Manager of the
TCW, MetWest,
and TCW Alternative
Fund Families
INSIGHT
VIEWPOINT
Understanding China’s
New Currency Policy
DAVID LOEVINGER | FEBRUARY 8, 2016
This year, concerns about China – ranging from growth prospects, to policy missteps, to
currency depreciation, to bad communications – have rattled markets. Many investors
continue to worry that China will both want and have to allow the Chinese Yuan (CNY)
to depreciate significantly because in their minds: 1) growth is falling off of a cliff; 2) the
exchange rate is the only effective policy tool left to counteract this decline; and 3) China
will lose control of its currency as capital outflows drain its foreign exchange reserves. In
addition, since China is the largest trading partner of many countries, particularly in Asia,
many investors fear a large depreciation will spark a global currency war (and could even
break Hong Kong’s 32-year peg).
David P. Loevinger
Managing Director
Emerging Markets Sovereign Research
Mr.
Loevinger is a sovereign analyst in
TCW’s Emerging Markets group, covering the
Asian region. Prior to joining TCW in 2012,
Mr. Loevinger was the U.S.
Department
of Treasury’s Senior Coordinator for China
Affairs and the U.S.-China Strategic and
Economic Dialogue. While at Treasury,
he also served as minister counselor for
financial affairs at the U.S. embassy in Beijing
and Deputy Assistant Secretary for Latin
America, Asia, Africa and the Middle East.
Mr.
Loevinger was previously an economist
for the International Monetary Fund and
also worked in the office of the IMF’s U.S.
executive director. He started his career in
the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative,
the Senate Banking Committee, and the
U.S.
Commerce Department. Mr. Loevinger
earned a Masters in Public Policy from
Harvard University’s Kennedy School of
Government and a BA in Government and
Economics from Dartmouth College.
While China faces many challenges, including excess capacity and inventories in
manufacturing and property, and rising corporate leverage, we do not expect them to
implement a ‘mega-depreciation’, which we define as a quick move lower of at least 15%.
We see the risks of such a depreciation outweighing the benefits.
And there are better
ways to support growth. In addition, we see China’s shift to a more flexible exchange rate,
starting by managing the CNY against a trade-weighted basket – rather than the US dollar
– as beneficial.
In the near-term, uncertainty over the direction of China’s economy and exchange rate will
likely continue to weigh on markets and lead to periodic bouts of volatility. In addition,
there remains a risk that policy missteps, poor communications, and/or an excessively
heavy handed enforcement of capital controls could further undermine investor confidence.
However, we believe that as investors become comfortable with China’s basket based
exchange rate policy and the greater USD/CNY volatility that comes with it, their fears
of a large depreciation should subside.
We expect the CNY to be modestly weaker against
the trade weighted basket, and end the year around 6.9/USD. We expect that China will
continue to tighten controls on outflows to slow the drain on foreign exchange reserves until
market expectations on the CNY are more firmly anchored.
Below, we go into further detail of why we don’t believe China will pursue a megadepreciation, along with our outlook on the currency, capital controls and the economy.
As we stated in our white paper last summer1, we believe the changes last August
to China’s exchange rate policy were driven in part to address concerns raised by
the IMF in China’s now successful campaign to join the SDR basket. The CNY’s
1 www.TCW.com – Anchors Away? Assessing Changes to China’s Exchange Rate Policy (August 24, 2015)
.
VIEWPOINT
Understanding China’s New Currency Policy
depreciation from November 2015 until early this year was, in our view, largely driven by China’s desire to avoid a further
strengthening of the CNY against a basket of currencies of its major trading partners (the “trade-weighted basket”), which by
late October was close to the August highs and up 15% since mid-2014. However, many investors interpreted the moves as
indications that Chinese authorities wanted to depreciate the CNY significantly against the US dollar. The lack of clear official
forward guidance only served to heighten market uncertainty.
CNY depreciated against the USD when the basket hit highs & markets expected further USD strength vs. major currencies.
USD/CNY
Index Value
132
6.0
106
105
130
128
6.1
104
103
6.2
102
126
6.3
101
100
124
122
6.4
99
98
6.5
97
120
96
6.6
2014 2015
JP Morgan REER [LHS1]
2016
USD/CNY [RHS]
StanChart CFETS CNY Basket [LHS2]
Source: JP Morgan, Standard Chartered Bank; Data as of February 5, 2016
China’s growth is slowing, but a weaker currency won’t fix what ails the Chinese economy.
Investors should ignore recent headlines that “China’s growth has fallen to the lowest level in 25 years” and “Chinese growth
disappoints at 6.8% vs expectations of 6.9%.” Data prints over the last several months – while weak – have not been significantly
worse than expected and haven’t changed our economic outlook for growth of around 6-6.5% this year (slightly below consensus).
