Fake
Exports from China to HK Surface, $10bn Detected
The gap between China’s reported
exports to Hong Kong and the territory’s imports from the mainland widened in
September to the most this year, suggesting fake export-invoicing is again
skewing China’s trade data.
China recorded $1.56 of exports to Hong
Kong last month for every $1 in imports Hong Kong registered, leading to a
$13.5 billion difference. Hong Kong’s imports from China climbed 5.5 percent from a year earlier to $24.1 billion, figures
showed on 26 October; China’s exports to Hong Kong surged 34 percent to $37.6 billion, according to mainland data on
Oct. 13.
While China’s government has strict
rules on importing capital, those seeking to exploit yuan
appreciation can evade the limit by disguising money inflows as payment for
goods exported to foreign countries or territories, especially Hong Kong. The
latest trade mismatch coincided with renewed appreciation of China’s currency,
leading analysts at banks and brokerages including Everbright
Securities Co. and Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. to question
the export surge.
Industrial
Profits
Data added to evidence of moderating
economic growth on 27 October. Industrial profits rose 0.4 percent
in September from a year earlier, following a 0.6 percent
decline in August - the weakest two months since mid-2012.
Gross domestic product rose 7.3 percent in the July-September period from a year earlier,
the slowest expansion since the first quarter of 2009. Export demand has been a
bright spot in an economy weighted by a property slump and a decline in investment
growth.
Although a rapid increase in luxury
goods shipments suggests some of the exports to Hong Kong should be attributed
to capital inflows, exports of processed goods including the iPhone drove the
September surge, said Hua Changchun, a China economist
at Nomura Holdings Inc. in Hong Kong.
“The fake invoicing problem is not as
severe as last year,” Hua said.
Yuan
Bets
After almost uninterrupted annual gains
since 2005 that saw the yuan rise about 33 percent versus the dollar, speculators have come to see
China’s currency as a one-way trade. That prompts hot money to seek out China
on currency appreciation bets. Worries about distortions had abated this year
after a government crack down and as the yuan dropped.
Companies have “faked, forged and
illegally re-used” documents for exports and imports, Wu Ruilin,
a deputy head of the State Administration of Foreign Exchange’s inspection
department, said at a briefing in Beijing last month. The country has uncovered
almost $10 billion in fraudulent trades nationwide since April last year.
China’s government noticed the rapid
increase in trade of some merchandise with Hong Kong in September, Shen Danyang, spokesman
of the Ministry of Commerce, said at a briefing on Oct. 16. The spokesman said
the ministry will step up scrutiny and analysis.
The State Administration of Foreign
Exchange of China didn’t immediately respond to a fax sent on 26 October asking
about the reliability of the data.
The China-Hong Kong export gap
highlights a “policy risk” if authorities respond with disciplinary action and
foreign exchange intervention, analysts at ANZ Bank led by Raymond Yeung wrote in a note on 26 October.
“We believe that the People’s Bank of
China is paying close attention to possible resurrection of cross border financial
arbitrage and non-genuine trade activities,” the analysts wrote. “We should pay
close attention to the possible consequences.”