We,(the whle world economy in fact)are sliding towards another debt-ridden disaster, with the eurozone and China one shock away from a fresh crisis, according to a leading economics consultancy.
Fathom Consulting, which is run by former Bank of England economists, said current levels of low volatility masked systemic risks in the global financial system.
Danny Gabay, director of Fathom, said an oil price shock would be enough to trigger a "hard landing" in China as growth slowed, house prices plummeted and the country's already huge amount of non-performing loans soared. Mr Gabay drew parallels between China today and America in 2006, when a number of households began to default on their sub-prime mortgages but authorities played down the potential impact on the rest of the global economy. Fathom also said high levels of non-performing loans in the eurozone posed a threat to the 18-nation bloc, while a strong euro and contracting private sector credit would push the eurozone into deflation within the next 12 months. Charles Goodhart, senior economic consultant at Morgan Stanley and a former Bank of England rate setter, compared Fathom's assessment of global risks to the ideas of Hyman Minsky, who believed that "stability is destabilising" and the global financial system itself could generate shocks because of investor complacency. "When you have so much stability, particularly at very low yields, what everyone does is they reach for yield, and they take on riskier and riskier positions. When something causes the balloon to blow up, then you're in real trouble," said Mr Goodhart. Mr Goodhart said Beijing's "remarkable track record" of "managing success" led him to believe that China would be able to contain another crisis. However, Mr Gabay argued that the Chinese authorities might be reluctant to prop up the whole banking system in the event of a crisis, as this could send out a signal that the state was prepared to shoulder all losses. "A lot of people say that the authorities can afford to bail the system out, and there's nothing to worry about. But I think you'd be very silly to think that Lehman Brothers happened because the Americans couldnt afford to stop it. Of course they could afford it. They just didn't. "We see a soft landing in China, but there's a very significant risk that they will be unable to contain the "inevitable" banking crisis, because they're not superhuman, and there's a lot of money sloshing around out there that's non-performing." Fathom expects eurozone inflation to fall "below zero within a year", with core inflation, which strips out volatile items such as food and energy, "way below that". "A substantial proportion of the eurozone is expected to be in deflation," said Mr Gabay. "And that's what ultimately we think will force the European Central Bank's hand [to launch quantitative easing]"... There will be a "shock" that will plunge the global economy into another recession. However, the cause will have nothing to do with China and will be much closer to home.
Being "European", the only thing you have to be aware of is the inevitable rise in interest rates. It is the inevitable delay in the rise of interest rates that has allowed the Europe's even Germany's an UK's economy's faint heart beat to continue for the past 8-9 years! More so, "nothing lasts forever" and the BoE as well as ECB ( and the other "sheisters" ) and other central banks raising their interest rates (and you've heard it here first!), will actually be the go-ahead for the beginning of the end of all major (and dare I say now worthless and useless ) indebted currencies (this financial crisis & QE was the finial nail in the coffin for individual currencies as we once knew ) and the creation of just 3 or 4 new currencies to be used globally.
Don't worry about China. Worry about that Canadian (and others.) who are firmly in the pockets of some extremely undesirable characters.
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