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Anti-Pervert Tights Become Internet Sensation in China

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Anti-Pervert Tights Become Internet Sensation in China These days, girls in China can keep perverts away by wearing “full-leg-of-hair stockings” in public.

At least that’s what an advertisement says on Sina Weibo, China’s version of Twitter.

When a girl dons a pair of these tights, her legs …

The post Anti-Pervert Tights Become Internet Sensation in China appeared first on The Epoch Times. Reported by Epoch Times 1 hour ago.

This Photo Of 'Anti-Pervert' Hairy Leg Stockings From China Is Going Viral

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This Photo Of 'Anti-Pervert' Hairy Leg Stockings From China Is Going Viral Early this week, a confusing picture of what appears to be a woman wearing "hairy leg" stockings went viral.

It was first posted on China's micro-blogging service Sina Weibo before being picked up by ChinaSMACK, and then shared by major media outlets around the world. 

The translated caption of the picture reads: "Super sexy, summertime anti-pervert full-leg-of-hair stockings, essential for all young girls going out."

The supposed stockings are covered with thick, 3D black hair, and appear to stop at the wearer's ankles. The insinuated goal is that men would be too repulsed to hit on or molest a girl wearing faux-hairy legs.

It's worth noting, however, that this picture is the only one of its kind and that searches for companies who make leggings or tights that look like hairy legs has proved futile. 

For all we know, this could just be a really good Photoshop job, or a picture of someone's actual hairy legs.

See for yourself below:

*SEE ALSO: China Has Built A Miniature Version Of Italy*

Join the conversation about this story »

 
 
 
  Reported by Business Insider 1 hour ago.

China's Hunger For Pork Will Impact The U.S. Meat Industry

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Quick Take Smithfield Foods agrees to be acquired by China-based meat processing company Shuanghui International. Rising demand for pork at home and livestock feed supply issues has prompted the Chinese firm to acquire Smithfield. Higher exports to China will lead to higher domestic pork prices, which will increase the input costs of U.S. based packaged meat companies. Smithfield Foods Inc., the world’s largest pork producer by sales volume, has agreed to be acquired by Shuanghui International Holdings, a privately owned meat processing company headquartered in China, for $7.1 billion including debt, valuing the company’s equity at $34 per share. Although the deal still needs to receive shareholder and regulatory approvals, we believe it can have a significant impact on the North American meat industry as it will lead to higher pork prices in the U.S. Packaged meat companies like Hillshire Brands are expected to witness higher input costs and an improvement in volume market share in the long run as a result of this deal. Reported by Forbes.com 55 minutes ago.

Rocky Mountain Institute Launches Reinventing Fire: China

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Coalition of unique partners to map path for China to maximize efficiency and renewables

Snowmass, Colo. (PRWEB) June 19, 2013

Rocky Mountain Institute (RMI) announced in Beijing the launch of “Reinventing Fire: China,” an effort to create an analytically robust model that outlines a path for China to economically meet its energy needs using the maximum share of efficiency and renewables through 2050.

Together, the U.S. and China account for about 38 percent of global energy use and 43 percent of global energy-related CO2 emissions. Working with a unique team of American and Chinese partners, RMI plans to deliver an analysis of the four energy-producing and -consuming sectors of the economy (buildings, industry, transportation, and electricity) to spotlight the economic, social, and environmental benefits of rapidly deploying renewables and energy efficiency technologies in China.

“The transition to an efficient and clean global energy future cannot happen without leadership from both China and the United States,” said Amory Lovins, RMI’s chief scientist and chairman emeritus. “Reinventing Fire: China will serve as a platform for pan-Pacific cooperation and leadership between the world's two largest economies for one of the most pressing issues of our time."

Reinventing Fire: China is developing insights that will lead to actions—policies, technology development, and adoption approaches—and is designed to build an enduring resource that can be applied by Chinese leaders to continually advance the country’s global clean energy efforts. To complete this work, RMI is partnering with Energy Research Institute (ERI), the energy think-tank of China's National Development and Reform Commission; China Energy Group at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL); and Energy Foundation's China Sustainable Energy Group (CSEP).

"We want to have a beautiful China and need to break through our existing energy constraints. That is why Reinventing Fire: China is so important," said Deputy Secretary General of the National Development and Reform Commission Zhao Jiarong, a leader on the initiative's advisory panel.

"China is undergoing a critical period of transformation. We have encountered a number of challenges: environment and climate change, economic development, and resource availability. Reinventing Fire is an exciting vision for China to pursue to solve these problems," added Yang Hongwei, Director of the Energy Efficiency Center at China's Energy Research Institute.

Reinventing Fire is a compelling vision for China to consider as an instrument to promote a revolution in energy production and consumption. Today, China is experiencing staggering growth in energy production and consumption, recently surpassing the U.S. to become the world’s largest gross energy consumer and carbon emitter, (although the U.S. still leads those categories in per-capita calculations). And, while previous energy studies have provided key insights, no model currently exists that integrates all four sectors while also examining technical feasibility and economic impact.

The two-year project has several planned deliverables, including an executive report disseminated to key Chinese government, business, and thought leaders; policy briefing and recommendations authored by ERI; and an online database documenting analytic approaches, assumptions, and calculations. An advisory panel consisting of key Chinese energy stakeholders—including leaders responsible for writing China’s 13th Five Year Plan, the country’s social and economic development initiatives—will guide the effort.

“China needs to build a sustainable energy infrastructure to preserve environmental quality and support future growth,” said Jon Creyts, the RMI program director leading the project. “This project builds on the rigorous analysis of RMI’s Reinventing Fire vision, released in 2011, and will offer practical and actionable solutions that China and other developing countries can follow.”

About RMI
Rocky Mountain Institute is an independent, entrepreneurial, nonprofit think-and-do tank with offices in Snowmass and Boulder, Colorado. RMI emphasizes integrative design, advanced technologies, and mindful markets in fulfilling its mission to drive the efficient and restorative use of resources. RMI’s strategic focus is to map and drive the U.S. transition from fossil fuels to efficiency and renewables by 2050. Please visit http://www.rmi.org for more information.
--- Reported by PRWeb 18 minutes ago.

China's first space teacher gives video lecture

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China's second female astronaut, Wang Yaping, has delivered a live video lecture from China's fifth manned space mission, Shenzhou-10.

 
 
 
  Reported by Telegraph.co.uk 8 hours ago.

One Detail In China's Ugly Manufacturing Report Was So Bad That It's Almost Unbelievable

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One Detail In China's Ugly Manufacturing Report Was So Bad That It's Almost Unbelievable Everyone's a little freaked out about the China's June Flash manufacturing PMI report, which missed expectations and unexpectedly dropped to a 9-month low of 48.3.

Any number under 50 signals contraction.

