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China factory output drops miserably

Real estates could spell china's doom.

China's real estate worry.

By Bloomberg News

Nov. 29 (Bloomberg) -- Property risks are “overshadowing” China’s economic outlook as a slowdown in sales threatens to trigger developer collapses, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said.

“While the exit of small developers would not pose a problem, the failure of large promoters could put some bank lending at risk, perhaps triggering negative chain reactions,” the Paris-based OECD said in a report yesterday. “A key risk is an overly quick liquidation of unsold property.”

China’s economy, the world’s second biggest, will expand 8.5 percent next year even as export growth is pulled down by weak demand and a decline in the nation’s competitiveness, the report said. Government housing projects can help to support construction and moderating inflation may allow Premier Wen Jiabao’s government to cut interest rates from the middle of 2012, the OECD said.

Vice Premier Li Keqiang said Nov. 25 that the property market is at a “critical stage” and indicated that curbs should be maintained even as sales fall. October housing transactions declined 25 percent from September and prices fell in 33 of 70 cities, according to government data.

China Vanke Co., the nation's biggest publicly listed developer, has said that it may adjust prices at some projects though it has no plans to do so nationwide.

“Individuals have been holding back from purchasing houses and developers carry a rising level of unsold inventory,” the OECD said. A property slump could hurt migrant workers relying on construction work and purchasers facing losses, it said.

Japan’s Risks

Japan, the region’s second-biggest economy, risks seeing a spike in government bond yields unless it controls a debt load set to approach 230 percent of gross domestic product in 2013, the OECD said.

“The delay in fiscal consolidation and the continuing rise in the public debt ratio compound the risk of a run-up in long- term interest rates,” the report said.

Yields on benchmark 10-year notes touched 1.065 percent yesterday, the highest level since Sept. 2, after Standard & Poor’s and the International Monetary Fund last week warned about the country’s mounting debt. The government should weigh forming a panel to assess its policymaking progress and put a “stronger legal foundation” under its fiscal targets, the OECD said.

While the economy is recovering from the March 11 earthquake, the initial boost after the disaster has started to wear off, the OECD said. Reconstruction demand will help drive growth through the middle of 2012, it said.

Australian Rate Cuts

Elsewhere in Asia Pacific, Australia has scope to cut interest rates should Europe’s sovereign-debt crisis stall global growth, the OECD said, a scenario investors already are betting on.

If downside risks to the international economy materialize, “monetary policy should be eased significantly to sustain demand in the context of moderating inflation,” the OECD said. Australia’s government could also boost spending, it said, though that would delay a pledged return to a budget surplus in 2012-13.

Australia’s central bank responded to heightened global risks and weaker inflation pressure by lowering its benchmark rate by a quarter percentage point to 4.5 percent on Nov. 1, the first reduction in 31 months. Swaps traders wager policy makers will need to cut again and reduce borrowing costs by more than 1.5 percentage points over the next year, a Credit Suisse Group AG Index shows.

--Paul Panckhurst, Lily Nonomiya, Michael Heath. Editors: Paul Panckhurst, Nerys Avery

---------- Post added at 06:03 PM ---------- Previous post was at 06:02 PM ----------

there are unrest everywhere in this world,look at New York and London.but still,better than some places which always have bombs problems.

Only 1 dead in the blast is the C*** who wanted to plant the bomb.This has nothing to do with labor unrest.
 
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Indians are brave enough to accept the facts and figures :tup:

are the chinese ready :disagree:


I think China economy is much more invovled in globalization than India one.
I remember In 2008 in south china, a lot of people were influenced by the crisis. Things have ups and downs.
 
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The bubble was waiting to burst and after 2014 china's growth rate will start to fall as china have lived its demographic benefits.
 
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LOL.... China is moving up the value chain. Many of the export factories are closing up. People can go back to the countryside. This is a good thing. Capital can be reinvested instead of wasted in dead-end assembly manufacturing.

I will bet anything China's manufacturing value-added actually increased in 2011.
 
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The world is in turmoil, no great power is safe.

2012 is coming.

:P
 
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LOL.... China is moving up the value chain. Many of the export factories are closing up. People can go back to the countryside. This is a good thing. Capital can be reinvested instead of wasted in dead-end assembly manufacturing.

I will bet anything China's manufacturing value-added actually increased in 2011.

US just had the best Black Friday and Cyber Monday sales on record. Consumption is back in style. Meanwhile Indian jobs moving to Philippines en masse.
 
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US just had the best Black Friday and Cyber Monday sales on record. Consumption is back in style. Meanwhile Indian jobs moving to Philippines en masse.

hehe. You wish. Philippines overtaking India in BPO means Indian jobs moving there :lol:
 
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hehe. You wish. Philippines overtaking India in BPO means Indian jobs moving there :lol:

I don't have to wish. This is happening in many other sectors despite the Philippine's higher costs. Hey, you get what you pay for.
 
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both india and china are developing countries deeply affected by the economic slowdown. we need to step up efforts to boost domestic consumption. relying on western exports is not sustainable.
 
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US just had the best Black Friday and Cyber Monday sales on record. Consumption is back in style. Meanwhile Indian jobs moving to Philippines en masse.

Don't believe the garbage statistics about "best black friday sales". Absolute dollar consumption was "up" 6.6%, but true inflation is something like 15% in the US. Shadowstats. Purchasing power consumption is down. This is correlated with everything else, including electrical and petrol stats.
 
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