially.

Black Swan events are, by definition, completely unexpected events of large magnitude and consequences and usually mark a watershed in the history.

No surprises that the prospects of a default, and its perceived potential repercussions sent the global markets into tailspin earlier this week. Traders anticipating a repeat of Lehman moment in Evergrande default, rushed to close their positions. It was feared that failure of Evergrande will have a strong spiral impact on the global financial system and markets. It may result in collapse of China property development market, leading to sharp fall in property prices and erosion of collateral value for banks. The collateral damage will also be felt in metal markets, as China property developers have been a key drivers for the metal demand.

But it is pertinent to note that China real sector, its importance, challenges, problems and threats have all been analysed threadbare in past one decade. There is nothing that is not known to global investors and analysts. It is only the lure of high yield and confidence in Chinese authorities (they would not let it fail) that keeps the investors’ interest alive in this market. China and all its enterprise face close scrutiny of the global community, despite scant availability and low reliability of the information. To be honest very few investors and analysts would not expect the available information to be mostly manipulated. Everyone therefore is always on their guards in relation to anything connected with China. Therefore, Sighting a Black Swan in Chinese context itself is a Black Swan event.

I would therefore like to believe that Evergrande is a scarecrow that has been shown to the global investing community as a warning of the risk of investing in high yield bonds by over leveraging.

It is also a harbinger of the things that are likely to come over next few years. A decade of readjustments in China may require many adjustments in most corners of the world.

Wednesday, September 21, 2022

Weaker Chinese economy is a problem for all

In a world where almost every central banker is struggling to contain inflation and tightening monetary policy, the People’s Bank of China (PoBC) seems to be facing a different set of problems and hence adopting a divergent policy approach. PoBC has actually cut the key loan prime rate (LPR) twice in 2022.


It is pertinent to note that the Chinese economic growth has been on the decline ever since the global financial crisis. The pandemic has slowed the growth even further. The latest growth data suggests that the Chinese economy is growing less than 5% this year, its lowest growth rate in at least three decades. Some part of the growth decline could be attributed to the zero tolerance policy towards Covid and stringent lockdown; but it is important to keep the declining trend since 2010 in mind.


 

Considering that China has been one of the key growth drivers of the global economy; declining Chinese economy is a matter of concern for all.

Besides, China has been one of the primary (i) financiers of the deficit budgets run profligately by many western economies; (ii) investor for the development projects undertaken by the Middle-East and Central Asian and African emerging economies; (iii) exporter of deflation through low rates, taxes and wages to the world; and (iv) absorber of the carbon emission for many developed and developing countries which chose to offshore their polluting manufacturing to the Chinese shores. Obviously, a weaker Chinese economy is a major concern for a large part of the world.

In the Evergrande episode (read here) we saw how much the global markets are sensitive to a financial crisis in China. In principle, the western democracies may not like the authoritative political regime of China, but the global investors’ confidence in the Chinese markets is mostly driven by this very regime; as it lends confidence to the investors that any crisis will be contained almost instantaneously. As President Xi Jinping gets ready to be elected for a record third term later this year, it would be important to see how he keeps alive the faith of global investors, who have not made money in Chinese markets for almost a decade now.

Thursday, January 27, 2022

What markets are actually worrying about?

The weather in the market has changed rather dramatically over the past two weeks. As we changed the calendars about four weeks ago, it was a partially clouded sky, but no one was forecasting a hailstorm, the markets are witnessing for the past 6 trading sessions. Seven odd percent fall in the benchmark Nifty is certainly not indicative of the damage that has been caused to equity investment portfolios, as the theater has been mostly outside the Nifty.

The sharp correction in equity prices is nothing unusual. In fact it has been a regular feature of the markets ever since the advent of public trading of corporate. However, in modern times this volatility assumes a wider socio-economic significance because the markets have become increasingly democratic. The access to the market is no longer confined to an elite section of the society. Investors in listed equities now come from all walks of life – young college students to old pensioners and top metros to the poorest districts of the country.

No surprise, the policy makers afford significant importance to the “markets” and markets also expect undivided attention from the policy makers like a possessive child. The markets begin to throw tantrums if they get any hint of likely coercive or disciplinary action from the policymakers.

Moreover, social media has not only made markets more sensitive to the flow of information; it has also made markets more susceptible to manipulation by vested interests. The market participants are often inundated with incoherent data from across the globe, invoking “fast finger first” type reactions from traders. Robotic traders, which account for a significant part of the market activities these days, often follow the herd and accelerate the prevailing trend.

