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The Daily Reckoning PRESENTS:
There are two ways to think about China: you can take the optimistic
standpoint, and view it as a rapidly growing country filled with
opportunity...or you can see it as a ticking time-bomb, just waiting to
destroy itself. Justice Litle explores both avenues of thought...
China
presents two stories at once. In the long run, the dragon's rise seems
inexorable. It's hard to imagine anything that could thwart it. In the
short run, however, China must deal with dangerous internal weakness,
namely a rotten banking system, poor internal controls and a dangerous
torrent of "hot money" - speculative capital in pursuit of
aggressive returns - that threatens to boil over the economy and unleash
massive instability down the road when it withdraws, similar to the
Asian currency crisis of the late '90s.
A
divergence of opinion is slowly building as to whether China will make
the full transition to free-market capitalism with its current political
system intact. Naysayers believe that a top-down, statist approach to
governance will never mix with free markets and that the conflicts
inherent in China's uneasy arrangement will eventually tear the
leadership apart...or bring about a violent end to free-market
reforms...or both at the same time.
In
contrast, optimists point to thriving countries like Singapore, where
capitalism has flourished under the benign authoritarianism of Lee Kuan
Yew and his protégées. (By the way, it's technically not illegal to
chew gum in Singapore; you simply can't import or sell it legally.) They
point out that an arrangement that appears statist and authoritarian is
actually more democratic than it looks, because the people willingly
endorse the arrangement. The tradeoff is stability for prosperity, and
as long as prosperity is delivered, stability in the form of
quasi-democracy will be accepted. The optimists see China's
authoritarianism slipping away gradually - just as China's communism has
transitioned from policy to rhetoric - and they see no reason why the
transition cannot be carried further without a major dislocation.
Only
hindsight will prove who is correct, but the stakes are high because of
the global turmoil that would follow any political uprising. As of
year-end 2004, China had more than $600 billion in U.S. dollar reserves.
That is a sum that could effectively tear the financial plumbing system
apart, if it were unceremoniously dumped on the markets with such
massive pressure in a compressed period of time the pipes would surely
burst. Of course, this would be fiscal suicide for the dumpers as well,
which is precisely why such a move is not feared. China's own economy
would be sucked into the vortex too, so why would the Chinese put a gun
to their own heads?
The
theme that applies here is the doctrine of mutually assured destruction,
or MAD - but of the financial sort, rather than the nuclear.
A
product of the 1950s, the doctrine of MAD essentially states that two
parties with the capacity to destroy each other will recognize the folly
of hostilities. We liquidate the Soviet Union, they liquidate us and
nobody wins. So peace is assured, right? Wrong. The flaw in the theory
comes in the form of a question: What happens if one side or the other
is thrown into political turmoil, or if the reins are taken over by
madmen with nothing to lose?
A
Communist Party leadership on the edge of collapse would make a
last-ditch bid for stability by any means necessary, which in turn would
make it willing to contemplate the financial-Armageddon option, as a
form of extreme blackmail, if its hand were forced. If the mandarins
feared implosion, they would have the means to not just ask for
extraordinary coordination from the United States and Japan, but to
demand it... on pain of catastrophic consequences if they were allowed
to fall.
But
is this a point in favor of the optimists or the pessimists? Obviously,
it's not a pleasant thought to imagine a breakdown in China's economy
sparking massive civil unrest, in turn leading to a "hot war"
with Taiwan as a means of distraction and a catalyst for unifying
nationalism, which by extension draws in the United States and sets the
stage for the grand finale: the financial equivalent of a hydrogen bomb
going off as hostilities escalate out of control.
As
a silver lining to this dark cloud, we have a built-in bias for
stability on the part of global leaders such as Japan and the United
States.
As
MAD wisdom dictates, everyone loses if the mandarins lose, and thus
everyone has strong incentive to ensure things go smoothly. In this
sense, financial MADness works in favor of China's current political
system, rather than against it. As fans of functional plumbing in the
global financial system, you and I have a vested interest in the
mandarins' success.
If
you're shaken by the doom-and-gloom analysis, take heart: There's no
point in living in fear, and nowhere to go that can make fear
profitable. Bonds are hardly safe in the teeth of rising interest rates,
and we've seen how quickly cash can depreciate in an inflationary
environment. A neutral currency with a physical store of value, gold is
the bulwark against any meltdown of the financial system.
