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Chinese Military,Political and Social Superthread

The South China Morning Post is reporting that 16 PLA major generals have been relieved/detained and are under investigation for corruption. Most (all?) are either relatives of or were senior aides more senior officers who are already being investigated.

It appears to me that Xi Jinping is striking harder and deeper at his military opposition ~ decapitating the "next generation," too.


Edited to add link: http://www.scmp.com/news/china/article/1727199/16-pla-major-generals-many-them-newly-promoted-under-investigation
 
An example that shows that no positions in the PLA, even as high as the members of the CMC (or even former CMC members), are immune to scrutiny from Xi's anti-corruption drive:

Reuters

Exclusive: China investigates second top officer for graft - sources

By Ben Blanchard and Benjamin Kang Lim

BEIJING (Reuters) - China is investigating a second former top military officer on suspicion of corruption, two independent sources told Reuters, as President Xi Jinping widens his campaign against deep-rooted graft in the country.

Guo Boxiong, 72, was a vice chairman of the powerful Central Military Commission until he stepped down in 2012. Another former vice chairman, Xu Caihou, was put under investigation last year for corruption.

Before their retirement, the men had been two of China's top military officers who served together under Xi's predecessor, Hu Jintao. Xi was also a vice chairman with Guo and Xu from 2010-2012, before he became head of the party and military commission chief.

Serving and retired military officers have said graft in the armed forces is so pervasive it could undermine China's ability to wage war. In one case, a senior officer has been accused of making millions of dollars from selling hundreds of military positions.

(...SNIPPED)
 
Maybe some Hong Kong residents are now regretting they ever traded the Union Jack for the PRC flag...

Reuters

UK lawmakers say China eroding freedoms in Hong Kong

LONDON (Reuters) - British lawmakers banned from entering Hong Kong last year said Chinese regulations were eroding freedoms in the former British colony and urged their government to take a harder stance against Beijing.

Pro-democracy protests shut down parts of Hong Kong for two-and-a-half months last year in response to a decision by China to pre-screen candidates in a 2017 election that will choose the city's next chief executive.

On Friday a report by the British parliament's Foreign Affairs Committee said China's new nomination process was "unduly restrictive".

(...SNIPPED)
 
Former President Hu Jintao also under the microscope?

Reuters

Former China leader not implicated in aide's investigation, official says

By Ben Blanchard

BEIJING (Reuters) - Retired Chinese President Hu Jintao is not being implicated in a corruption probe into a former top aide, a senior government spokesman said on Friday, adding that the official was being investigated more over financial issues than political ones.

Ling Jihua was demoted in September 2012 without explanation. Sources told Reuters that the move happened after his son was involved in a deadly crash involving a luxury sports car in Beijing.

Ling was dropped from his post as head of the party's General Office of the Central Committee, a powerful job similar to cabinet secretary in Westminster-style governments.

(...SNIPPED)
 
An interesting idea to make cyber espionage more expensive for the Chinese:

http://www.realcleardefense.com/articles/2015/03/05/one_way_to_counter_chinese_hacking_poison_the_well__107700.html

One Way to Counter Chinese Hacking: Poison the Well
By Adam Segal

The Director of National Intelligence released his annual threat assessment last week, and cyberattacks top the list. There were at least three headlines in Clapper’s written and oral statements. First, while a “cyber armageddon”—a destructive attack that debilitates wide swathes of U.S. infrastructure—might be possible, it is very unlikely. Instead, the risk is from an “ongoing series of low-to-moderate level cyber attacks,” which will “impose cumulative costs on U.S. economic competitiveness and national security.” Second, China may get most of the press coverage, but Russia is a serious challenge. In fact, Clapper admitted that the “Russian cyber threat is more severe than we’ve previously assessed.” Third, Clapper accused Iran of hacking the Sands Casino and warned that the next wave of attacks could change or manipulate information, impairing decision making by government officials, corporate executives, or investors.