More importantly, as we’ve noted in the past, investors should pay more attention to how China is growing, rather than how fast.
It’s no surprise that growth is slowing as long-term tailwinds, like demographics, turn into headwinds, recovery in global demand
continues to disappoint, and the “old” Chinese economy (heavy manufacturing and property) cuts back investment in the face of
too much productive capacity, inventories and debt.
At the same time, parts of the “new” Chinese economy (service sectors like
leisure, health care, education, e-commerce, and clean tech) are growing at double digit rates. And even with China growing at
only 6%, it’s estimated the economy will expand this year more than the U.S., Germany, and France combined (in US dollars).
2
. VIEWPOINT
Understanding China’s New Currency Policy
A Tale of Two Economies: Sharp Downturn in Manufacturing & Construction, Services Steady
China Rebalancing Towards Services
Percent
20
15
11.90
10
5
Manufacturing and Construction Nominal Growth (y/y)
Services Nominal Growth (y/y)
0
2010
2011
0.30
2012
2013
Source: National Bureau of Statistics of China; Data as of December 31, 2015
2014
2015
Investors should also be cautious about viewing a plummeting stock market as a bellwether for the broader economy. Chinese
equity markets have traditionally been volatile and represent a small share of corporate financing and household wealth. A
plunging stock market also doesn’t imply that China is experiencing a financial crisis. While many Chinese corporations have
too much debt and banks’ non-performing loans are rising, money market rates have remained low and stable, compared to
the spikes seen in the U.S.
during the global financial crisis and in China during 2013. One reason why Chinese depositors
and lenders are willing to provide financing at low spreads is the fact that a large share of China’s debt is concentrated in local
governments, state-owned enterprises, and state-owned banks backed by an AA-rated sovereign. However, this confidence comes
with long-term costs.
China needs to scale back government guarantees and allow more defaults so credit risk can be better
priced and more resources can flow to China’s most dynamic firms. There remains a risk that the necessary defaults of corporate
debtors could rattle credit markets.
We don’t believe the depreciation of the CNY is meant as a beggar-thy-neighbor policy to grab growth at the expense of the rest
of the world. First, China doesn’t need a weaker currency to stay competitive.
While it’s true that exports have been declining
(down 5% y-o-y in 2015 Q4), and some firms and sectors have been hit hard, China’s exports have fallen less than exports from
most other Asian economies (for example in Q4 Korea’s exports were down 12% y-o-y and Taiwan’s were down 14%). As a result,
China has been gaining global market share even as the Yuan has appreciated 30% against the trade-weighted basket over the
last 5 years. The main drag on China’s exports has been weak global demand, not a strong currency.
Moreover, China has been
getting more bang out of each export buck because the share of Chinese exports actually made, rather than just assembled, keeps
rising as they move up the value added chain and component manufacturers move onshore. Finally, as China gains market share,
maintains one of the highest growth rates among major economies, and sees its current account surplus climb again towards
2.5% of GDP, it would be hard for this year’s G-20 chair (China) to justify a mega-depreciation to its G-20 partners.
3
. VIEWPOINT
Understanding China’s New Currency Policy
The main drag on Chinese exports has been weak global demand, not a strong currency. China continues to gain market share.
Percent
16.50
16.00
Chinese Exports (y/y)
3mma [LHS]
World Imports from China/Total Exports (excl. China)
12 mma [RHS]
Percent
30.00
25.00
15.50
20.00
15.00
15.00
14.50
10.00
14.00
5.00
13.50
0.00
13.00
-5.00
12.50
2011
-10.00
2012
2013
2014
2015
Source: National Bureau of Statistics of China, IMF; Data as of December 31, 2015
In addition, Chinese policy makers are well aware that currencies of many of their trading partners (particularly in Asia) will track
any CNY weakness, limiting China’s ability to gain any competitive advantage. For example, since August on a trade-weighted
Source: National Bureau of Statistics of China, IMF; Data as of December 31, 2015
basis the depreciation of the CNY has been only about two-thirds of its 5.5% depreciation against the US dollar.
Finally, since it
would be difficult to convince markets that it would be a one-time event, a mega-depreciation risks destabilizing financial markets,
raising risk premia, outweighing any modest trade benefit.
With China choking over too much capacity and debt, we agree that trying to boost growth by easing monetary policy would be
neither effective nor desirable. But that doesn’t leave China dependent solely on a weak currency. Support for growth is rightly
shifting to fiscal policy with government spending picking up, increased tax incentives in autos and other goods to promote
consumption, and the refinancing of local government debt is freeing up funds for infrastructure.
We expect further fiscal stimulus
will be announced when the 2016 budget is released in March.
