"For a long time when it came to Chinese loan creation, analysts would only look at the broadest reported aggregate: the so-called Total Social Financing.
And, for a long time, it was sufficient - TSF showed that in under a decade, China had created over $20 trillion in new loans, vastly more than all the "developed market" QE, the proceeds of which were used to kickstart growth after the 2009 global depression, to fund the biggest capital misallocation bubble the world has ever seen and create trillions in nonperforming loans.
However, a problem emerged about a year ago, when it was revealed that not even China's TSF statistic was sufficient to fully capture the grand total of total new loan creation in China.
We profiled this three months ago in a post titled "China's Debt Is Far Greater Than Anyone Thought", where, according to Goldman, "a substantial amount of money was created last year, evidencing a very large supply of credit, to the tune of RMB 25tn (36% of 2015 GDP)."
This massive number was 9% higher than the TSF data, which implied that "only" a quarter of China's 2015 GDP was the result of new loans.
We profiled this three months ago in a post titled "China's Debt Is Far Greater Than Anyone Thought", where, according to Goldman, "a substantial amount of money was created last year, evidencing a very large supply of credit, to the tune of RMB 25tn (36% of 2015 GDP)."
This massive number was 9% higher than the TSF data, which implied that "only" a quarter of China's 2015 GDP was the result of new loans.
What this really means, is that China's debt/GDP, estimated most recently by the IIF at 300%..."
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