As several other U.S. government officials have done over the last several months, Clapper also claimed that attribution has become easier. Hackers can no longer assume that their attacks will be undetected and they can no longer expect that when attacks are unmasked, their identities will remain anonymous. With enough time and resources, attacks can be attributed. This, however, has not created deterrence. Breaking into networks remains easy, the gains of the attacks high, and the relatively long delays between attack and attribution create a permissive environment.


This seems to be especially true in the case of China. Clapper notes that Chinese cyber espionage continues despite “detailed” private cybersecurity reports attributing attack on U.S. companies and government agencies, “scathing” public denouncements, and “stern” U.S. government demarches. Clapper does suggest one way of limiting attacks. Because Chinese hackers use relatively simple tools and techniques, improving defenses would force them to develop more sophisticated, expensive, and time consuming methods. The costs of economic espionage would go up.

(Recommended: How to Deter China)

Coincidentally, I was at a conference last week in Washington focused on this exact question: how do you raise the cost to Chinese hackers? There was a great deal of skepticism that the United States would be able to get China to accept a norm against the cyber-enabled theft of intellectual property, trade secrets, or business strategies. Other states do not believe the United States actually adheres to the norm, and many friends of the United States actively engage in cyber-enabled economic espionage. One participant, for example, noted an uptick in attacks on U.S. companies coming from South Korea.

There was also little sense that big technology companies would be interested in pursuing trade or other sanctions against the Chinese firms that are thought to be benefiting from the theft. Smaller firms might have the stomach for a fight, but the larger firms, with sizable investments in the market, are already overexposed to retaliation from the Chinese government. Things are already bad, with foreign technology being removed from government procurement lists and a draft counterterrorism law that would require firms to hand over encryption keys and install backdoors, and they fear that it will only get worse.

Instead of raising the costs by engaging in active defense where small groups of U.S. hackers with highly detailed intelligence disrupt attacks in China before they hit U.S. networks, the one idea that generated any enthusiasm was to lower the value of the information Chinese hackers stole through deception. Here the model is the Farewell Dossier. In 1981, French intelligence obtained the services of Col. Vladimir I. Vetrov, “Farewell,” who photographed and supplied 4,000 documents on KGB efforts to obtain scientific and technical secrets. President Mitterrand offered the information to President Reagan, and the CIA discovered that the Soviets had already stolen radar, computer, machine tool, and semiconductor technology. In an effort to conduct its own version of economic warfare on Moscow and poison the collection efforts, the CIA fed fake information to Soviet agents that would later fail. (Fans of The Americans will recognize this plot line. Elizabeth and Phillip send stolen plans of propellers that cause a submarine to sink.)

A strategy of poisoning the well would require cooperation from industry. Companies would have to help design fake but attractive data and maintain it on their networks (and make sure it was not used by mistake internally). This might be too high a bar for many companies, but even a failed cyber Farewell Dossier, or just the suggestion that companies are adopting such a strategy, could raise costs for Chinese hackers. Once there was a doubt about the veracity and usefulness of data, all information taken would be subject to much higher levels of scrutiny which may force a slow down in collection. Hackers might become more cautious, afraid of supplying faulty goods to their customers and superiors.

(Recommended: The U.S. Navy's Cruise Missile Nightmare)

Last year’s worldwide threat assessment contained no reference to making hacking more difficult for China but we shouldn’t read too much into one section of this year’s assessment. The United States will continue being detailed, scathing, and stern with China on cyber industrial espionage, and one U.S. government official at the meeting insisted that he was “not convinced that the boat had sailed on norms.” But Clapper’s brief mention of defensive measures may signal a small tilt away from developing a norm toward inflicting cost.
 
How many decades before realistic looking female robo-concubines, reminiscent of those seen in sci-fi movies like "Ghost in the Shell", will meet the demand from China's growing population of perpetually single and desperate male bachelors resulting from the one-child policy?  :blotto:

Market Watch

China’s factories are building a robot nation

Published: Mar 8, 2015 5:38 p.m. ET

(...SNIPPED)

Growing demand
The International Federation of Robotics (IFR), which represents robot manufacturers and research institutes, said China last year surpassed Japan to become the world’s biggest market for industrial robots. Some 200,000 were operating in China at the end of 2014, the IFR said, with 32,000 installed in 2013 alone, accounting for 20% of worldwide installations that year.

