Why did China join the credit downgrade club?
Staff Reporter | | Apr 11, 2013 05:05 PM EDT |
(Ibtimes) - Fitch Ratings has cut one of its most important ratings on Chinese government debt as concerns that the nation's huge indebtedness, which is burgeoning, in part because of a big influx of foreign currencies, could threaten the stability of the world's second-largest economy.
Like Us on Facebook
The London-based agency, which has held a negative outlook on China's local currency debt since April 2011, said Thursday it lowered its rating on China's long-term, local currency sovereign credit rating to A+, its fifth highest rating.
"Credit has grown significantly faster than GDP since 2009," Fitch said in a statement. "China experienced the second-fastest expansion of credit in real terms, behind only Qatar, between end-2009 and end-June 2012.
"Fitch believes total credit in the economy including various forms of 'shadow banking' activity may have reached 198 percent of GDP at end-2012."
Shadow banking refers to non-bank financial intermediaries that provide many of the services offered by commercial banks. However, these intermediaries are subject to very little regulation and are deemed to be far less stable than commercial banks.
One reason for the huge increase in credit is the influx of foreign currencies. Beijing said this week that foreign currency reserves had climbed to $3.44 trillion by the end of March.
"The rise in foreign exchange reserves is a very clear sign that capital inflows are back," Shen Jianguang, an economist with Mizuho Securities, told the Financial Times. "We will see more and more worries about this in the coming months because of the massive money printing in the U.S. and Japan."
©2015 Chinatopix All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission
EDITOR'S PICKS
-
Did the Trump administration just announce plans for a trade war with ‘hostile’ China and Russia?
-
US Senate passes Taiwan travel bill slammed by China
-
As Yan Sihong’s family grieves, here are other Chinese students who went missing abroad. Some have never been found
-
Beijing blasts Western critics who ‘smear China’ with the term sharp power
-
China Envoy Seeks to Defuse Tensions With U.S. as a Trade War Brews
-
Singapore's Deputy PM Provides Bitcoin Vote of Confidence Amid China's Blanket Bans
-
China warns investors over risks in overseas virtual currency trading
-
Chinese government most trustworthy: survey
-
Kashima Antlers On Course For Back-To-Back Titles
MOST POPULAR
LATEST NEWS
Zhou Yongkang: China's Former Security Chief Sentenced to Life in Prison
China's former Chief of the Ministry of Public Security, Zhou Yongkang, has been given a life sentence after he was found guilty of abusing his office, bribery and deliberately ... Full Article
TRENDING STORY
-
China Pork Prices Expected to Stabilize As The Supplies Recover
-
Elephone P9000 Smartphone is now on Sale on Amazon India
-
There's a Big Chance Cliffhangers Won't Still Be Resolved When Grey's Anatomy Season 13 Returns
-
Supreme Court Ruled on Samsung vs Apple Dispute for Patent Infringement
-
Microsoft Surface Pro 5 Rumors and Release Date: What is the Latest?