As per the popular commentary, the market fall in the present instance is precipitated by the following “factors” and/or “fears”:

(a)   The US Federal Reserve (The Fed) is expected to end its bond buying program that was started in 2019, and begin hiking the policy rates from March onwards. It is expected that these Fed policy actions may result in higher bond yields and tighter liquidity leading to unwinding of USD carry trade. This shall lead to outflow of foreign funds from emerging markets that have benefitted from the deluge of liquidity created by central bankers of developed countries.

In this context, it is relevant to note that:

(i)    This move of the Fed is most anticipated since the past many months. The markets are known to act in much advance of these anticipated events and rarely wait till the last minute.

(ii)   The foreign investors have been net sellers in the Indian secondary markets for most of the current financial year. In fact, in the past 13months they have already sold Rs1.1trn worth of equities.

(iii)  The empirical evidence indicates that the Fed rate hike cycles usually lead to higher equity prices.

(iv)   Indian bond yields have already risen sharply over the past six months. Even if the Fed raises 50-75bps over 2022, the yield differential will still be attractive for the foreign investors.

(v)    In 2021, the last action of 17 central banks was a hike in rate, and none reduced. In spite of this, markets made all-time highs across the world.

(b)   There could be a Lehman like collapse or a dotcom like bust in the market.

The global central bankers have learned their lessons well from the global financial crisis. From the Greek sovereign crisis to Evergrande default, there is sufficient evidence to support their ability to mitigate the contagion impact of any major failure.

Insofar as the valuation bubble is concerned, we have already seen 50-70% correction in numerous inflated assets/stocks in the past three months, while global indices were recording new highs every day. The ability of markets to handle sectoral busts is certainly much better than the dotcom era of 2000.

(c)    Hyperinflation is upon us and financial assets will lose their value.

The global experts are still struggling to define whether the current episode of inflation is supply driven or demand pulled. The helicopter money that led to sudden spurt in demand has been largely exhausted. It is paradoxical to assume that no more helicopter money would lead to price erosion in the equity market but continue to fuel inflation in goods markets. The growth has already moderated world over and logistic constraints are not structural enough to last for years. Technology that has been the biggest deflationary force in the world continues to advance.

The traditional inflation hedges like gold have shown no sign of heating in demand. The German and Swiss benchmark yields are still negative and Japanese bonds are witnessing no bear attacks. The Chinese central bank has lowered rates.

(d)   There could be a full-fledged war between Russia and NATO allies.

Neither the conflict at Yatseniuk’s Wall (Russia and Ukraine border) is new; nor is the conflict in Middle East Asia new. The bogeyman of WDM (Weapons of Mass Destruction) in Iraq killed almost every chance of significant united NATO action two decades ago. Russia invaded and annexed Crimean peninsula from Ukraine in 2014. The US and Russian relations have shown no apparent signs of deterioration post that. The German Navy Commander recently revealed the German thoughts on potential Russia-Ukraine conflict.

(e)    The pandemic effects are unknown. The rising inequalities and poverty will plunge the world into chaos.

There is sufficient empirical evidence available to show that the rising inequalities have benefitted the larger companies and therefore stock markets. The world has been a chaotic place for at least the past 2 million years. In fact the past two decades perhaps have been the most peaceful period in the post Christ era.

(f)    The finance minister may impose new taxes in the budget to manage the resources for populist agenda of the government.

The Union Budget actually ceased to be an important event many years ago. Indirect taxes are mostly no longer part of the budget now. Direct taxes are mostly rationalized and have little scope for tinkering. Fiscal data is announced every month and it is easy to estimate the deficit and borrowing figures on a regular basis. Usually there are no negative surprises on this account in the budget.

This time particularly, the finance minister is in no position to cut tax rates and it can hardly afford to hike taxes. There could be some minor tinkering here and there, but nothing major should be expected. The fiscal deficit figure will account for Rs 1trn from LIC IPO, which is not certain. Obviously, assessing the accounting part of the budget may be difficult.

Obviously, the market behavior is not in congruence with the narrative. If the investors were truly fearful about the factors they are talking about, then they must have moved towards the shelter (defensive and deleveraged) from the cyclical. Whereas, in 2022 so far, IT, Pharma, FMCG have been the worst performing sectors and cyclical energy and financials which mostly face the brunt of tightening money cycle have performed the best.