The robot-to-worker ratio in the country is still relatively low, the IFR said, with 30 robots working in manufacturing plants per 10,000 employees. Japan’s ratio is 11 times higher.

Four multinational companies — Switzerland’s ABB Group ABBN, +0.19%  , Japan’s Fanuc Corp. 6954, -0.95% FANUF, -1.33%  and Yaskawa Electric Corp. 6506, -0.90%  , and Germany’s Kuka Robotics KU2, +0.98%  — are the dominant suppliers of robotic systems for factories in China. Mir Industry, a Chinese industrial consultancy, said the four account for about 58% of the nationwide market.

(...SNIPPED)
 
S.M.A. said:
How many decades before realistic looking female robo-concubines, reminiscent of those seen in sci-fi movies like "Ghost in the Shell", will meet the demand from China's growing population of perpetually single and desperate male bachelors resulting from the one-child policy?  :blotto:

Market Watch

- We could use them as part of our Foreign Workers Program instead of tearing all of those poor people away from their families, culture, and warm climate so they can hand us a double-double at forty below.
 
Although this article is about the global financial crisis, the section on China is quite interesting and pretty frightening at the same time. All the people who were putting their "eggs" in the basket marked Unlimited Chinese Growth will be getting a very nasty surprise.

And of course a hard landing of the Chinese economy is bound to have very negative effects in China itself. The bellicose attitude that China has been displaying in the last decade could also be a problem as the leadership decides that pointing people at "external" problems and enemies is the best way to deflect attention from the real crisis at home:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/jeremy-warner/11448051/Only-mass-default-will-end-the-worlds-addiction-to-debt.html

Only mass default will end the world's addiction to debt
As global debt rises off the scale, creditors stand to take a huge hit in a threatened tsunami of defaults
by Jeremy Warner
7:04PM GMT 03 Mar 2015

In a valedictory speech at the weekend of characteristically Latin American duration – a mind-numbing three hours – the Argentine president, Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, claimed that her country was the only one in the world to have reduced its national debt over recent years.

I doubt she is right about being alone in this “achievement” – there must surely be others - but even if she is, I’m not sure that reduction in the national debt via the mechanism of default is anything to boast of. Only Kirchner could think this a matter of national pride.

Nonetheless, where Argentina treads, others will surely soon be following. The world is sinking under a sea of debt, private as well as public, and it is increasingly hard to see how this might end, except in some form of mass default.

Greece we already know about, but the coming much wider outbreak of debt repudiation will not be confined to sovereign nations. Last week, there was another foretaste of what’s to come in developments at Austria’s failed Hypo Alpe-Adria-Bank International. Taxpayers have had enough of paying for the country’s increasingly crisis-ridden banking sector, and have determined to bail in private creditors to the remnants of this financial road crash instead - to the tune of $8.5bn in the specific case of Hypo Alpe-Adria. Finally, creditors are being made to pay for the consequences of their own folly.

You might have thought that a financial crisis as serious as that of the past seven years would have ended the world economy’s addiction to debt once and for all. It has not. If anything, the position has grown even worse since the collapse of Lehman Brothers.

According to recent analysis by McKinsey Global Institute, global debt has increased to the tune of $57 trillion, or 17pc, since 2007, with little sign of a slowdown in sight. Much of this growth has been in emerging markets, which were comparatively unaffected by the financial crisis. Yet even in the developed West, private sector deleveraging has been limited and, in any case, more than outweighed by growing public indebtedness. The combined public sector debt of the G7 economies has grown by 40pc to around 120pc of GDP since the crisis began. There has been no overall deleveraging to speak of.

Where the West left off, Asia has taken up the pace, with a credit-induced real estate bubble that makes its pre-crisis Western counterpart look tame by comparison, much of it fuelled, as in Western economies, by growth in the shadow banking sector.