However, it's not just about China. Exports played a big role in this drop. And the collapse in the new export orders sub-index has Societe Generale's Klaus Baader scratching his head.

A good deal of the weakness was apparently driven by external developments as the new export orders index plunged 4.9pt to 44.0, the lowest reading since the middle of the Great Recession. This collapse is quite difficult to fully believe, given developments in the region and the global economy, where there are no signs of such a collapse of demand.

Again, it's not just about China.  This report clearly sent warning signs about the global economy.

Join the conversation about this story »

 
 
 
  Reported by Business Insider 9 hours ago.

End to Fed Stimulus, China Slowdown Rattle World Markets

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End to Fed Stimulus, China Slowdown Rattle World Markets Filed under: Market News, Economic Recovery, Federal Reserve, Bonds, Economy

*AP*

By Richard Hubbard

LONDON -- The U.S. Federal Reserve's explicit signal it will stop pumping money into the world economy and data showing China's economy slowing down swept across financial markets Thursday, sinking bonds, shares and commodities alike.

Emerging markets, many of which have been primed by easy Fed money, saw some of the biggest selling as investors rushed to the exits.

MSCI's benchmark index for emerging equities slumped by more than 3 percent and shares across the Asian Pacific region outside Japan recorded their biggest one day drop since late 2011.

World stocks in general were down 1.75 percent.

The initial catalyst for the selloff was Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke's surprisingly strong commitment to end the central bank's to asset-buying by the middle of 2014. That sent 10-year U.S. Treasury note yields to 15-month highs.
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"Bernanke came across as being quite clear and I think people were hoping for a less clear cut path to higher rates and that came as a little bit of shock," said Luca Jellinek, head of European interest-rate strategy at Credit Agricole.

Fed stimulus has helped keep the world awash in investment cash as it has struggled with a severe economic downturn.

The withdrawal of such money makes the future direction of financial markets uncertain, although it is motivated by expectations of a more robust U.S. economy.

"We see [Bernanke's statement] as a good sign in the long-term as it shows that a return to normal monetary policy is in the offing, that economic growth is picking," said James Humphreys, senior investment manager at Duncan Lawrie Private Bank.

Thursday's market reaction for many, however, was to run for the hills.

The jump in Treasury yields lifted the dollar against a broad range of currencies by 0.6 percent. Against the yen, the dollar gained around 1.8 percent to 98.18 yen.

The shift into U.S. assets then accelerated when a survey of China's factories showed activity slumping to a nine-month low just as a squeeze in the nation's money markets sent short term rates to record highs.

The stress was clear in Asian credit markets, where the spread on the iTraxx Asia ex-Japan investment-grade index widened 23 basis points, reflecting the rising cost of hedging against debt default.

In the currency market, the Philippine peso lost 1.2 percent to 43.76 per dollar, the weakest since May 31 last year, while South Korea's won fell 1.4 percent to 1,146.6.

India's rupee hit an all-time low on the U.S. dollar, prompting intervention to stem the rot.

"If you put the Chinese numbers together with the policy statements from both, what's clear to me is that the emerging market currencies, particularly with a commodity bias, will continue to go down," said Mark Matthews, head of Asia research at Julius Baer.

*Europe Recovers?*

In Europe a key survey of business activity from the 17 countries that use the euro helped offset some of the gloom by suggesting the bloc's long-running recession was finally beginning to ease.

The broad FTSEurofirst 300 index, which only last month hit a 5½ year high, was still down by 1.75 percent by mid-morning though off its lows. The euro zone's blue-chip Euro Stoxx 50 index fell 2 percent.

Markit's Flash Eurozone Composite Purchasing Managers' Index, which is seen as a reliable economic growth indicator for the bloc, rose to 48.9 in June from May's 47.7, topping forecasts and leaving it at its highest level since last March.

"At this rate we should see stabilization in the third quarter and growth appearing in the fourth," said Chris Williamson, chief economist at Markit.

The most encouraging picture was in southern Europe where countries such as Spain and Italy saw the smallest declines in two years.

The euro eased 0.5 percent at $1.3223, swiftly retreating from a four-month high around $1.3418 touched on Wednesday.

Oil slipped by around $2 for its biggest daily slide in close to three weeks while gold fell for a fourth straight session to $1,328.75 an ounce -- its lowest level since a 15 percent plunge in mid-April.

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Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments Reported by DailyFinance 9 hours ago.

Is it policy? China edition

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This is really worth watching. China’s money markets have spiked again after the central bank rebuffed pleas to inject more cash in to the financial system on Thursday, according to the FT.

We have the 7-day repo rate jumping 270 basis points to 10.8 per cent, nearly triple where it stood just two weeks ago and overnight money markets hitting silly levels:

Continue reading: Is it policy? China edition Reported by FT.com 9 hours ago.

China Banking Crisis: Interbank Rates at Record

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China Banking Crisis: Interbank Rates at Record The LIBOR rate spiked sharply in 2008 before and immediately after the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers in 2008, at the height of the financial crisis. A similar situation is currently playing out in China. 

A credit crunch is escalating in …

The post China Banking Crisis: Interbank Rates at Record appeared first on The Epoch Times. Reported by Epoch Times 8 hours ago.

Beautiful New Species Of Moth Discovered In China

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*Pensoft Publishers*

Scientists describe a new striking species of moth from China with an engaging wing pattern. The new species Stenoloba solaris has its name inspired by the orange circular patch on its wings that resembles the rising sun. The study was published in the open access journal Zookeys.

"During a spring expedition to north-west Yunnan, a striking specimen of an undescribed Stenoloba was collected.", explain the authors Drs Pekarsky and Saldaitis. "Only a single male was caught at ultraviolet light on 24 May 2012 near Zhongdian in northwest China's Yunnan province in the remote Baima Xue mountain range. The new species was collected in a wide river valley near mountain mixed forests dominated by various conifer trees, bushes and rhododendron."

The newly described sun moth belongs to the family Noctuidae, also known as owlet moths, which refers to their robustly built bodies. With more than 35,000 known species out of estimated possibility for more than 100,000 in total total, they constitute the largest Lepidoptera family.

Several of the species from the family have economic importance with their larva living in the soil and feeding on the bases of some crops such as lettuce and cabbage. Other species have caterpillars which have the extraordinary ability to feed on some poisonous plants, the chemicals contained in which would definitely kill other insects.

---

On The Net:




· Pensoft Publishers Reported by redOrbit 2 hours ago.

Appconomy Launches Carrefour Smart Shopper App in China in a Major Milestone for the Retail Industry

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Indoor Location Sensing, Social Shopping List, and Sophisticated Advertising System Enable Retailers and Brands to Reach Shoppers at their Point of Decision

Shanghai, China / Austin, Texas (PRWEB) June 20, 2013

Appconomy today launched its first-in-China, context-aware, mobile marketing platform with the introduction of the Carrefour Smart Shopper app. The Carrefour Smart Shopper app combines state-of-the-art indoor location sensing technology, a user-friendly, social shopping list, and a sophisticated advertising system that enables retailers to engage with their customers in a next generation of personalization. The company believes apps like the Carrefour app, powered by the Appconomy platform, will fundamentally alter the way people shop and the way retailers and brands reach and engage their target consumers.

