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    Spotlight China: Electricity Consumption Drops Sharply; Central Bank Vows Housing Support; Oil Imports From Iran Fall Again; Asia Real-Estate Bull Turns Bearish

    Wed, 02/08/2012 - 04:54 EDT - Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis
    • RDF10

    Inquiring minds are tired of the spotlight on Greece (believe me I am as sick as anyone of Groundhog Day).

    Given the world will not end when Greece defaults, whether in March of this year or next, let's turn our attention to a country far more significant.

    Chinese Electricity Consumption Fell Massively In January

    Business Insider reports Chinese Electricity Consumption Fell Massively In January, And The Chinese New Year Doesn't Explain It
    Ultra-brief note here from Nomura's Zhiwei Zhang :

    According to the China Securities Journal, China's electricity consumption in January fell by 7.5%. We estimate this may be the first decline since 2002 (excluding the financial crisis period in 2008-09), indicating industrial production may have slowed sharply in January.

    They don't have any more answers here at the moment, except they say that if you're thinking it has something to do with the New Year, then you are incorrect.

    For now it's just one of those things that make you go hmm...China Pressures Iran On Oil Prices

    China has stepped up the pressure on Iran in the face of Europe's oil embargo. Business World reports China's Oil Imports From Iran Reduced Again
    China will reduce its crude oil imports from Iran for a third month, sources said today, as the two remain divided over payment and price terms, although they plan to meet again for talks as early as this week.

    China is the top buyer of Iranian oil and also the fastest expanding major oil importer, putting it in a strong position to negotiate for better terms after it more than halved imports for both January and February.

    The reductions for March-loading supplies will be largely the same, if not deeper, than the previous two months, industry officials with direct knowledge of the supply situation told Reuters.

    China, which buys around 20 percent of Iran's total crude exports, cut its January and February purchases by about 285,000 bpd, just over one half of the total average daily amount it imported in 2011.China Central Bank Vows Housing Support

    In a sure sign that property prices in China are crashing faster than the Chinese government wants, China Central Bank Vows Housing Support
    China’s central bank pledged support for first-home buyers as a crackdown on real-estate speculation threatens to trigger a property slump in the world’s second- biggest economy.

    Officials will increase support for construction of affordable housing and ensure that “loan demand from first-home families” is met, the People’s Bank of China said on its website yesterday evening.

    Policy makers aim to limit public discontent by making housing more affordable, with Vice Premier Li Keqiang, a possible contender to be the next premier, describing the distribution of low-cost homes as a key test of government credibility. At the same time, the ruling Communist Party aims to avoid the economic “hard landing” that Fitch Ratings said yesterday is a key global risk.

    “The government doesn’t want to see home transactions slide too fast -- that may hurt economic growth,” said Lu Ting, a Hong Kong-based economist at Bank of America Corp. Too Late to Prevent a Hard Landing

    Given the massive size of China's property bubble, it's far too late to prevent a crash landing. The only way to prevent crashes is to not let bubbles get so big in the first place.

    Asia Real-Estate Bull Turns Bearish

    MarketWatch reports Asia Real-Estate Bull Turns Bearish
    Asia’s gradually cooling property markets aren’t the great buys they once were, according to one expert in the region, who says better bargains can be found in the depressed markets in the West.

    Tim Murphy, the Hong Kong-based chief executive officer of property advisory group IP Global, says he’s telling his clients to look more towards New York and San Francisco for deals, although London also ranks well in terms of rental yield in some projects.

    Back home in Asia, the only market he likes is Malaysia, where average prices in its big cities are about one-tenth of those in Hong Kong, while its commodity-backed economy should outperform its export-dependent regional rivals.

    What’s changed? Murphy says the ongoing debate in Asia during the current soft patch is being driven by inflation concerns that were absent during previous periods of economic weakness.

    Specifically, he sees a “role reversal” from the regional crisis that unfolded in 1997, as fresh barriers to foreign investment and speculative activity are now enacted across many parts of Asia, while hard-hit cities in the West are offering tax breaks and other concessions as incentives to invest.