China’s total indebtedness has quadrupled since 2007 to $28 trillion, according to estimates by McKinsey. At 282pc of GDP, the debt burden is now bigger, relative to output, that the US.

Attempts to rein in this growth have so far proved problematic. The Chinese property market has slowed markedly, which in turn has knocked the stuffing out of the all-important construction sector and its feeder industries. Starved of its regular fix of debt, the Chinese economy seems as incapable of generating decent levels of growth as the mature economies of the West. The addiction to credit has gone global.

In any case, China now seems to have abandoned all attempts at tighter credit conditions. At the weekend, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) again cut interest rates. It has also announced reduced reserve requirements in an attempt to further reinvigorate credit and prevent a hard landing. It may already be too late. The PBOC’s long-serving governor, Zhou Xiaochuan, will almost certainly soon be on his bike, in apparent punishment for the enforced policy reversal. Credit-fuelled growth, China’s high command seems to have concluded, is better than no growth at all.


Some economists claim not to be too concerned by the explosion in global credit. For them, it is merely the mirror image of rising output, asset prices and wealth. And up to a point, they are of course right. Economies engaged in across-the-board deleveraging find it extremely difficult to grow, as the depression-like conditions afflicting much of the eurozone again remind us. Decent growth requires abundant credit.

But you can also have too much of a good thing. Today’s global economy is plainly a case of it. The world has taken on more debt than it is ever likely to be able to repay, absent of implausibly high levels of output growth or contractionary fiscal consolidation. This, in turn, makes the global economy highly vulnerable to continued financial crisis and balance sheet recession. Too much capacity and too much debt make a poisonous combination.

Credit cycles tend to be much longer than ordinary business cycles, which may have something to do with the cautionary effect that financial crises have on banking practice. It can take as much as a generation for a bank entirely to forget the normal disciplines of prudential risk management, and go for broke. Unfortunately, they always do eventually, once all institutional memory of the last crisis has died off.

A paper by the Bank for International Settlement’s Claudio Borio a number of years ago traced the origins of the credit boom that preceded Lehman’s collapse to the early 1990s. Others might put it as far back as the 1980s. He was, however, talking only about the American credit cycle. Looked at from a global perspective, the real bust has yet to arrive.

Traditionally, governments have dealt with big debt overhangs through inflation and financial repression. In extremis debts are monetised via central bank money printing. It’s the legal, backdoor approach to default. Creditors get progressively squeezed by low interest rates and rising prices. Regrettably, it doesn’t work so well in a deflationary environment, and it doesn’t work at all when the credit is in a foreign currency, hence the apparently intractable debt standoff that afflicts the eurozone. Southern Europe has in effect been borrowing in a hard, northern European currency.

In the early 19th century, more than half of UK incarcerations were for unpaid debts. The debtors’ prisons were filled to bursting. Then came the realisation that excessive debt was as much a problem for the creditor as the debtor, proper bankruptcy laws were introduced, and mechanisms for burden sharing put in place. Creditors found it harder to demand their pound of flesh.

Yet when the problem is as big, and international, as it is today, such solutions become virtually impossible, and unilateral default much more likely. How might the present explosion in debt end? The only thing that can be said with certainty is “badly”.
 
Does anyone else here think that conflict between these two nations is inevitable?

Bloomberg video

China Overtakes N. Korea as Japan’s Top Security Concern

Japanese people are more concerned about China’s military strength and assertiveness in Asia than any other security issue, according to a public opinion poll released by the government at the weekend. Bloomberg's Isabel Reynolds has more on "First Up." (Source: Bloomberg)

Reuters

Tokyo fire bombing survivor fears Japan starting down road to war again
Reuters

By By Elaine Lies | Reuters – 12 hours ago

(...SNIPPED)

The U.S. bombing after midnight on March 10, 1945, annihilated a wide swathe of northeastern Tokyo, packed with small factories and houses made of wood and paper.
An estimated 100,000 people were killed, many of them women and children - a toll higher than those of the Dresden fire bombing and the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

Now, as memories fade of how civilians suffered during World War Two - suffering Saotome blames on Japan's wartime leaders who thought of their citizens as "weeds" - the 82-year-old author fears Japan may be marching toward war again.