Powered by the Appconomy platform, the Carrefour Smart Shopper app lets shoppers easily browse the most current discounts and promotions and build shopping lists on their smartphones that they can share with others. Additionally, while inside the store, shoppers can easily use the app to search for and navigate directly to any product they are seeking to buy. Finally, Appconomy’s context-aware engine routes targeted advertisements and offers from merchants and brands to shoppers while they are near the products they are seeking to buy or that they may have an interest in purchasing.

Launched initially for the world’s second largest retailer as the Carrefour Smart Shopper, the app’s initial three core functions are:


·     Social Shopping List: Contains everything on sale and being promoted, as well as non-sale, regular items, in the store and allows shoppers to create lists of the items they want. A social function allows different shoppers to cooperate to make sure no item is forgotten.

·     Navigation Guide: Step by step navigation tells shoppers how to get to the area in the store where the product they want is stocked. The indoor positioning and unique sending technology developed by Appconomy is designed to be hardware-agnostic, allowing it to be suited to any store layout and take advantage of increasingly sophisticated location-sensing hardware advances in the future.

·     Promotional Information: Informs shoppers through targeted, in-app notifications about promotions and products that are relevant to them, as determined by the context of their location inside the store, their selection of particular products, or other dimensions of their behavior and profile.

Currently in use at selected Carrefour stores in the greater Shanghai area, the Carrefour Smart Shopper will be rolled-out across the remainder of Carrefour locations in Shanghai, available to smartphone users through the iTunes App Store and popular Android app stores. Appconomy is currently pursuing and implementing other customers in addition to Carrefour in line with its ambitious international expansion strategy.

“The Carrefour Smart Shopper app is set to become one of the showcase examples of the power of the Appconomy platform to re-invent industries, beginning with retail,” said Brian Magierski, President and Co-CEO of Appconomy. "We enable leading brands and brick-and-mortar companies to provide a next generation of personalization to their customers through apps like the Carrefour Smart Shopper that are far superior to that of e-commerce today.”

Charles Liu, senior vice president and CTO of Appconomy, commented: “As a leader in this industry, Appconomy is in a position to set expectations that will determine how these apps function in the future. Our widespread partner network in the US and China gives us access to the most cutting-edge technology, expertise, and financing in the largest global markets and underpins what we are seeing as strong momentum behind the Appconomy platform. We look forward to announcing new technology partnerships and retail customers in the coming weeks and months.”

Appconomy expects to announce new partnerships with retailers and technology providers in the next month. The Carrefour Smart Shopper app represents the latest example of the Appconomy platform powering retail solutions. In 2012, the company successfully launched its Jinjin Marketplace app and brand in China, an aggregated marketplace for food & beverage, health & beauty, and other chain store retailers to offer mobile, loyalty and rewards programs.

About Appconomy
Appconomy is a software company with a groundbreaking context-aware, mobile marketing platform that enhances users’ shopping experiences and delivers benefits to retailers. Appconomy’s Carrefour Smart Shopper app represents the latest example of the Appconomy platform powering retail solutions. In 2012, the company successfully launched its Jinjin Marketplace app and brand in China, an aggregated marketplace for food & beverage, health & beauty, and other chain store retailers to offer mobile, loyalty and rewards programs. The company is privately held and dual-headquartered in Shanghai, China and Austin, Texas. Appconomy is venture-backed, with strategic investors including Qiming Ventures, Neusoft Holdings, True Ventures, and WTI. The company’s customers include major Chinese retailers and global, retail brands that rely on Appconomy for strategic insights and products in mobile retail technology. Reported by PRWeb 8 hours ago.

CHINA: Carrefour eyes 30 new cities for China expansion

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French retail giant Carrefour has confirmed plans to increase its presence in China through expansion into 30 new cities over three years. Reported by Just-Food 5 hours ago.

Bank Of China Denies Default

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Bank Of China Denies Default Either things in China are now very serious (and Jean-Claude Juncker has been hired as chief propaganda officer), or the BOC hired Erin Callan as CFO. Either way, for now at least, the Bank of China "is fine":

Then again, looking back in history, the instances when banks volunteered to being in default are... er... uhm.... not many.

via BBG Reported by Zero Hedge 8 hours ago.

Iron ore price rises on re-stocking in China

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The benchmark iron ore price has risen to $120 a tonne as Chinese steel mills re-stocked after stocks had run down due to perceptions of a slower recovery.

The price had fallen 25 per cent since earlier this year.

Traders in Hong Kong spoken to said the iron ore price could be range bound between $100 - $120 a tonne for some time, but that this would depend on how fast the Chinese economy gathered speed in the second half of the year.

Stocks at Chinese ports rose 6.5 percent to 70.6 million tonnes from a four-year low in March.

China accounts for around 55-60 per cent of global seaborne iron ore demand.

Some analysts are tipping the price could gain with an expected uptick in the level of useage for iron ore in China in the second half of 2013. Reported by Proactive Investors 7 hours ago.

The LIBOR Of China Is Going Totally Ballistic

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During the darkest days of the financial crisis in 2008, the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) surged like crazy. 

LIBOR is the interest rate banks charge to lend to each other. And interbank lending is crucial to the credit markets.

The spike in LIBOR caused credit markets to freeze, which prevented even the healthiest companies from accessing the capital markets to finance their ongoing operations.

In recent days, SHIBOR — China's version of LIBOR — has been spiking.

Overnight SHIBOR is at 13.4%, up 578 basis points from yesterday.  1-week SHIBOR is at a staggering 11.0%, up 292 basis points.

And this has everyone freaked out that China is running right into its own credit crisis, which potentially could have devastating cascading economic effects around the world.

"It is remarkable that China's central bank has been unable or unwilling to contain the spike in short-term rates, as the interbank liquidity squeeze continues," noted Sober Look's Walter Kurtz. "This is roughly the equivalent of the Fed not being able to control the fed funds rate."

Here's a long-term look at overnight SHIBOR via Barclays:

*SEE ALSO: The Mechanism That Holds Chinese Banks Together Is Falling Apart*

Join the conversation about this story »

 
 
 
  Reported by Business Insider 5 hours ago.

Gold, Silver, Equities, Bonds Plunge On Fed Noise And China Debt Crisis Risk

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Gold, Silver, Equities, Bonds Plunge On Fed Noise And China Debt Crisis Risk Today’s AM fix was USD 1,303.25, EUR 986.34 and GBP 842.38 per ounce. 
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,366.00, EUR 1,019.86 and GBP 874.91 per ounce.