    Today, governments around the region, and particularly in China, are wary that too much liquidity could stoke a U.S.-style housing bubble and inflict long-term damage upon the economy, he said.

    “Singapore and Hong Kong are two of the freest economies in the world, yet you pay more in stamp duties [real-estate transaction taxes] now than you would in London, because they are very worried about the markets continuing to overheat,” Murphy said. Infomercial for Property-Advisory Firm IP Global

    As much as I agree with the headline message, I have to comment the same message could have and should have been said years ago. Given the illiquid nature of real estate, one cannot sell on a dime when the market turns.

    "We see what’s happening as a great chance for Asians to buy overseas at the moment,” Murphy said, adding that in December he opened an office in Shanghai to tap the growing interest among China’s newly wealthy for overseas homes. 

    Given the entire two-page article was about Murphy and his firm, I have to ask "Was that an news story by MarketWatch or an infomercial for Tim Murphy?"

    Regardless, anyone who bought in China in the last couple years and has not sold yet is now likely trapped.

    Mike "Mish" Shedlock
    http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
    Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post ListMike "Mish" Shedlock is a registered investment advisor representative for SitkaPacific Capital Management. Sitka Pacific is an asset management firm whose goal is strong performance and low volatility, regardless of market direction.
    Visit http://www.sitkapacific.com/account_management.html to learn more about wealth management and capital preservation strategies of Sitka Pacific.

    • Original article
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      The US' complete ineptitude on oil policy is in the spotlight just as predicted. A pair of articles will show what I mean. China Snubs Geithner on Iran Oil Bloomberg reports China Snubs Geithner on Iran Oil, Japan Plans Cut

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      SINGAPORE/SEOUL — South Korea’s Samsung Total Petrochemicals Co has revived a contract to buy Iranian oil after a year’s hiatus, as thin margins in plastics make the cheap fuel from Iran hard to resist, people familiar with the deal said on Friday. Stringent U.S. and European sanctions aimed at reducing Iran’s oil income and forcing Tehran to curb its nuclear programme have made shipping and paying for the oil hard, halving the Islamic Republic’s crude exports.

    • EU Iran Oil Embargo Likely Delayed Six Months; Obama Sends Teams of Consultants Worldwide Hoping to "Manage Supply and Demand of Oil"; Phased In Oil Shock

      Under pretense of looking for other sources of oil, EU Iran Oil Embargo Over Nuclear Work Said Likely to Be Delayed Six Months A European Union embargo on imports of Iranian (OPCRIRAN) oil will probably be delayed for six months to let countries such as Greece, Italy and Spain find alternative supplies, two EU officials with knowledge of the talks said.

    • How Sustainable are China's Copper, Cotton, Steel Imports? What About Chinese Purchases of Canadian and Australian Real Estate? Fresh Thinking on Balance of Payments

      Inquiring minds as well as commodity bulls need to consider the likely economic impact of China's commodity imports and how sustainable those imports are.

    • South Africa Ignores US Sanctions and Increases Imports of Iranian Crude

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      If I had to pick the economy's likeliest spoiler this year, it would be oil prices. Whether it's Iran trying to close the strait of Hormuz or the Arab Spring  wafting through Saudi Arabia, I have no idea; but nothing matches the track record of oil in delivering nasty economic surprises.

    • EU set to slap oil embargo on Iran

      The European Union readied to slap an embargo on Iran's oil exports Monday as the West ramped up pressure over the country's suspect nuclear drive and urged Tehran to return to the negotiating table.In the toughest measures yet to reduce Iran's ability to fund a nuclear weapons programme, EU foreign ministers meeting Monday are to strengthen existing sanctions by banning imports of Iranian crude as well as targeting finance, petrochemicals and gold.

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    • Geithner Seeks Support for Iran Oil Sanctions From China; What Should China's Response Be? Shoddy Reporting by Bloomberg on Oil Story

      CNBC Reports Geithner Seeks Support for Iran Oil Sanctions From China As Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad continued his Latin American tour, U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner arrived in Beijing to persuade the Chinese government to support sanctions on the Iranian oil industry.

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