New York: Billionaire investor George Soros said China’s debt-fuelled economy resembles the US in 2007-08, before credit markets seized up and spurred a global recession.

China’s March credit-growth figures should be viewed as a warning sign, Soros said at an Asia Society event in New York on Wednesday. The broadest measure of new credit in the world’s second-biggest economy was 2.34 trillion yuan (Dh1.3 trillion, $362 billion) last month, far exceeding the median forecast of 1.4 trillion yuan in a Bloomberg survey and signalling the government is prioritising growth over reining in debt.

What’s happening in China “eerily resembles what happened during the financial crisis in the US in 2007-08, which was similarly fuelled by credit growth,” Soros said. “Most of money that banks are supplying is needed to keep bad debts and loss-making enterprises alive.”

War of words

Soros, who built a $24 billion fortune through savvy wagers on markets, has recently been involved in a war of words with the Chinese government. He said at the World Economic Forum in Davos that he’s been betting against Asian currencies because a hard landing in China is “practically unavoidable.” China’s state-run Xinhua News Agency rebutted his assertion in an editorial, saying that he has made the same prediction several times in the past.

China’s economy gathered pace in March as the surge in new credit helped the property sector rebound. Housing values in first-tier cities have soared, with new-home prices in Shenzhen rising 62 per cent in a year. While China’s real estate is in a bubble, it may be able to feed itself for some time, similar to the US in 2005 and 2006, Soros said.

Parabolic cycle

“Most of the damage occurred in later years,” Soros said. “It’s a parabolic cycle.”

Andrew Colquhoun, the head of Asia Pacific sovereigns at Fitch Ratings, is also concerned about China’s resurgence in borrowing. Eventually, the very thing that has been driving the economic recovery could end up derailing it, because China is adding to a debt burden that’s already unsustainable, he said in an interview in New York. Fitch rates the nation’s sovereign debt at A+, the fifth-highest grade and a step lower than Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s Investors Service, which both cut their outlooks on China since March.

“Whether we call it stabilisation or not, I am not sure,” Colquhoun said in an interview in New York. “From a credit perspective, we’d be more comfortable with China slowing more than it is. We are getting less confident in the government’s commitment to structural reforms.”

Concern overblown

Not everyone agrees. Concern about China’s debt levels posing a systemic risk is overblown, and policy easing so far has not exacerbated overcapacity, HSBC Holdings Plc economists led by Qu Hongbin wrote in a note Thursday.

Soros has warned of a 2008-like catastrophe before. On a panel in Washington in September 2011, he said the Greece-born European debt crunch was “more serious than the crisis of 2008.”

The Hungarian-born investor rose to fame as the manager who broke the Bank of England in 1992, netting $1 billion with a bet that the UK would be forced to devalue the pound. Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad called him a “moron” during the 1997 Asian financial crisis, saying he was out to wreck the region’s economies. Soros, who began his career in New York in the 1950s, saw his hedge fund post average annual gains of about 20 per cent from 1969 to 2011.

Capital outflows from China are a growing phenomenon driven by the nation’s anticorruption campaign, which makes people nervous and spurs them to pull money out, Soros said. While China’s reserves swelled by $10.3 billion in March to $3.21 trillion, they’re down by $517 billion from a year earlier.

“There is a definite urge for people to diversify, to get your wealth out,” said Soros.

Yuan basket

Soros was more positive about China’s foreign-exchange policy, saying efforts to link the yuan to a broad basket of currencies rather than just the dollar are a healthy development, and that the threat of competitive devaluation is greatly diminished.

Sustainability question

Ma Jin, the chief economist at the central bank’s research bureau, said in a speech this month that recent data points including real estate investment growth, industrial value-added growth, and producer prices indicate the economic outlook is probably better than some economists forecast.

The stabilising trend isn’t giving investors “enough confidence,” as China seems to have relied more on government investment in state-owned enterprises to boost the economy, said Gao Xiqing, former vice-chairman of the China Securities Regulatory Commission, in an interview in New York this week.