*Sign up for our daily market update and special offers here.*

Gold fell $16.10 or 1.18% yesterday and closed at $1,351.00/oz. Silver sank to $21.25 and ended down 1.25%.

Bonds, shares plus gold and silver fell sharply around the world this morning after the U.S. Federal Reserve again suggested an end to their easy money policies. Data also showed China's economy slowing down amid growing concerns that a credit crunch in China is worsening.


Cross Currency Table – (Bloomberg)

Gold fell to a more than two-year low, while silver was at its lowest since 2010. Gold fell 2.7% and silver slumped by 4.5%.

The sell-off began after Fed chairman Ben Bernanke again suggested that U.S. economic growth was strong enough to begin tapering back on its $85 billion in monthly asset purchases later this year.


Gold in USD, 2 Year – (GoldCore)

Ten-year U.S. Treasury note yields hit 15-month highs of about 2.38% after the comments sparking a slump in global equity and bond markets. 

The FTSE fell 1.8% in early trade, while the Dax was down 2.4% and the CAC 40 down 2.1%. 

The selling accelerated when a survey of China's factories showed activity slumping to a nine-month low just as a squeeze in the nation's money markets sent short term rates to record highs. 

Asian stocks outside Japan suffered their biggest daily loss since late 2011, German Government bond futures dropped to their lowest levels since February and oil slumped by around $1.50 a barrel.


Gold in USD, 3 Year – (GoldCore)

Perhaps most concerning is the very sharp selloff in the UK and other European government bond markets which have seen very sharp falls.

The market slump is also due to the fact that many bond and equity markets had become overvalued despite deteriorating fundamentals.

This deterioration in the fundamentals of the global economy may be more important that the Fed suggesting that they will ‘taper’ their extremely unorthodox and massive debt monetisation programme.

The Fed has been suggesting that this would happen for many months and as ever it is always best to watch what central bankers do rather than what they say. 

Some market participants may be realising that markets, and bond markets in particular, are hopelessly addicted to ultra-loose monetary policies, the printing of money to buy bonds and currency debasement.  

Conversely, these fundamentals are actually bullish for gold and silver in the medium and long term.

The smart, store of wealth, money will continue to gradually accumulate physical bullion on dips like this.

Commercial traders, the so-called "smart money" in the futures market have twice as many long positions as they do short, as per the latest Commitments of Traders (COT) report. Meanwhile, the speculators, the so-called "dumb money" have slightly more short positions.

Considering that the commercial traders tend to be biased to the short side, this indicates they are confident that prices will soon rise.

Ignore the noise of the Fed and continue to focus on the long term fundamentals driving the precious metals market.

NEWS
Gold falls to 1-month low on Fed stimulus outlook - Reuters

India unlikely to ban gold imports or hike gold import duty - Reuters

Asian Stocks Drop Most in Two Years on Fed, China Credit - Bloomberg

Bonds, shares slump as Fed signals end to stimulus - Reuters

COMMENTARY
Video: "Get Out Of Paper Money" - Bloomberg

Video: Gold "Coming Back As Alternative Store Of Value" - Bloomberg

Man Who Oversees $150 Billion Warns Of Hyperinflation – King World News

The Dreaded “Tapering” - GoldSeek

Silver: Important Weapon Against ‘Superbugs’—Silver Institute - Mineweb

For breaking news and commentary on financial markets and gold, follow us onTwitter. Reported by Zero Hedge 3 hours ago.

Tom Engelhardt: How Far Will China Rise?

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Yes, the predictions are in. By 2016 (or 2030?), China will have economically outpaced the U.S. So say the economic soothsayers. And behind them lie all those, in the Pentagon and elsewhere in Washington, who secretly fear that, if nothing is done to contain it, China will within decades be dominant in the Pacific, the overlord of Asia, and perhaps later in the century the -- to steal a phrase -- "sole superpower" of planet Earth.

The first signs of things to come, it's believed, are already there, including the way China has been building up its military and has started nudging its neighbors about a set of largely uninhabited islands in energy-rich areas of the Pacific, not to speak of recent more informal claims to a large, heavily inhabited, very militarized island in the region -- Okinawa. Like the previous global superpower, China, it is believed, has designs on turning the Pacific into its own "lake" and possibly even setting up military and other bases ("a string of pearls") through the Indian Ocean all the way to Africa.

It's a great story, but hold your horses! As that peripatetic reporter for Asia Times, Pepe Escobar, indicates in a vivid plunge into China's roiled waters, "The Chimerica Dream," that country faces potentially staggering problems. After all, contradictions -- to use a classic Marxist word -- abound: a Communist Party leading a capitalist revolution with its own stability as a ruling elite dependent, above all, upon ever greater economic growth. And yet this isn't the nineteenth century. China is on an imperiled planet. Every economic move it makes has potentially long-term negative consequences. For all we know, there may be no twenty-second-century superpower on planet Earth and if there is, don't necessarily count on China.

As Escobar explains, to spur the staggering levels of growth that keep the country and the Party afloat, the Chinese leadership is embarking on a kind of forced urbanization program that may have no historical precedent. It is guaranteed to destabilize the countryside, while yet more peasants flood into the cities. It's seldom acknowledged here (though the Chinese leadership is well aware of it) but China has a unique, almost two-thousand-year-long record of massive peasant uprisings (often religiously tinged) sweeping out of the countryside and upsetting established rule. The last of them was Mao Zedong's peasant revolution that established the present People's Republic.

Mass protest in China has been on the rise. Environmental conditions are disastrous. Let the Chinese economy falter and who knows what you'll see. This is not a formula for an expansive imperial power, no less the next master of planet Earth, whatever Washington's fears and militarized fantasies may be. Reported by Huffington Post 5 hours ago.

Pacer International/Ocean World Lines Expands Network Extensively in China

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Filed under: Investing

*Pacer International/Ocean World Lines Expands Network Extensively in China*

DUBLIN, Ohio--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Pacer International, Inc. (NAS: PACR) , a leading North American freight transportation and global logistics services provider, is pleased to announce that effective July 1, 2013, Pacer International/Ocean World Lines (OWL) has entered into a new agreement with CTS International Logistics Corporation, Ltd. that will further expand its network. CTS brings 56 offices in mainland China to the Pacer/OWL network, providing a location in every major business and manufacturing center, port and airport. Pacer believes that CTS International is perfectly situated for unmatched supplier relationship management and origin and destination logistics activities.

"Pacer's US domestic intermodal capacity and highway network streamline our reach into the heartland of the USA. " commented Mr. Chen Yu, Executive Vice President at CTS, "And the OWL network reaches the logistics supply chain country extremities demanded by our customers. This partnership gives us the access we need."