(...SNIPPED)
 
Birth tourism in North America is not only popular with the Chinese but a number of other nationalities as well. I seem to recall reading about a Nigerian gang who helped smuggle in pregnant women from Nigeria, for a hefty free, all the way to the US or Canada.

South China Morning Post

US homes raided in crackdown on pregnant Chinese ‘birth tourism’ rings

Homes raided as agents target services accused of helping foreign women deliver more than 400 babies in US for
automatic citizenship


Federal agents have searched more than a dozen homes in a crackdown on so-called "maternity tourism" operators who arrange for pregnant Chinese women to give birth in the US, where their babies automatically become American citizens.

Agents targeted three alleged maternity tourism rings operating out of apartment complexes and other sites in Los Angeles, Orange and San Bernardino counties on Tuesday.

The businesses, catering largely to wealthy women paying up to US$80,000, were believed to have helped Chinese tourists deliver more than 400 American babies, court papers said.

There is nothing in US law making it illegal for pregnant women to enter the United States - and no one was arrested in the raids
.


(...SNIPPED)
 
When I was studying in Beijing back in 2003 for an exchange program at a local university, I remember seeing bootleg DVD/VCD copies of the movie "Matrix Revolutions" being peddled on the street the same night I watched it in a movie theatre!  :facepalm:

Shanghaist blog

Of course fake Apple Watches are already on sale in China

Less than 24 hours after Apple formally unveiled its new Apple Watch, knockoff versions have already been sighted at electronic markets in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen.
According to CNN Money, the fakes were found at the Huaqiangbei electronics market in Shenzhen, with others being sold nationwide via e-commerce websites such as Taobao. Those at the market mimic the design and style of Apple's new offering, selling for between 250 yuan and 500 yuan, but online it is possible to find models selling at various different price points.

(...SNIPPED)
 
More on the corruption/graft of flag/general officers in the PLA as posted by ERC on the previous page:

South China Morning Post


Retired generals point to ‘horrible’ graft in PLA
Money, connections and personal bonds decide promotions, and the culture of confidentiality makes exposing wrong-doers difficult, former top brass says
PUBLISHED : Tuesday, 10 March, 2015, 10:48pm
UPDATED : Wednesday, 11 March, 2015, 5:37am
Nectar Gan
nectar.gan@scmp.com

All People’s Liberation Army ranks have a price, getting a Communist Party membership has a price, and important military positions are reserved for cronies, senior officers children and in-laws, three retired PLA major generals told local TV this week, addressing the “horrible” corruption in the military.

In the interview with mainland-tied Phoenix Television on Monday, the former senior officers called for reforms, from empowering the military anti-graft agency to improving defence spending transparency, to curbing rampant graft among troops.

“Everybody in society knows that in the PLA … you need to pay to join the party. Promotions to become leaders at platoon, company, regiment and division levels all have their own price tags,” said retired PLA Major General Yang Chunchang, who is a former department deputy head of China’s Academy of Military Sciences.

< Edited >
 
S.M.A. said:
When I was studying in Beijing back in 2003 for an exchange program at a local university, I remember seeing bootleg DVD/VCD copies of the movie "Matrix Revolutions" being peddled on the street the same night I watched it in a movie theatre!  :facepalm:

Shanghaist blog

Well, they don't call Shenzhen "the pirate capital" for nothing.
 
A model of the Chinese carrier Liaoning's successor:

Source: IHS Jane's 360 - 10 March 2015

1630808_-_main.jpg


A model of a potential follow-on carrier to China's Liaoning was unveiled by Jinshuai Model Crafts in late 2014. Source: Jinshuai Model Crafts

People's Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) deputy political commissar Rear Admiral Ding Haichun has confirmed that construction of China's first indigenous aircraft carrier is underway, according to the Hong Kong Commercial Daily newspaper, which interviewed several senior officers, including Rear Adm Ding, on the margins of the National People's Congress being held in Beijing.

