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The Daily Reckoning PRESENTS:
Two
separate news events late in August tell you all you need to know about
the course of the low-intensity economic battle between the United
States and China: China is winning. Dan Denning explains...
First, the Chinese
have not given up their determined pursuit of scarce energy assets.
Chinese National Petroleum Corp. - China's biggest oil producer -
succeeded in its $4.2 billion bid to buy Petro Kazakhstan. Petro
Kazakhstan is a Canadian company, but most of its 150,000 barrels of
production per day come from Kazakhstan, which is considerably closer to
China than Canada.
This
is simply Round 2 of China securing energy reserves closer to its
borders. The CNOOC bid for Unocal was first, and failed. But the Chinese
strategy hasn’t changed. The second, successful, bid is more evidence
that the bull market in resources is being driven as much by national
strategy as it is by economic scarcity.
And
in winning the bid, the Chinese beat out their Indian rivals on the
subcontinent. It’s bad news for India, because China has an additional
$700 billion in currency reserves with which to conduct its global
campaign for resource security.
While
the Chinese patiently execute their strategy for economic competition
with the United States, I’d be remiss if I didn’t note the joint
military exercises conducted by China and Russia in August, dubbed
“Peace Mission 2005.” Over 11,000 Russian and Chinese forces
coordinated a mock invasion of a restive country. The exercises took
place on eastern China’s Shandong Peninsula, which is well north of
Taiwan.
But
make no mistake about the several messages being sent by both China and
Russia. First and foremost is always Taiwan. A recent report published
in the China Daily newspaper quoted a government report concerning the
social instability sparked by a growing gap between rich, urban coastal
dwellers and poor, rural farmers, who have not benefited from China’s
sudden prosperity. “China's growing income gap is likely to trigger
instability after 2010 if the government finds no effective solutions to
end the disparity,” the article concluded.
This
is the kind of instability that puts pressure on a government. Faced
with domestic pressure, most governments create a straw-man foreign
enemy — in this case, Taiwan. One way of viewing the exercises with
Russia is as a reminder that the communists in Beijing are willing to
turn any domestic instability into an excuse to attack Taiwan.
However,
I’m sure the Chinese would prefer not to attack Taiwan militarily, at
least not yet. And the Chinese would prefer to put diplomatic and
economic pressure on the United States, not spark a military conflict.
Enter the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, a group that includes Iran,
India, Russia, Pakistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and
Uzbekistan.
These
countries were invited to watch the exercises. And in the future, this
is just one of the ostensibly diplomatic groups China will employ to
exert subtle pressure on the United States. China recognizes it is in a
long-term, nonmilitary conflict with the United States for scarce
economic resources. China has gone about securing resources through
careful alliances and agreements. Of course, China also does a great
deal of business with U.S. consumers. But in the long term, China sees
the United States, and perhaps rightly so, as its chief global economic
rival. All of the actions of the Chinese government indicate this is the
case, and that the government will do all it can to win this
low-intensity economic war.
While
China takes the reality of peak oil production seriously, the second
important news item from August shows that Americans are still behaving
as if it were possible to get rich buying houses from one another.
However, the news on the housing front was mixed.
On
the downside, sales of existing homes fell off the record pace in June
by 2.6%. That said, 2005 sales of existing homes are still on track to
eclipse 7 million. Yet the median price of an existing home is now over
$218,000, and it went up in July. Could it be that rising prices are
starting to price out certain new buyers from the existing home market?
It could be.
Even
the upside isn’t so up. July new home sales jumped 6.5%, to a 1.41
million pace for the year. That was the good news. The bad news is that
the median price for new homes fell 4% for the month. A study by
National City Corp. showed housing prices in at least 53 American cities
were “extremely overvalued.” But let me just give you some insight
from here on the ground in Superior, Colo.
I’m
staying with my older brother and his wife before I leave for Australia
in November. They live at the end of a cul-de-sac in a relatively new
neighborhood that’s grown up near the enormous FlatIron Crossing
shopping center outside Denver. It’s nearly a perfect example of the
consumption economy at work. People buy expensive houses with low
interest rates, cash out some equity, and head to the mall.
The
only problem is house prices aren’t inevitably going up. A flier from
a local real estate agent showed the list and final sale prices for a
dozen new homes in the areas. Only two of the 12 homes sold for the
original list price. The “Cabernet” and “Chardonnay” models
seemed to fare the worst. One “Chardonnay” model, a four-bedroom,
four-bathroom, 3,100-square-foot monster, originally listed at $525,000.
Its final sale price was $397,500.
If
you’re doing the math at home, that’s a hefty 24% discount to the
list price. Still, nearly $400,000 for a home isn’t exactly cheap. Yet
this is further evidence that the frothy mentality that has sent home
prices to the boiling point may finally be cooling off.
Will
it just cool off, or will it pop, with all the gory consequences to the
stock market and the economy I’ve predicted? Well, the economy is a
lot more dependant on the housing sector - for employment and retail
sales - than many people realize. That doesn’t even include what might
happen to regional banks that own a hefty slice of mortgage debt should
home prices fall radically. Yet as I showed, all that has to happen is
for home prices to grow less fast for retail sales to grind to a halt.
This
is what happens when you gear an entire economy to wealth accumulation
through rising stock and house prices. Of course, those are assets
everyone should own in order to get or preserve wealth. But only when
you can buy them at a good price.
In
a low-interest rate-driven economy, rampant speculation, not patient
wealth building, becomes the name of the game. As easy as the money came
with low rates, I fear it will go away just as easily with high rates.
All of which means that owning the right stocks - companies with durable
competitive advantages and pricing power and good management - is more
important than ever.
Regards,
Dan
Denning
for The Daily Reckoning

© 2005 Dan Denning
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www.dailyreckoning.com
Dan
Denning is the editor of Strategic Investment, one of the most respected
"big-picture" investment newsletters on the market. A former
specialist in small-cap stocks, Dan has been at the helm of Strategic
Investment since 1999 - where, drawing from his network of global
contacts, he has designed an investment strategy that takes into account
global political and economic trends. His weekly e-mails and monthly
newsletter give investors the most complete picture of what's shaping
investment markets, what's coming next, and exactly what to do today
You
can sign up for a free subscription to the Daily Reckoning here: http://www.dailyreckoning.com.
This
essay was originally published in The Daily Reckoning.
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