CTS already has facilities situated in those cost effective regions where Chinese manufacturers are migrating to, and several members of management within both companies have long-standing relationships that further enhance the partnership and advance the business relationship development.

"CTS is an established, well respected organization located right where our customers need them. We are extremely pleased to have the opportunity to expand our global coverage for our customer base through the CTS network. Pacer has been steadily expanding its US based sales force over the last twelve months and is pooling additional resources from its International and Intermodal business units to manage the new business. From day one we will offer an unrivaled, complete end-to-end solution from virtually any point in China, through Control Towers in Shanghai, Singapore, the USA and Europe, to any point in the over 100-country strong OWL network." remarked Bob Noonan, EVP International, Pacer. "We can offer our customers direct-access to every major production center in China without the typical concerns and asset acquisitions associated with start-up operations."

CTS was founded in 1984 and has since become a reputable name in the logistics industry in China, ranking seventh^in the country's top 100 logistics companies. CTS's key products: ocean freight, airfreight, customs brokerage, projects and warehousing, bond perfectly to the competencies of the OWL Network, and its corporate vision and strategy is core to OWL's own philosophy.

ABOUT PACER INTERNATIONAL (*http://www.pacer.com*)

Pacer International, a leading asset-light North American freight transportation and logistics services provider, offers a broad array of services to facilitate the movement of freight from origin to destination through its intermodal and logistics operating segments. The intermodal segment offers *container capacity*, *integrated local transportation services*, and *door-to-door intermodal shipment management*. The logistics segment provides *truck brokerage*, *warehousing and distribution, international freight forwarding*, and *supply-chain management services*. For more information on Pacer International, visit *http://www.pacer.com*.





INVESTOR:
Pacer International, Inc.
Steve Markosky, 614-923-1703
VP, Investor Relations & Financial Planning & Analysis
steve.markosky@pacer.com
or
MEDIA:
Princeton Partners
Tracy Williams, 609-806-1023
Account Manager, Public Relations
twilliams@princetonpartners.com
or
James Curtis, 609-452-8500 x118
Account Executive
jcurtis@princetonpartners.com

*KEYWORDS:*   United States  North America  China  Ohio

*INDUSTRY KEYWORDS:*

The article Pacer International/Ocean World Lines Expands Network Extensively in China Reported by DailyFinance 3 hours ago.

Here Is What's Going On In China: The Bronze Swan Redux

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Here Is What's Going On In China: The Bronze Swan Redux A month ago, when stock markets around the globe were hitting all time highs, we wrote "The Bronze Swan Arrives: Is The End Of Copper Financing China's "Lehman Event"?" which as so often happens, many read, but few appreciated for what it truly was - the end of a major shadow leverage conduit (one involving unlimited rehypothecation at that),and the collapse of a core source of shadow liquidity. One month later, China's "Lehman event" is on the verge of appearing, and with Overnight repo rates hitting 25% last night, coupled with rumors of bank bailouts rampant, it very well already may have but don't expect the secretive Chinese politburo and PBOC to disclose it any time soon. So now that the market has finally once again caught up with reality, for the benefit of all those who missed it the first time, here is, once again, a look at the arrival of China's Bronze Swan.

From May 20: * *

*The Bronze Swan Arrives: Is The End Of Copper Financing China's "Lehman Event"?*

In all the hoopla over Japan's stock market crash and China's PMI miss last night, the biggest news of the day was largely ignored: *copper, *and the fact that copper's ubiquitous arbitrage and rehypothecation role in China's economy through the use of Chinese Copper Financing Deals (CCFD)* is coming to an end. *

Copper, as China pundits may know, is the key shadow interest rate arbitrage tool, through the use of financing deals that use commodities with high value-to-density ratios such as gold, copper, nickel, which in turn are used as collateral against which USD-denominated China-domestic Letters of Credit are pleged, in what can often result in *a seemingly infinite rehypothecation loop *(see explanation below) between related onshore and offshore entities, allowing loop participants to pick up virtually risk-free arbitrage (i.e., profits), which however boosts China's FX lending and leads to upward pressure on the CNY.

Since the end result of this arbitrage hits China's current account directly, and is the reason for the recent aberrations in Chinese export data that have made a mockery of China's economic data reporting, *China's State Administration on Foreign Exchange (SAFE) on May 5 finally passed new regulations which will effectively end such financing deals. *

The impact of this development can not be overstated: according to independent observers, as well as firms like Goldman, this will not only impact the copper market (very adversely) as copper will suddenly go from a positive return/carry asset to a negative carry asset leading to wholesale dumping from bonded warehouses, but will likely take out a substantial chunk of synthetic shadow leverage out of the Chinese market and economy.

Naturally, for an economy in which credit creation is of utmost importance, the loss of one such key financing channel will have very unintended consequences at best, and could potentially lead to a significant "credit event" in the world's fastest growing large economy at worst.

But before we get into the nuts and bolts of how such CCF deals operate, and what this means for systemic leverage, we bring you this friendly note released by Goldman's Roger Yuan overnight, in which Goldman not only quietly cut their long Copper trading recommendation established on March 1 (at a substantial loss), but implicitly went short the metal with a 12 month horizon: a huge shift for a bank that has been, on the surface, calling for a global renaissance in the global economy, and in which Dr. Copper is a very leading indicator of overall economic health and end demand.

From Goldman:



*Closing: Long LME copper September 2013 contract at $7,482/t, a $236/t (3.1%) loss*

 

Following the initial sell-off in copper prices in the second half of February 2013, we established a long copper position at $7,718/t in the September contract (on March 1, 2013). We believed that the fall in copper prices, reflecting in part concerns about Chinese activity, was overdone. We reiterated this view on April 22, post further substantial price declines. Since then, prices have rebounded strongly, with the September contract closing at $7,482/t on May 22, up by 10% from the May 1 low of $6,808/t.

 

*The emergence of the risk that CCFDs unwind over the next 3 months – we had assumed that deals would continue indefinitely – has complicated our near-term bullish copper view (from current prices*). On the one hand, our fundamental short-term thesis is playing out – copper inventories are drawing, copper’s main end-use markets in China are growing solidly (property sales +39% yoy, completions +7% yoy, auto’s output +14% yoy Jan-April 2013), seasonal factors are currently supportive, Chinese scrap availability is tight, positioning also remains short, and policy risks are, arguably, mildly skewed to the upside.

 

Set against this is the likely near-term unwind in CCFDs and, critically, our view that copper is headed into surplus in 2014 (the window for higher copper prices is shortening). *On net, we now see the risks to our 6-mo forecast of $8,000/t as skewed to the downside, and, in this context, we unwind our September long copper position at $7,482/t, a $236/t (3.1%) loss, given the recent strong rally in LME prices to near our 3-mo target of $7,500/t. *Additionally, *we believe that a further rally in copper prices in the near term would be a good selling opportunity taking a 12-month view** [**ZH: translated: short it].*

 

*Consumers: *We believe that consumers will have a better opportunity to enter the copper market to buy taking a 12-month view. Following the recent sharp sell-off in zinc we are increasingly bullish on the outlook from current prices and as such believe consumers should take advantage of current low levels.

