7/28/2015

China's Stock Market Decline Causing Art Market Concerns


Artsy just posted an interesting article about the recent decline and losses in China's main stock exchanges.  On Monday one exchange fell by 8.5% and since mid June the exchange had previously lost 30% ($3 trillion).

The article interestingly looks at the issues in the art market, particularly the impressionist sector when the Japanese economy started to fail and the bubble burst in the late 1980s and early 1990s..

Artsy reports
Here’s where things get interesting. Most sufficiently humble financial analysts—with the exception of the inner circle of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s economic advisers who are engineering the stabilizing measures that faltered on Monday—will admit that very few people actually have a particularly clear answer as to what’s ahead for Chinese markets. But, as reported by Quartz, several analogues do exist, one of which—Japan, 1989—has serious cross-over to what we’re seeing in the art market as well.

In the lead up to Japan’s two-decade-long stint in the economic doldrums out of which it has only recently reappeared, the country’s collectors became infamous on the auction circuit for their serial record-setting bids. Vincent van Gogh’s Sunflowers (1888) became the world’s most expensive painting in 1987 when purchased by Yasuda Marine & Fire Insurance Company for $39.9 million. Businessman Ryoei Saito set another record in 1990 when he dropped $82.5 million on another van Gogh, Portrait of Dr. Gachet (1890). An Australian collector had set a new benchmark in between, but the more than doubling of the record in just three years was quick to raise alarm among pundits about an imminent art market bubble. (If that doesn’t sound familiar, read this.)

As it turned out, the economic bubble in Japan had already burst; its effects simply hadn’t yet become apparent. In order to sustain the rampant growth that had propelled Japan to be the world’s second-largest economy, the government began subsidizing that expansion with cheap loans. Consumption fell and instead the country ended up with a hoard of so-called “zombie banks and corporations,” creating export-oriented supply for which there was insufficient demand. It invested in rolling over existing lines of credit—and thus mushrooming its debt—rather than in new growth sectors. And, a majority of that lending was collateralized in real estate, another bubble that burst.

Prices of art on the domestic Japanese market dropped 80–90% by some estimates. And Japanese collectors receded from the international stage en masse. Coupled with a decline in U.S. spending on art at the time, the art market fell dramatically, particularly in the Impressionist and Modern sector, which had seen such fervent investment from the Japanese. (Other sectors, which hadn’t experienced as much exposure to the boom, fared better.)

Across the board, China’s economy sits on a very similar-looking ledge. After Monday’s selloff, a spokesman for the China Securities Regulatory Commission told the Wall Street Journal that the subsidiary of his commision, which has been a main driver of official stabilization measures would continue to purchase shares and even increase its investment if need be. Though it would be beneficial to the market in the short term, the move is very much out of the Japanese playbook.

However, other reports suggest the government could be pulling back on its efforts to prop up the markets. Bloomberg cites major slumps in the share price of key state-backed conglomerates that had been used to juice the market over the past month as a potential sign of shifts in strategy. Other analysts have suggested that the government is simply struggling to maintain the level at which many of the firms listed on its markets have been trading.

Any back-down on government support would be welcomed by some within the global economic community, perhaps most prominently among them the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which, as Bloomberg reported, urged the Chinese state to reduce the magnitude of its interventions, keeping debt manageable in the interest of the long-term viability of its economy.

What impact such a wind-down will have in real terms on both the Chinese and global economy—and indeed China’s art market and the numerous art world ventures that have invested heavily in the region—is unclear. (Some have postulated that due to the relatively small percentage of the country’s wealth that is traded on its exchanges, the impact could be more slight than projected.) Moreover, key questions about the fundamental health of the Chinese economy and the potential knock-on effects of a planned increase in U.S. interest rates remain unanswered. Art purchases will no doubt be particularly sensitive to market corrections, something which the recent auction data suggests is already taking place. But, avoiding a long-term Japan-style meltdown of the Chinese economic machine is likely worth the sting.
Source: Artsy 


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