Temasek's investment on Chinese banks is losing big money

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Kyle Bass is not short Chinese banks but...

Hedge fund manager Kyle Bass has a theory about what could happen to credit growth in Asia over the next couple of years. And he has a trade strategy to match.

The Hayman Capital Management founder and managing partner told CNBC's "Power Lunch" on Friday that Chinese banks have grown too large compared to the country's GDP. He said a natural result of this would be a loan-loss cycle. "And if that's the fact, then credit fueled growth in Asia is going to take a breather and have a little bit of a decline," he said.

"There are a lot of institutions in Asia that lend aggressively to China," he said. "I think the Asian banks are going to see severe trouble over the next two years." But, he added, "it's not the end of the world."

Bass said he is not short Chinese banks, but rather the "rest of the financial institutions in Asia," specifically those are not in China and Japan, but that lend to China. He declined to give any specific names.


He forecasts that Chinese banks have gotten too big and that they will eventually "lose all of their equity." But China has the ability to deal with it through financial resources and a government committed to recapitalizing its banks. It would mean an end to double-digit credit growth in China, he said.

"And if credit isn't growing at double digits in China, then it's not growing at double digits in the rest of non-Japan Asia," he explained.

That is what could bring down the other financial Asian institutions Bass is short, he explained.
 
BOC is giving 3.55% on saving interest... so you mean not safe?
 
If BOC is giving 3.5% then I want to move my CPF money there:)
 
If TemaSEX stopped losing money I would be so worried, because that's so abnormal, so NOT TemSEX.
 
All things are wearisome,
more than one can say.
The eye never has enough of seeing,
nor the ear its fill of hearing.
What has been will be again,
what has been done will be done again;
there is nothing new under the sun.
Is there anything of which one can say,
“Look! This is something new”?
It was here already, long ago;
it was here before our time.


[video=youtube;X1sjFHEl5GI]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X1sjFHEl5GI[/video]
 
He forecasts that Chinese banks have gotten too big and that they will eventually "lose all of their equity." But China has the ability to deal with it through financial resources and a government committed to recapitalizing its banks. It would mean an end to double-digit credit growth in China, he said.

"And if credit isn't growing at double digits in China, then it's not growing at double digits in the rest of non-Japan Asia," he explained.

That is what could bring down the other financial Asian institutions Bass is short, he explained.

Brace, brace, the Descent of Money is upon us ..............

[video=youtube;GzZASUOS5Jk]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GzZASUOS5Jk[/video]
 
Another crisis is coming ..........

[video=youtube;OCWE5chTuOk]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OCWE5chTuOk[/video]
 
Another crisis is coming ..........

[video=youtube;OCWE5chTuOk]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OCWE5chTuOk[/video]

Definitely ...nothing has changed since the the 2008 meltdown. It is back to normal. Who knows what is the black swan this time?
 
Millennials Ditch Big Banks and Go Local With Their Money ......
Community banks won with younger customers last year, netting a 5 percent increase in account holders ages 18 to 34, while credit unions recorded a 3 percent gain.......large national and regional banks struggled to retain millennial clients -- losing 16 percent of them over the same period.

One reason: Bigger banks tend to charge more for retail services. There’s been an increase in fees for account maintenance, overdrafts, ATM withdrawals and other services at major financial institutions................

Traditionally, big banks have been able to dominate with physical presence, having extensive branch networks, name recognition and being able to spend a lot on advertising,” .....But the popularity of banking via the Internet has leveled the playing field. ......

Millennials in particular crave more high-touch........“They want to make sure people are paying attention” to their needs.......

To attract and keep younger customers, community banks are swallowing the costs of offering products like free checking in exchange for the potential long-term gains that come with serving the generation’s mortgage, investing and eventually retirement needs,...........
Millennials, now numbering 83.1 million people, have surpassed baby boomers as the largest portion of the population, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. By 2017, they’ll attain more spending power than any other generation.............. ”

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...like-big-banks-and-all-those-fees-they-charge

As usual, they got it wrong with their money losing love affairs with big banks-not to mention the thousands of jobs lost when they push for the merger of the locals banks -so that they can be bigger .
As usual no accountability for their failures thanks to the 70%.
The above story is about the US, but you can observe it everywhere, here included. Problem ,is after all the local banks merger, there are no choices left for locals who have to fork out high fees to the only 3 "big banks" left here.
 
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