 

*Producers: *Our base case of a sharp slowdown in growth of Chinese construction completions in 2014, in the context of above-trend supply growth, presents significant longer-term downside risks to global copper demand growth and prices. Therefore we continue to believe that any further rallies in the copper price in 2013 represent a good opportunity to hedge, and in our view other non-producer market participants should continue to monitor any copper positions in light of the 2014 downside risks.

 



So just what is the significance of CCFDs? As it turns out, it is huge. Goldman explains (get a cup of coffee first: this is *not* a simple walk-thru):

The combination of Chinese capital controls and a significant positive domestic (CNY) to foreign (USD) interest rate differential has, in recent years, resulted in the development and implementation of large scale ‘financing deals’ which legally arbitrage the interest rate differential via China’s current account. These Chinese ‘financing deals’ typically use commodities with high value-to-density ratios such as gold, copper, nickel and ‘high-tech’ goods, as a tool to enable interest rate arbitrage. With the notional value of the deals far exceeding the export/import value of the commodities used, and likely significantly contributing to the recent run-up in China’s short-term FX lending (and related upward pressure on the CNY), China’s State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) announced new regulations to address these issues (May 5), to be implemented in June. Goldman continues:



*SAFE’s new policies are, in our view, likely to bring these Chinese ‘financing deals’ to an end over the next 1-3 months*. Having said this, some uncertainty remains around the implementation of the new policies by SAFE and Chinese banks, the speed at which the policies impact the market, and the possibility that new financing deals are “invented”. Owing to these uncertainties, a complete unwind of CCFDs is still at this point considered a risk.

In this note we provide a full example of a typical deal and discuss our understanding of the impact of an unwind in Chinese Copper Financing Deals (CCFDs) 1 on the copper market.

 

*Our view is that the bulk of copper stored in bonded warehouses in China – at least 510,000t at present, as well as some inbound copper shipments into China – is being used to unlock the CNY-USD interest rate differential*. This material has not been entirely unavailable to the market (deals can be broken if costs rise, such as a tightening of LME spreads), *but the inventory has been effectively financed by factors exogenous to the copper market for some time.*

 

We find that *a complete unwind of CCFDs would be bearish for copper prices as the copper used to unlock the differential would shift from being a positive return/carry asset to a negative carry asset for those who currently hold it*. As such this inventory will likely become more ‘available’ to the global market. Initially stocks would likely move into the Chinese domestic market to ease the current tightness, until the current SHFE price premium to LME closes.

 

After the SHFE-LME price arbitrage closes sufficiently, *the remaining bonded stock (over and above day-to-day working flows) would likely shift from bonded warehouses to the LME*. We expect that the ex-China (LME) market would likely see inventory increases as a result, as China draws on bonded stocks instead of importing and as excess bonded stocks are shifted back on to the LME. *We estimate that the ex-China market will need to ‘carry’ a minimum of 200-250kt of additional physical copper over the coming months, equivalent to 4%-5% of quarterly global supply. The latter would most likely result in a widening contango, including downward pressure on cash prices.*

 

Specifically, the current LME 3-15 month contango is 1.1%, compared to full carry of c.3%-3.5%.

 

The emergence of this bearish risk – we had assumed that deals would continue indefinitely – complicates our near-term bullish copper view. Indeed, our fundamental short-term thesis is unfolding – copper inventories are drawing, copper’s main end-use markets in China are growing solidly (property sales +39% yoy, completions +7% yoy, auto’s output +14% yoy over the Jan-April 2013 period), seasonal factors are currently supportive, and scrap availability in China is reportedly tight. Positioning also remains short, and policy risks may be mildly skewed to the upside (ECB meeting June 6 and FOMC meeting June 18-19).

 

The other factors that have recently supported a rebound in copper prices have been mine supply disruptions at Grasberg in Indonesia (c.480kt for 2013E), and the threat of further strikes in Chile ahead of the Chilean elections and at Grasberg ahead of contract negotiations (the current labour contract ends in September). Our forecast 2013 disruption allowance of 5.8%, or c.900kt is designed to account for these kinds of developments, and so far this year our allowance looks reasonable, meaning that these disruptions are not set to impact our overall balance forecast.

 

Set against this is the likely near-term unwind in CCFDs and, critically, our view that copper is headed into significant surplus in 2014 (the window for higher prices is shortening). On net, we now see the risks to our 6-mo forecast of $8,000/t as skewed to the downside. In this context, we unwind our September long copper recommendation at $7,482/t, a 3% loss.



If you haven't shorted copper after reading the above.... we suggest you re-read it.

Ploughing on: below is the reason for SAFE's new dramatic regulations, and why China decided to go ahead and kill CCFD, unintended consequences, whatever they may be, be damned:



China’s foreign currency reserves have risen significantly since the start of the year, placing upward pressure on the CNY (Exhibit 1). This development prompted SAFE, China’s regulator of cross-border transactions, to announce a new set of regulations on May 5, to be implemented in June.

 

 

The new regulations can be split into two parts, and broadly summarised as follows:

 

*a) The first measure targets Chinese bank balance sheets. This measure aims to:*

 

i) Directly reduce the scale of China’s FX loans, thus reducing the scale of letter of credit (LC) financing (bank loans), thereby reducing the volume of funding available for CCFDs (though not specifically targeting CCFDs); and/or

 

ii) Raise banks’ FX net open positions (banks are required to hold a minimum net long FX position at the expense of CNY liabilities), thus raising LC financing costs, thereby increasing the cost of funding CCFDs.

 

Specifically, Exhibit 2 shows that SAFE aims to implement a bank loan to bank deposit ratio of 75%-100% going forward, compared to an existing ratio of  >150%.

 

*
*

 

*b) The second measure targets exporters and/or importers (‘trade firms’) by identifying any activities that mainly result in FX inflows above normal export/import backed activities (i.e. trades for the purpose of interest rate arbitrage, amongst others). This measure would force entities to curb their balance sheets if they are found to be involved in such activities.*

 

Since May10 SAFE has been requesting ‘trade firms’ provide detailed information of their balance sheets and trading records, in order to categorize them as either A-list or B-list firms by June 1, 2013. B-list firms will be required to reduce their balance sheet significantly by cutting any capital inflow related trade activities.

 

To avoid being categorized as a B-list firm by SAFE, ‘trade firms’ may reduce their USD LC liabilities in the near term, with CCFDs likely impacted. It is not yet clear what happens to the B-list firms once they are categorized as such. However, if B-list firms were prohibited from rolling their LC liabilities this could increase the pace of the CCFD unwind, since these trade firms would likely need to sell their liquid assets (copper included) to fund their LC liabilities accumulated through previous CCFDs.