Infrastructure Supporting Growth
Percent
50
Infrastructure Investment
(y/y) 3mma
40
Manufacturing Investment
(y/y) 3mma
30
Real Estate Investment
(y/y) 3mma
20
10
0
-10
2011
2012
2013
2014
Source: Bloomberg; Data as of December 31, 2015
4
2015
. VIEWPOINT
Understanding China’s New Currency Policy
While capital outflows and the decline in foreign exchange reserves have been large, and may continue near-term, some flows are
likely to dissipate.
China’s headline foreign exchange reserves have fallen $760 billion from their June 2014 peak. Roughly one-third of this reflects the
decline in US dollar value of non-dollar reserves. Nevertheless, the central bank has been selling a lot of dollars. With a rising trade
surplus (over $175 billion in 2015 Q4) and China still likely receiving more direct investment inflows than outflows, this means outflows were large (such as Chinese tourist spending and bank lending abroad, as well as portfolio outflows).
A rough estimate of all
these other net outflows is $350 billion for 2015 Q4. The main drivers of outflows have been:
1. Rising outward direct invest as Chinese companies want to be closer to their foreign customers;
2. Rising overseas lending by Chinese banks as they follow their corporate customers abroad;
3. Diversification of wealth as Chinese investors reduce their large underweight allocation to foreign investment (though this has
been offset by inflows as foreigners reduce their large underweight allocation to Chinese investment);
4. An unwind of the carry trade as Chinese corporates refinance foreign currency denominated loans and bonds with lower cost
CNY loans and bonds, which reduces currency mismatches;
5. A reversal of foreign equity flows in response to the Chinese stock market sell-off; and
6. Other capital flight, including Chinese investors moving assets overseas to keep them out of the clutches of anti-corruption
investigators.
The first three factors are trends that have been going on for years and are expected to continue as China develops. However, large
outflows linked to the carry trade and China’s stock market bubble are likely to dissipate over time.
Most importantly, we see little
evidence of large scale currency substitution, which occurs when people lose confidence in their currency and shift their savings to
foreign currency or hard assets like gold. This tends to happen in countries that are experiencing high inflation. China has very low
inflation, and in some sectors, deflation.
Finally, a trade surplus of $500-600 billion this year will help counter the impact of these
outflows on the CNY.
Trade balance improving slightly, FDI is flat and there are initial signs that the outflows from carry trade unwind may be slowing.
Large Capital Outflows
USD Billion
75
50
25
0
-25
-50
-75
-100
-125
-150
2011
Trade Balance 3mma
Services Balance & Non FDI Capital Flows 3mma
FDI (Monthly Avg)
2012
2013
2014
Source: National Bureau of Statistics of China, China Ministry of Commerce, Bloomberg; Data as of December 31, 2015
5
2015
. VIEWPOINT
Understanding China’s New Currency Policy
The carry trade is being unwound as Chinese borrowers repay foreign currency denominated debt to foreigners...
Drivers of Outflows
USD Billion
USD Billion
1,100
Foreigners' Deposits [LHS]
-550
1,000
Loans from Foreigners [LHS]
-500
Foreigners' Equity Investments [LHS]
800
USD Billion
-450
Direct investment Abroad [LHS]
-400
Chinese Bank Lending Abroad Inverted [RHS]
700
-350
600
-300
500
-250
400
-200
300
-150
200
100
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
Source: National Bureau of Statistics of China, China Ministry of Commerce, Bloomberg; Data as of December 31, 2015
...and domestic banks.
Carry Trade Unwinding
USD Billion
$950
$900
Chinese Financial Institution FX Loans
Source: National Bureau of Statistics of China; Data as of September 30, 2015
$850
$800
$750
$700
2013
2014
2015
Source: National Bureau of Statistics of China; Data as of December 31, 2015
6
-100
USD Billion
900
. VIEWPOINT
Understanding China’s New Currency Policy
China retains tools to keep an exchange rate depreciation orderly.
China’s central bank still has over $3.3 trillion in foreign exchange reserves. Using the IMF’s most up to date methodology, which
looks at a range of potential drains on foreign currency, we estimate that China still has 1.5 to 2 times the minimum recommended
reserves. And as debt and other external liabilities get repaid and exports fall, the need to hold foreign exchange as a buffer also
declines. So while China reserves are more than adequate to cover another $400 billion drop over six months, large declines in
foreign exchange reserves risk undermining confidence.
As a result, Chinese authorities have turned to other tools to stabilize the
currency, such as 1) boosting the cost of shorting the currency (particularly in Hong Kong), 2) limiting Chinese households’ ability
to invest abroad, 3) limiting banks’ ability to engage in certain types of cross border and offshore Yuan lending, and 4) stepping up
enforcement of existing capital controls.
Foreign Exchange Reserves Have Fallen But Are Still Large
China Foreign Exchange Reserves
USD Trillion
4.00
FX Reserves
3.50
3.00
2.50
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
Source: People’s Bank of China; Data as of December 31, 2015
While market communications have improved, uncertainty will continue to weigh on markets.