In my view, the markets are fearful because (a) they are feeling guilty about the excessive greed shown towards internet and renewable energy; and (b) a large majority of investors lacking in conviction would have followed the pied pipers rather than making an informed decision about their investments, are falling in the ditch.


Saturday, September 25, 2021

US Fed may not remain completely data driven

In its latest meeting the US Federal Reserve Open Market Committee (FOMC) reiterated its position stated in the last meeting. The Committee maintained status quo on the Fed rate (Repo Rate) and its asset (bond) buying program (US$120bn/month). The limit for single counterparty under reverse repo has been raised to US$160bn from the present US$80bn, allowing the banks to park more money with the Federal Reserve.

The Committee reiterated its stance of last meeting, stating that “If progress continues broadly as expected, the Committee judges that a moderation in the pace of asset purchases may soon be warranted”; implying that the FOMC decision on QE continues to be data driven, and the present reading of data guides a gradual unwinding of the monetary stimulus introduced to mitigate the impact of Covid-19 pandemic.

“While no decisions were made, participants generally viewed that so long as the recovery remains on track, a gradual tapering process that concludes around the middle of next year is likely to be appropriate”, the Fed Chairman said in a post meeting conference.

The Chairman also informed that the Committee feels that the Fed is closer to passing the test of “substantial further progress” on employment and inflation. Accordingly, more members now see the first rate hike happening in 2022. It is pertinent to note that in June, when FOMC members last released their economic projections, a slight majority of members had projected rate increase into 2023.

The markets have obviously read what it wanted to in the Fed statement. The bullish response to the Fed statement implies that market is giving more credence to the “slower growth” forecast than the “higher inflation” expectation. The market move post Fed statement implies that the confidence in “November Taper” is much lower given the slowing growth and uncertainties in Chinese markets. Even if the tapering begins in November, the pace may slower than anticipated. Also, the data for the “lift” (rate hike) may not adequate as of now and much more evidence may be required before a concrete lift decision could be taken.

Despite the headline inflation running much higher than the fed target of 2%, FOMC did not appear concerned about price situation. The Chairman repeatedly stressed in his interaction with the press that “he expects price pressures to subside as supply chain factors, goods shortages and unusually high levels of demand return to pre-pandemic levels’; thus reiterating his “transitory” stance on inflation.

Many analysts have related the Fed decision to postpone the question of Tapering to the November meeting, to the debt ceiling fracas in US. “The Fed never makes major changes to policy when there are major unresolved issues in Washington,” said Danielle DiMartino Booth, chief executive of Quill Intelligence. “Between the debt ceiling, budget resolution and potential for a government shutdown, there are plenty of political reasons for the Fed to not change policy.”

In my view, Fed would refrain from taking any decision till the (i) concerns over Covid-19 variants subside materially; (ii) political fracas in US ends amicably; (iii) dust created by Evergrande settles down and (iv) “transitory” nature of inflation is denied. November Taper, if at all happens, would be slow (may be US$10bn/month) and protracted. The rate hike decision is still in the realm of speculation.

Friday, June 10, 2022

Endure the grind, do nothing

What would be the first thought that crosses your mind, when you hear a veteran fund manager betting his shirt on Nifty falling 30-40% in the next 6months! Yes, you heard it right. Last week, a former CEO/CIO of a large AMC, confidently told an audience composed of top bankers and HNIs that Nifty is bound to come to sub 10000 levels in next 6months and gold is the only safe haven under the present circumstances.

I am not sure about how many amongst the audience actually concurred with his view, but the first thought that came to my mind was “how would this old man look without a shirt!”

In a recent visit to the financial capital Mumbai, I also had the opportunity to meet some senior market participants (bankers and investors). None of them sounded enthusiastic about the markets. The consensus appears to be strongly favoring a slow grind over the next 6-9months.

Incidentally, the reference point for most of the senior participants is 2008 market crash, in the wake of the global financial crisis (GFC). The fear is that rising cost of funds and fast drying liquidity could trigger some major defaults that could trigger a global contagion like what happened post Lehman collapse in 2008.