<snipped>

In a separate report, the PLA Daily reported the successful development of an electromagnetic catapult, citing the assertion by the project leader, Rear Admiral Ma Weiming, that it is the equal of American designs.

China has been very reticent to outline its carrier plans and ambitions. In January, information relating to a contract to supply components for the new carrier was removed from a company's website after it circulated online. On 6 March, Chinese media reported that two workers with access to bases in Dalian had been jailed for six and eight years for passing photographs of China's first carrier, Liaoning , to "foreign spies".
 
Can't see China putting up with this for long ....
Four Chinese people were killed in southwestern Yunnan province Friday by a bomb dropped from a Myanmar warplane, state media reported, days after Beijing warned of escalating violence across the border.

The official news agency Xinhua said the bomb hit a sugarcane field in Lincang city, killing the four workers and injuring nine others.

It came after China's foreign ministry said earlier this week that a house in Yunnan had been hit by shelling from across the border in Myanmar, where the military are fighting rebel forces.

Beijing has previously warned of a threat to border stability after the dramatic upsurge in ethnic conflict in the remote Kokang region in Myanmar's northeastern Shan state.

Last month, Myanmar declared a state of emergency in Kokang in response to the conflict, which began on February 9.

The unrest has virtually emptied the main Kokang town of Laukkai, the epicentre of the fighting, with streets in the once-bustling frontier community transformed into a battleground.

More than 30,000 people have fled from Myanmar into Yunnan province, according to Xinhua.

Early Saturday morning, the agency reported that Chinese Deputy Foreign Minister Liu Zhenmin had summoned Myanmar ambassador Thit Linn Ohn on Friday night to protest the deaths ....
 
More on the state of China's economy. The *truth* is probably not quite as bad as David Stockman makes out, but certainly it isn't all roses either. The amount of debt China is holding, the ramshackle credit and finance structures within China and (perhaps more importantly) the lack of transparency and manipulated data means there is no clear way to understand what is happening, much less take proper corrective action. This isn just the "Local Knowledge Problem" on steroids, this is moving into a dark cave without a light, rope or even a pole to test the ground in front of you....

http://davidstockmanscontracorner.com/chinas-monumental-ponzi-heres-how-it-unravels/

China’s Monumental Ponzi: Here’s How It Unravels
By David Stockman
March 29, 2014

China is the greatest construction boom and credit bubble in recorded history. An entire nation of 1.3 billion has gone mad building, borrowing, speculating, scheming, cheating, lying and stealing. The source of this demented outbreak is not a flaw in Chinese culture or character—nor even the kind of raw greed and gluttony that afflicts all peoples in the late stages of a financial bubble.

Instead, the cause is monetary madness with a red accent. Chairman Mao was not entirely mistaken when he proclaimed that political power flows from the end of a gun barrel-–he did subjugate a nation of one billion people based on that principle. But it was Mr. Deng’s discovery that saved Mao’s tyrannical communist party regime from the calamity of his foolish post-revolution economic experiments.

Just in the nick of time, as China reeled from the Great Leap Forward, the famine death of 40 million and the mass psychosis of the Cultural Revolution, Mr. Deng learned that power could be maintained and extended from the end of a printing press. And that’s the heart of the so-called China economic miracle. Its not about capitalism with a red accent, as the Wall Street and London gamblers have been braying for nearly two decades; its a monumental case of monetary and credit inflation that has no parallel.

At the turn of the century credit market debt outstanding in the US was about $27 trillion, and we’ve not been slouches attempting to borrow our way to prosperity. Total credit market debt is now $59 trillion—-so America has been burying itself in debt at nearly a 7% annual rate.

But move over America!  As the 21st century dawned, China had about $1 trillion of credit market debt outstanding, but after a blistering pace of “borrow and build” for 14 years it now carries nearly $25 trillion.  But here’s the thing: this stupendous 25X growth of debt occurred in the context of an economic system designed and run by elderly party apparatchiks who had learned their economics from Mao’s Little Red Book!


