China's Liquidity Injection Did Not Calm All Its Credit Markets

While last night’s almost unprecedented reverse repo liquidty injection into the Chinese banking system stopped the bleeding of short-dated money-market rates briefly, the likelihood remains that a shadow-banking system default will occur: As CASS’s Zhang noted:

  • *CHINA TRUSTS AND SHADOW BANKING TO SEE DEFAULTS IN 2014: ZHANG
  • *CHINA SHADOW-BANKING DEFAULTS WOULD BE GOOD THING: CASS’S ZHANG

Perhaps that explains why China’s CDS spread remains at its highest since the summer credit crunch, barely budging on last night’s cash drop. At double the default risk of Japan, China appears far from out of the contagion fire.

 

China’s risk makes the US debt ceiling debacle look miniscule and while liquidity does not reign supreme in these markets, the last few months have seen considerably more activity in Asian sovereign CDS…

 

China’s Academy of Social Sciences Zhang Ming had a few other things to say…

  • *CHINA EXPORTS MAY NOT BE AS GOOD AS MARKET EXPECTS: ZHANG
  • *CHINA MONETARY POLICY TO REMAIN RELATIVELY TIGHT IN 2014: ZHANG
  • *YUAN APPRECIATION COMING TO AN END, CASS’S ZHANG MING SAYS
  • *YUAN MAY WEAKEN AFTER REACHING 6 PER DOLLAR: RESEARCHER ZHANG

and typically is seen as yet another mouthpiece for the administration… so that won’t please Schumer and his crowd…

 

Chart: Bloomberg


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1ilvj3m Tyler Durden

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