More Bubble Talk From The Financial Times
Here's some more food for thought from the Financial Times for the many bubble-deniers in the world today, such as Jim Rogers as seen in this
item earlier today. The British business daily seems to be full of "bubble stories" in recent weeks, just a few days ago publishing Nouriel Roubini's
Mother of all carry trades faces an inevitable bust.
China rushes towards a Japan-style bubble
By Peter Tasker
Emerging markets, it seems, have had a good crisis. In contrast to the debt-ridden G7 economies, they have quickly resumed their growth trajectory. No surprise, then, that US emerging market mutual funds are experiencing record inflows. The stellar performance of the Brics markets - Brazil, Russia, Indian and China - is due to continue into the distant future.
Such is the narrative now forming among investors. To anyone who has lived through the rise and fall of the Japanese bubble economy, it should set off alarm bells.
Remember that it was in the years following the 1987 "Black Monday" crash that Japanese assets went from being expensive to absurdly overvalued and the Nikkei's dizzy rise to 39,000 forced the bears to throw in the towel.
Then, as now, the logic seemed unassailable. While the western world was stuck in the post-crash doldrums, the Japanese economy had got back on track with apparent ease. Japanese corporations were using their high market capitalisations to finance acquisitions of foreign trophy assets. Japanese banks boasted the world's strongest credit ratings.
But what you saw was decidedly not what you got.
Just the fact that government sponsored bank lending in China this year has grown to staggering proportions should set off alarm bells for most people, but, human nature being what it is, many look past that development all too easily.
The Wall Street Journal joined in with their own bubble warning of sorts with the lead story in the Money & Investing section today -
Fears of a New Bubble As Cash Pours In.
Pretty straightforward stuff - zero percent interest rates, a large and growing carry trade, government profligacy in the name of economic recovery.
Back to the Financial Times and the parallels between 1980s Japan and 2000s China...
The crisis, far from leaving Japan unscathed, exacerbated its structural problems and laid the groundwork for a far greater disaster.
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