 

These new regulations are likely to impact a number of markets and market participants. In this note we focus on the impact on CCFDs and the copper market. *Should a) and b) be enforced, copper financing deals are highly likely to be impacted.*



* * *

That explains China's macro thinking. But what does it mean for the actual Copper Financing Deal? The below should explain it:



*An example of a typical, simplified, CCFD*

 

In this section we present an example of how a typical Chinese Copper Financing Deal (CCFD) works, and then discuss how the various parties involved are affected if the deals are forced to unwind. Exhibit 3 is a ‘simplified’ example of a CCFD, including specific reference to how the process places upward pressure on the RMB/USD. We believe this is the predominant structure of CCFDs, with other forms of Chinese copper financing deals much less profitable and likely only a small proportion of total deal volumes.

 

*A typical CCFD involves 4 parties and 4 steps:*

· *Party A *– Typically an offshore trading house
· *Party B –* Typically an onshore trading house, consumers
· *Party C *– Typically offshore subsidiary of B
· *Party D *– Onshore or offshore banks registered onshore serving B as a client

*Step 1) *offshore trader A sells warrant of bonded copper (copper in China’s bonded warehouse that is exempted from VAT payment before customs declaration) or inbound copper (i.e. copper on ship in transit to bonded) to onshore party B at price X (i.e. B imports copper from A), and A is paid USD LC, issued by onshore bank D*. The LC issuance is a key step that SAFE’s new policies target.*

*
*

 

*Step 2) *onshore entity B sells and re-exports the copper by sending the warrant documentation (not the physical copper which stays in bonded warehouse ‘offshore’) to the offshore subsidiary C (N.B. B owns C), and C pays B USD or CNH cash (CNH = offshore CNY). Using the cash from C, B gets bank D to convert the USD or CNH into onshore CNY, and trader B can then use CNY as it sees fit.* *

 

*The conversion of the USD or CNH into onshore CNY is another key step that SAFE’s new policies target*. This conversion was previously allowed by SAFE because it was expected that the re-export process was a trade-related activity through China’s current account. Now that it has become apparent that CCFDs and other similar deals do not involve actual shipments of physical material, SAFE appears to be moving to halt them.* *

 

*Step 3)* Offshore subsidiary C sells the warrant back to A (again, no move in physical copper which stays in bonded warehouse ‘offshore’), and A pays C USD or CNH cash with a price of X minus $10-20/t, i.e. a discount to the price sold by A to B in Step 1.* *

 

*Step 4)* Repeat Step 1-Step 3 as many times as possible, during the period of LC (usually 6 months, with range of 3-12 months). This could be 10-30 times over the course of the 6 month LC, with the limitation being the amount of time it takes to clear the paperwork. In this way, the total notional LCs issued over a particular tonne of bonded or inbound copper over the course of a year would be 10-30 times the value of the physical copper involved, depending on the LC duration.* *

 

*Copper ownership and hedging*: Through the whole process each tonne of copper involved in CCFDs is hedged by selling futures on LME futures curve (deals typically involve a long physical position and short futures position over the life of the CCFDs, unless the owner of the copper wants to speculate on the price).

 

Though typically owned and hedged by Party A, the hedger can be Party A, B, C and D, depending on the ownership of the copper warrant.



As Goldman further explains, the importance of CCFD is "*not trivial*" - that is an understatement: with the implicit near-infinite rehypothecation in which the number of "circuits" in the deal is only a factor of "the amount of time it takes to clear the paperwork", there may be hundreds of billions, if not more, in leverage resulting from this shadow transaction that has been used in China for years. *Now, that loop is about to end*. The reality is nobody can predict what the impact will be, but whatever it is - i) it will extract tremendous leverage from the system and ii) it will have adverse impacts on both China's ability to absorb inflation and grow its economy.



*How important are CCFDs? They are not trivial!*

 

Chinese ‘financing deals’, including CCFDs, are likely to contribute to China’s FX inflows since they involve direct FX inflows through China’s current account. Specifically, for CCFDs, the immediate cross-border conversion of FX to onshore CNY after Party C pays Party B for the copper warrant (Step 2) directly contributes to China’s FX inflows. In terms of outflows, the issuance of LC (FX short-term lending) by Party D to Party A (Step 1) is not associated FX outflow by definition, and when the LCs expire they tend to be rolled forward. Step 3 occurs offshore, so there is no inflow/outflow related to this transaction.

 

In this way, the net Chinese FX inflows/outflows associated with CCFDs are equivalent to the change in the value of the notional LCs. We make some broad estimates of how much of China’s short-term FX lending could be accounted for by CCFDs.

 

Specifically, our best estimate suggests that roughly 10% of China’s short-term FX lending could have been associated with CCFDs since the beginning of 2012 (Exhibit 4). In April 2013, we estimate that CCFDs accounted for $35-40 bn (stock) of China’s total short-term FX lending of $384 bn (stock), making various assumptions. More broadly, Chinese bonded inventories and short-term FX lending has been positively correlated in recent years (Exhibit 5).

 



Two key questions remain: how the upcoming unwind will impact each CCFD participant entity...



*How an unwind may impact each CCFD participant*

 

As we discussed on pages 4 and 5, SAFE’s new regulations target both banks’ LC issuance (first measure) and ‘trade firms’ trade activities (second measure). Here we discuss how the different entities (A, B, C, D) would likely adjust their portfolios to meet the new regulations (i.e. what happens in a complete unwind scenario).

 

*Party A: *Party A, without the prospect of $10-20/t profit per Step 1-3 iteration, *is likely to find it hard to justify having bonded copper sitting on its balance sheet* (the current LME contango is not sufficient to offset the rent and interest costs). As a result, *Party A’s physical bonded copper would likely become ‘available’, and Party A would likely unwind its LME short futures hedge.*

 

*Party B, C: *To avoid being categorized as a B-list firm by SAFE, Party B and C may reduce their USD LC liabilities by: 1) *selling liquid assets to fund the USD LC liabilities, and/or 2) borrowing USD offshore and rolling LC liabilities to offshore USD liabilities*. The broad impact of this is to reduce outstanding LCs, and CCFDs will likely be affected by this. It is not yet clear what happens to the B-list firms in detail once they are categorized as such. However, if B-list firms were prohibited from rolling their LC liabilities this would increase the pace of the CCFDs unwind. *In this scenario, these trade firms would have to sell their liquid assets (copper included) to fund their LC liabilities accumulated through previous CCFDs.*

 

*Party D: *To meet SAFE’s regulations, Party D will likely adjust their portfolios *by reducing LC issuance and/or increasing FX (mainly USD) net long positions*, which would directly reduce the total scale of CCFDs and/or raise the LC financing cost, respectively.