That means there was no legitimate banking system in China—just giant state bureaus which were run by  party operatives and a modus operandi of parceling out quotas for national credit growth from the top, and then water-falling them down a vast chain of command to the counties, townships and villages.  There have never been any legitimate financial prices in China—all interest rates and FX rates have been pegged and regulated to the decimal point; nor has there ever been any honest accounting either—-loans have been perpetual options to extend and pretend.

And, needless to say, there is no system of financial discipline based on contract law. China’s GDP has grown by $10 trillion dollars during this century alone—that is, there has been a boom across the land that makes the California gold rush appear pastoral by comparison.  Yet in all that frenzied prospecting there have been almost no mistakes, busted camps, empty pans or even personal bankruptcies.  When something has occasionally gone wrong with an “investment” the prospectors have gathered in noisy crowds on the streets and pounded their pans for relief—-a courtesy that the regime has invariably granted.

So in two short decades, China has erected a monumental Ponzi economy that is economically rotten to the core. It has 1.5 billion tons of steel capacity, but ”sell-through” demand of less than half that amount— that is, on-going demand for sheet steel to go into cars and appliances and rebar into replacement construction once the current pyramid building binge finally expires.  The same is true for its cement industry, ship-building, solar and aluminum industries—to say nothing of 70 million empty luxury apartments and vast stretches of over-built highways, fast rail, airports, shopping mails and new cities.

In short, the flip-side of the China’s giant credit bubble is the most massive malinvesment of real economic resources—-labor, raw materials and capital goods—ever known. Effectively, the country-side pig sties have been piled high with copper inventories and the urban neighborhoods with glass, cement and rebar erections that can’t possibly earn an economic return, but all of which has become “collateral” for even more “loans” under the Chinese Ponzi.

China has been on a wild tear heading straight for the economic edge of the planet—-that is, monetary Terra Incognito— based on the circular principle of borrowing, building and borrowing. In essence, it is a giant re-hypothecation scheme where every man’s “debt” become the next man’s “asset”.

Thus, local government’s have meager incomes, but vastly bloated debts based on stupendously over-valued inventories of land. Coal mine entrepreneurs face collapsing prices and revenues, but soaring double digit interest rates on shadow banking loans collateralized by over-valued coal reserves. Shipyards have empty order books, but vast debts collateralized by soon to be idle construction bays. Speculators have collateralized massive stock piles of copper and iron ore at prices that are already becoming ancient history.

So China is on the cusp of the greatest margin call in history. Once asset values starting falling, its pyramids of debt will stand exposed to withering performance failures and melt-downs. Undoubtedly the regime will struggle to keep its printing press prosperity alive for another month or quarter, but the fractures are now gathering everywhere because the credit rampage has been too extreme and hideous. Maybe Zhejiang Xingrun Real Estate which went belly up last week is the final catalyst, but if not there are thousands more to come. Like Mao’s gun barrel, the printing press has a “sell by” date, too

Of the more than US$562 million (RMB3.5 billion) that it owed to debtors, US$112 million was borrowed from 98 private parties with annual interest rates of up to 36%, according to recent revelations from Chinese media. Under that kind of pressure, the only surprise is that the default didn’t happen sooner. The company struggled to find capital for years; the chairman is suspected of borrowing up to US$38.6 million with “fake mortgages.”

But before Xingrun gets branded as China’s worst small, private homebuilder, it’s important to understand how it ended up in the mess in the first place, and what specific factors brought the operation down, or at least to the brink of collapse (local government officials insist it hasn’t officially defaulted yet).

Xingrun’s business in Fenghua, a county-level city that is part of Ningbo in a manufacturing belt on China’s east coast, ran into trouble through a renovation project starting in 2007, Chinese media pointed out. The company attempted, after securing government support and taking over for another distressed local property company, to build high-rise apartment blocks in a village called Changting. The project required the company to build homes for the original residents before the existing village could be torn down and the new buildings built. Construction was slated to start in the first half of 2012. Xingrun projected that it could pay off its debts within three years.

The project never got to the construction phase. In fact, the small village homes are still standing. Xingrun built the replacement homes for the villagers but there’s no sign of its main housing product, high-rises. Nothing has happened because the residents of the village have tangled the project and the company in a lawsuit that has stretched for years.