Obviously, the senior bankers and fund managers have much wider vision and knowledge base to form their opinion; and therefore are certainly in a better place to foresee what direction the markets are taking. Nonetheless, I am not inclined to agree with their assessment. I strongly, believe that a repeat of 2008 like condition is unlikely, for the following simple reasons:

1.    Contrary to popular perception, the abundant liquidity infused in the global financial system post the GFC, has not resulted in excess return on assets. In the past 15yrs - European Equities (Stoxx600) has returned a mere 0.7% CAGR; Chinese equities have yielded negative return; Japanese equities continue to be lower than their 1990 level; Brazilian equities have yielded about 3.5% CAGR despite very high inflation; US and Indian equities have yielded less than 7% CAGR.

In comparison, during 2005-2007 – the Chinese equities had surged at 131% CAGR; European equities prices gained at 25% CAGR; US equity prices gained at 14% CAGR and Indian equity prices gained 58% CAGR.

Gold, aluminum, copper, crude oil prices (in USD terms) are at 2011 levels, while silver and steel prices are much lower as compared to 2011 levels.

Apparently, there is no bigger bubble to burst this time. There were localized bubble in sectors like US Tech, India internet; Taiwan semiconductor; China real estate etc. which have been punctured in past 9 months and the gas is releasing mostly in an orderly fashion, so far. It is also important to note that unlike numerous infra builders commanding crazy valuation in 2007-2008 (e.g., JPA, Suzlon, GVK, GMR, Lanco, Reliance Infra, KSK et. al.), and totally dominating market activity, the share of crazily valued new age businesses in the overall market is much less this time.

Another bubble was inflated in cryptocurrencies, which has already burst.

2.    The subprime crisis came to light in July 2007 when Bear Sterns announced the implosion of two of its hedge funds due to credit defaults. The market fell 20-25% and rose again to record higher highs in the next 6months. The governments and central bankers were mostly complacent in this period. They kept sitting on fringes waiting for the crisis to blow out in due course.

The global financial markets started to freeze due to threats of sovereign default crisis and sudden surge in energy prices. But it still took months for the governments and central banks to come out with a concrete plan for handling the crisis. The collapse of Countrywide Financials, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mae and Lehman Brothers (September 2008) actually catalyzed the globally coordinated response to the crisis. The markets made a strong bottom in the next six months (March 2009) and have not looked back since then.

While it took more than a year (July 2007 to September 2008) to devise a rescue and revival plan during GFC, the template is now available readily. The template has been tested extensively during the 2020 pandemic induced global lockdown. Despite a worldwide lockdown, no market froze and the panic fall in the markets was corrected in 3-4 months.

Besides, the global markets have handled Brexit; defaults by countries like Argentina, Sri Lanka etc.; China Evergrande crisis; collapse of some large funds and decimation of some cryptocurrencies (and tokens) etc. rather well in the past one decade.

Hence, it is safe to assume that the chances of a global market freeze like 2008 are significantly less.

3.    During the 2003-2007 market rally, the subprime credit was a primary supporting factor. This time it is materially different. This time subprime debt is mostly a tertiary factor. The debt is mostly sitting in the books of the financiers who have funded the investors in private equity funds. These private equity funds have invested in the equity of all these fancy startups. An implosion in the astronomical valuations of these startups would be the ultimate lenders with a significant time lag. Thus the grind could be slower and protracted this time.

4.    The regulatory changes since GFC have materially strengthened the global financial system. The risk management systems and processes are much superior now as compared to pre GFC period. Besides, the global agreements on information sharing systems have reduced the probability of unexpected global contagion.

5.    Leverage in Indian markets is significantly lower as compared to 2008. In 2008, over 55% NSE derivative volume was single stock futures and less than 10% was in Index options. Now 98% of derivative volumes are in Index options and less than 0.5% volume is single stock futures. Besides, cash margins are much higher. Hence, the chances of markets falling 10-15% in a day are much less.

I therefore believe that the probability of markets falling like 2008 due to inflation, slower growth, debt defaults, any other well-known factor or a combination of all these is insignificant. Of course, the markets can crash 30-40% due to some extraordinary ordinary, which is totally unexpected and cannot be foreseen.

In my view, as I said three months ago (see here), we are more likely to witness a “boring” market rather than a “bear” market in India. The indices may get confined in a narrow range and market breadth also narrow down materially. The market activity that got spread out to 1200-1300 stocks in the past couple of years may constrict to 200-250 stocks.

It will be a test of patience as well as endurance of the investors. Not doing much in the next few months would be the best course of action, in my view.