As
investors in natural resources, we have to incorporate certain
principles into our long-term assumptions. One of those assumptions is
that the China growth story has a long way to go. China is far from the
only market, of course; as the lead exporter and financial counterweight
to the United States, it simply demands outsized attention as a key
player and bellwether. We can fully expect the storm and gird up for it
- but we must also have conviction that the storm will blow over in time
and that the natural resource market is still in its early days.
Don't
expect global growth (and thus global demand) to progress in a straight
line. There will be setbacks and corrections along the way as China,
Asia as a whole and emerging markets in general step back from their
trajectories to consolidate and retrench. With this in mind, we want to
bring the same attitude to our core positions that China brings to its
strategic maneuvers for ensuring energy supply: conviction grounded in a
long-term perspective.
China's
leadership is particularly farsighted when it comes to energy. With the
challenges that will face it in coming decades, it will have to be.
China's population of cars and trucks on the road is estimated to
balloon from 20 million now to 120 million by that time.
Given
these monster trends, it only makes sense that China is spending
billions on alternative-energy investments. Whether oil maintains recent
peak prices or comes off in a temporary demand slowdown, the case for
alternatives as part of our core position is rock solid.
As
it is China's destiny to grow, it is also its destiny to import massive
amounts of oil. It simply does not have enough petroleum reserves
available to meet internal demand, and it never will. So China is
turning to coal on a large scale... but not without a price. At the
moment, coal meets about two-thirds of China's energy needs. It is also
causing significant pollution and logistics problems: coal is dirty,
inefficient and costly to transport, which is why they are turning to
coal-liquefaction plants.
Coal
is a solid organic material made up of large, complex molecules
containing mostly carbon, plus small amounts of hydrogen, sulfur,
nitrogen and oxygen. Raw coal also contains moisture and solid particles
of mineral matter (ash). The aim of direct coal liquefaction is to break
coal down into smaller component molecules, then to add hydrogen,
creating lighter and more stable oil molecules. The process
simultaneously removes sulfur, nitrogen and ash, resulting in a clean
liquid-fuel product.
The
advantages of a "clean coal" product are numerous. For one,
less dependence on imported oil. While it's estimated that oil will need
to remain above the $35-per-barrel range in the long term for this
technology to be cost effective, that projection is hardly a stretch.
Given conservative projections, permanent shifts in the structure of
demand and gradual depletion of proven reserves, $35 is clearly a solid
floor for oil, barring a deep global recession or depression.
Transforming
coal from bulk to liquid will also improve the logistics of delivery.
Rather than clogging the nation's transportation routes with railroad
cars and flatbed trucks loaded down with bulky coal deposits, as China
is forced to do now, direct transmission pipelines can be built. Less
stress on the transport system, fewer logistical hurdles to overcome and
smoother distribution over time will all contribute significantly to a
much-needed efficiency boost, lowering China's capital-intensive cost of
growth.
Last
but not least, clean coal in liquid form will be easier on China's
ravaged environment. Eight out of the top 10 most polluted cities in the
world are in China. As the dragon grapples with severe water shortages,
acid rain, toxic rivers and throat-burning smog - and all this with 20
million cars on the road, rather than the 120 million to come -
environmentally friendly technologies will become paramount.
Regards,
Justice
Litle
for The Daily Reckoning
Note:
Liquid coal has huge appeal outside China, too. Over the last 12 months,
energy companies in the United States announced plans to build over $100
billion worth of new coal-fired power plants. And U.S. coal production
is about to hit a record 1.2 billion tons...with Peabody Energy Corp.,
America's biggest coal producer, promising to double its production by
2010.

© 2005 Justice Litle
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Editor's
Note: Justice Litle is an editor of Outstanding Investments. He has
worked with soybean farmers, cattle ranchers, energy consultants,
currency hedgers, scrap metal dealers and everything in between,
including multiple hedge funds. Mr. Litle also acted as head trader for
a private equity partnership, and made contributions to Trend Following:
How Great Traders Make Millions in Up or Down Markets, a popular trading
book by Mike Covel (FT/Prentice Hall, 2004). In addition, Justice Litle
has been quoted in the Wall Street Journal and by multiple financial
newswires, such as Dow Jones and Future Source
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