That explains why Xingrun was unable to pay back its loans. But why has it come so close to keeling over now? Its troubles with the Changting project persisted for years but the company simply rolled over loans and borrowed at high rates from private lenders.

One problem for capital-strapped developers in the Ningbo area is that private lenders no longer want to lend to highly risky companies. In fact, they are calling in their loans. This is just one of the problems afflicting Xingrun. The value of property in some areas of Fenghua is decreasing and that trend has lowered confidence in developers’ ability to pay dizzyingly high interest rates.

Banks aren’t hot on lending to this kind of developer either. In the past, a developer such as Xingrun could ask the local branch of a commercial bank for more credit. The local branch would take that risk because loan officers there knew that, somewhere much higher up the chain, officials promoted the lending.

That support exists no longer. Now, when small developers beg local banks for credit, they will likely be turned away. Local bank managers are reportedly being told that they may lend to risky borrowers if they wish, but they will be held accountable.

High risk is something no one seems willing to stomach these days – in stark contrast to just a year ago.

Fenghua is a small town, and Xingrun’s reach beyond that area is limited. Analysts have come out strong in saying that such a default has little systemic risk. The bigger picture in the region, however, can’t be ignored.

Xingrun’s woes are still the woes of the local authorities. The default will add US$305 million (RMB1.9 billion) to Fenghua province’s non-performing loan portfolio, pushing up the rate of toxic assets to 5.27% and making it Zhejiang province’s most indebted government, according to calculations by The Economic Observer newspaper.

Add Fenghua’s problems to those of the greater Ningbo region. The area reportedly has at least six years of housing stock either sitting empty or under construction. The massive buildout will put small developers under great pressure to pay back loans, especially if private debtors are calling in high-interest loans. A slowdown in property prices won’t help either. Without a rescue from provincial-level banks, Fenghua won’t be the last local government stuck in a jam.
 
Beijing trying to antagonize Tokyo again. The ongoing territorial dispute today over the Senkakus between China and Japan is now spilling into the realm of history as well.

Shanghaiist

Chinese national flag found mounted to wreckage of sunk WW2 era Japanese warship

Divers who went down to visit a sunk World War II era Japanese warship off the coast of Palau were surprised to find that someone had recently erected a large Chinese national flag.

According to Kyodo News, The flag was found on March 21 attached to the wreckage of the fleet oiler Iro of the Imperial Japanese Navy. The ship lies on the 40-meter deep seabed about 8 kilometers off Koror Island, Palau. The area is a popular spot for divers visiting the archipelago.

On March 31, 1944 the ship was attacked and sunk in Palau Harbor by United States Navy aircraft carrier fighters from the Fast Carrier Task Force during Operation Desecrate One.
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A worrying development on the aviation front:

IHS Jane's 360

China's KJ-500 AEW&C platform 'enters service' 
23 March 2015

Images from Chinese military issue websites indicate the Kongjing 500 (KJ-500) airborne early warning and control (AEW&C) aircraft has started to enter service with the People's Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF).

While images of the KJ-500 in the PLAAF paint scheme first appeared in late 2014, the first image of one with an official serial number (30471), confirming its service entry, did not appear until 18 March.

First seen in early 2013, the KJ-500 is based on the Shaanxi Aircraft Corporation (SAC) Y-9 four-turboprop transport combined with a fixed phased-array radar developed by the Nanjing Research Institute of Electronic Technology (NRIET, or 14th Institute).

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The first image showing a KJ-500 with the serial number 30471 confirms its entry into PLAAF service. Source: Via Top81 website
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p1630826.jpg

The first clear images of the Shaanxi KJ-500 AEW&amp;C platform appeared in February 2013. (Via Top81 website)
 
Good to see they took all the duct tape off the nose and cockpit windows before taking it up. ;D
 
cupper said:
Good to see they took all the duct tape off the nose and cockpit windows before taking it up. ;D

They just moved it to the inside after realizing they cant see
 
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