Shifting to a new policy framework is always fraught with uncertainty and risks. That’s why market communications are so important.
The heavy handed policy response to stock market volatility, poor market communications, and the lack of transparency (in data and
policy making) has undermined investors’ confidence in the willingness and ability of Chinese institutions and policy makers to carry
out reforms. Fortunately, there have been some recent improvements in market communications, at least for the exchange rate.
In mid-December, the China Foreign Exchange Trading System (CFETS), an affiliate of the central bank, released a trade weighted
basket and comments by officials since then have stressed that, having brought the basket down from its August 2015 peak, they
see no need for a further large depreciation against the basket.
Though it could have been better communicated, a more flexible currency is the right move.
While China doesn’t have a trade competitiveness problem, it has a deflation problem in manufacturing (but not services).
Chinese
leaders have made clear that the priorities for 2016 are reducing excess manufacturing capacity, unsold property inventories, and
leverage. While we welcome this (and wish they would go faster), this is likely to add to deflationary pressures.
7
. VIEWPOINT
Understanding China’s New Currency Policy
Deflationary Pressures in Manufacturing
Percent
10
Producer Prices (y/y)
8
Consumer Prices (y/y)
6
GDP Deflator YTD (y/y)
4
1.60
2
0
-0.48
-2
-4
-6
2011
-5.90
2012
2013
2014
2015
Source: National Bureau of Statistics of China; Data as of December 31, 2015
Given this, it makes sense for China’s central bank to give itself more room to combat deflationary pressures by loosening the CNY’s
tie to the US dollar and targeting a broader range of currencies. In this light, it’s not surprising that China let the CNY weaken against
the US dollar when the CNY against the trade-weighted basket had strengthened and markets were expecting even further US dollar
appreciation.
In addition, China has scaled back controls on capital flows over the last year in its successful bid to join the IMF’s SDR basket. The
more it opens the capital account, the more it runs into what economists call the “impossible trinity” of an open capital account,
an independent monetary policy, and a rigid exchange rate. Given that China will always insist on an independent monetary policy,
it needs to give the CNY more room to move, and/or re-impose some capital controls.
We expect China to do both. With the re-imposition of controls, China’s long-term goal of promoting international use of the Yuan will take a back seat.
The Outlook for the Yuan in 2016
China has given us hints about what it considers an excessively strong basket, and the basket has stayed in a band of +/- 2.5% for
the past year. However, despite statements that there’s no need for a significant depreciation of the basket, there is uncertainty over
how low the floor is.
Ultimately, China can’t adhere to too rigid a basket, or it would be just swapping one kind of exchange rate peg
for another, limiting the central bank’s ability to set interest rates, as is the case for Singapore. A basket may ultimately be a transitory
tool for anchoring expectations as China moves to a more flexible regime. Still, managing the exchange rate against a basket will
likely lead to more volatility in the USD/CNY rate.
With some modest additional US dollar appreciation against other major currencies, CNY depreciation against the US dollar in the
mid-single digits (to around 6.9 by year-end) would allow the basket to weaken modestly and keep the rate of depreciation within
current forward implied yields (limiting its attractiveness as a speculative short).
A weaker Yuan will likely weigh on currencies of
other Asian economies, particularly those that sell components whose production is moving to the Mainland and those that compete with China in other export markets, such as Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, and Malaysia.
As mentioned, in the near-term, uncertainty over the direction of China’s economy and exchange rate will likely continue to weigh
on markets and lead to periodic bouts of volatility. In addition, there remains a risk that poor communications, and policy missteps
such as heavy handed enforcement of capital controls in a manner similar to what we saw last year in the stock market, could further
undermine investor confidence. However, we believe that as investors become comfortable with China’s basket based exchange rate
policy and the greater USD/CNY volatility that comes with it, their fears of a large depreciation should subside.
And this eventually
should be supportive for risk sentiment and risk assets.
This material is for general information purposes only and does not constitute an offer to sell, or a solicitation of an offer to buy, any security. TCW, its officers, directors, employees or
clients may have positions in securities or investments mentioned in this publication, which positions may change at any time, without notice. While the information and statistical data
contained herein are based on sources believed to be reliable, we do not represent that it is accurate and should not be relied on as such or be the basis for an investment decision.
The information contained herein may include preliminary information and/or “forward-looking statements.” Due to numerous factors, actual events may differ substantially from those
presented.
TCW assumes no duty to update any forward-looking statements or opinions in this document. Any opinions expressed herein are current only as of the time made and are
subject to change without notice. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
© 2016 TCW
865 South Figueroa Street | Los Angeles, California 90017 | 213 244 0000 | @TCWGroup
8
. .