... And what happens to copper prices (hint: GTFO)

*Implications for copper - bonded copper moves from a positive carry asset to negative carry asset*



*Implications for copper - bonded copper moves from a positive carry asset to negative carry asset*

 

We expect that a complete unwind of CCFDs, everything else equal, is likely to be bearish for copper prices, LME spreads, and bonded premiums.

 

CCFDs involve a long copper physical positions and a short futures position on the LME. The physical position would be sold if CCFDs unwound and the short futures positions bought back. The newly available physical copper would not be financed by the China and ex-China interest rate differential anymore (not a positive carry asset anymore), and would instead need to be financed by a natural contango (in the interim copper becomes a negative carry asset), everything else equal.

 

Theoretically then, the physical market, over a short period (say, one quarter), may need to absorb as much as c.400kt of copper, equivalent to 8% of quarterly global copper supply.

 

By contrast, the LME futures market would need to absorb buying of c.0.2%-0.3% of quarterly traded LME volumes and c.6% of daily average 2012 open interest. The impact on the physical market is therefore likely to be relatively large, in spite the fact that an unwind of CCFDs does not result in the creation of new copper (i.e. aggregate global copper inventory impact is 0/our inventory chart does not change).

 

*What about in practice?*

 

Since there are no comparable historical examples to make reference to, what happens when CCFDs unwind in practice is open for debate. We believe that since the downward pressure on the physical market is large, both in absolute terms and relative to the upward pressure on the futures market, near-term prices are likely to come under relatively significant pressure. Further, if the market fears the unwind of CCFDs, physical buyers may hold off on purchases, and futures sellers may bet on lower prices (offsetting either in part or more than offsetting the financing deal related unwind buying). In this way it is likely that in practice the whole copper price curve would be under pressure in the case of a complete CCFD unwind, at least until the contango widens sufficiently to compensate for the cost of carry.

 

We see the following as a likely chain of events in a complete unwind scenario:

· *China would draw on bonded until it is ‘full’. *In the current market bonded copper stocks will likely initially flow into the domestic Chinese market, since SHFE prices are above LME prices, with the SHFE curve in backwardation and LME in contango.
· *Chinese imports fall/remain low, placing upward pressure on LME stocks*. Since China is drawing bonded inventories to meet its demand, Chinese copper imports are likely to be under downward pressure beyond May, resulting in any excess material ex-China turning up on the LME as well (Exhibit 7). *Remaining bonded stocks (ex-stocks in transit), would shift to LME*. Once China is ‘full’ (i.e. the import arbitrage closes, bonded physical premia decline, SHFE price and curve softens), the remaining excess bonded inventory will likely make its way on to the LME. Since China is in deficit at present (drawing bonded and SHFE inventories, SHFE in backwardation), due in part to seasonal factors, the inventory numbers noted above, in practice, will likely be smaller but still very large. *Our best estimate would be a minimum of 200,000-250,000t of stock could shift/build on the LME over the next 2-3 months, or 4%-5% of quarterly global consumption. *
· *LME contango to widen. *Higher LME stocks suggest higher LME copper spreads, including downward pressure on the front end. Exhibit 8 illustrates that over the last 6 years, the buildup of LME inventory has been consistently associated with widening LME spreads into contango, and the scale of contango is mostly driven by financing cost and inventory levels. With excess copper flowing into LME warehouses, the spread needs to widen further to finance the carry trade effectively. For reference, LME annual rents are c.$150/t or 2% of copper prices. Assuming an annualized financing cost of 1%-1.5%, full carry is c.3%-3.5%, compared to current LME 3-15 month contango of 1.1%.

 

The main caveat to the above is that a complete unwind in CCFDs is still subject to the implementation of the policy by SAFE, Chinese banks and ‘trade firms’, and the possibility that new financing deals are “invented”. As a result, we will continue to closely monitor implementation of the policy by banks via monitoring bonded physical premiums, SHFE spreads and bonded stock flows.



Finally, what does all this mean for explicit rehypothecation chain leverage (initially just at the CCFD level although a comparable analysis must be done for systemic as well) and CCFD risk exposure:



*Leverage in CCFDs*

 

Below is a demonstration of the LC issuance process in a typical CCFD. Assuming an LC with a duration of 6 months, and 10 circuit completions (of Step 1-3) during that time (i.e. one CCFD takes 18 days to complete), Party D is able to issue 10 times the copper value equivalent in the form of LCs during the first 6 month LC (as shown from period t1 to t10 in Exhibit 10). In the proceeding 6 months (and beyond), the total notional value of the LCs remains the same, everything else equal, since each new LC issued is offset by the expiration of an old one (as shown from period t11 to t20).

 

*In this example, total notional amount of LC during the life of the LC = LC duration / days of one CCFD completion* copper value = 10. In this example, the total notional amount of LC issued by Party D, total FX inflow through Party D from party A, and total CNY assets accumulated by party B (and C) are all 10 times the copper value (per tonne).*

 

To raise the total notional value of LCs, participants could:

· Extend the LC duration (for example, if LC duration in our model is 12 months, the notional LC could be 20 times copper value)
· Raise the no. of circuits by reducing the amount of time it takes to clear the paperwork
· Lock in more copper

 

*Risk exposures of parties to CCFDs*

 

Theoretically, Party B risk exposure > Party D risk exposure > Party A risk exposure

 

· Party B’s risks are duration mismatch (LC against CNY assets) and credit default of their CNY assets;
· Party D’s risks are the possibility that party B has severe financial difficulties. (they manage this risk by controlling the total CNY and FX credit quota to individual party B based on party B’s historical revenue, hard assets, margin and government guarantee) (Party D has the right to claim against party B (onshore entity), because party B owes party D short term FX debt (LC)). If party B were to have financial difficulties, party D can liquidate Party B’s assets.
· Party A’s risk is mainly that party D (China’s banks) have severe financial difficulties (Party A has the right to claim against party D (onshore banks), because Party A (or Party A’s offshore banks) holds an LC issued by party D). In the case of financial difficulties for Party B, and even in case Party D has difficulties, Party A can still get theoretically get paid by party D (assuming Party D can borrow money from China’s PBoC).



In brief (pun intended): a complete, unpredictable clusterfuck accompanied by wholesale liquidations of "liquid assets", deleveraging and potentially a waterfall effect that finally bursts China's bubble, all due to a simple black swan. Although, in reality, nobody knows. Just like nobody knew what would happen when the government decided to let Lehman fail.

So... is this China's Lehman? Reported by Zero Hedge 3 hours ago.

Weak Economic Data To Force China Stocks To New Lows

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Heckman Global Advisors in New York was right, China is looking like a value trap.  The iShares FTSE China (FXI) exchange traded fund, the most popular passive way into the country, is likely heading into the high $20s. Reported by Forbes.com 4 hours ago.
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