Inside China’s Property Collapse (Evergrande Disaster)

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  • čas přidán 17. 05. 2024
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Komentáře • 2,2K

  • @chiragmodha
    @chiragmodha Před 7 měsíci +2523

    In any economic collapse, only common people suffer.

    • @lobbyskids2
      @lobbyskids2 Před 7 měsíci

      Unless it's communist and then everyone one does

    • @kevindelacruz2602
      @kevindelacruz2602 Před 7 měsíci +63

      As if monarchial rule never changes. 😢

    • @chickfila7nugget
      @chickfila7nugget Před 7 měsíci +17

      well said

    • @RemusKingOfRome
      @RemusKingOfRome Před 7 měsíci

      Don't worry, they can mass invaded western countries, claiming to be Refugees, and woke left wing governments will let them in.

    • @thewanderingartists
      @thewanderingartists Před 7 měsíci +59

      Because it's so easy to divide and control us

  • @thegrayyernaut
    @thegrayyernaut Před 7 měsíci +596

    One of the factors contributing to the "overcounting" problem in China is likely the fact that authorities often chase results and numbers. Bigger numbers = bigger praise and rewards for officials.
    I would know. I'm a Vietnamese. The authorities here love chasing numbers for rewards from the government.

    • @linusmayden8465
      @linusmayden8465 Před 7 měsíci

      But people chase numbers in the West too, that's how the 2008 financial downturn happened, that's why ponzi schemes exist in the West. And I would say what China is doing now is at least controlled demolition to try and fix it.

    • @michaeldoran4367
      @michaeldoran4367 Před 7 měsíci +9

      23 inch VEINY BLACK GIRTHY KOK!

    • @SupraSav
      @SupraSav Před 7 měsíci +93

      @@michaeldoran4367 dont skip your meds

    • @mwkcheng
      @mwkcheng Před 7 měsíci +26

      Really hope what is (or will be) happening in China will warn the Vietnamese government, especially when businesses are moving from China to Vietnam. But I doubt the Vietnamese government will learn.

    • @petiteange08
      @petiteange08 Před 7 měsíci +5

      There is also the issue that in some rural area, it is believed that there are population that do not figure on official records. So possibly they also overestimated the number of people that are not on official records.
      Also, I wonder if you can claim for subsidies based on the size of the population. If so, local authorities would have incentive to be generous in their reports instead of being more conservative.

  • @DaL33T5
    @DaL33T5 Před 7 měsíci +760

    Around the early 10s, when I was an American high schooler, I read something about how there was all this massive investment in real estate in china, even when houses were just staying vacant. With the subprime mortgage crisis fresh in our minds, I had a feeling I'd be hearing about this again in the future, and in a bad, bad way.
    And lo, here we are. Time is a flat circle.

    • @nothingtoseehere3061
      @nothingtoseehere3061 Před 7 měsíci +25

      Reminds me of the 2008 crisis, somewhat.

    • @Homer-OJ-Simpson
      @Homer-OJ-Simpson Před 7 měsíci +32

      I went to China in 2017. I saw lots of empty buildings and saw 2 huge neighborhoods that were ghost towns on the otter edge of a city. One of them at night had only 10% of the lights on...and it was 30 buildings that were about 25-30 floors each!

    • @gund89123
      @gund89123 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@Homer-OJ-SimpsonChinese government will install lights and turn them on at night so that people will think these ghost towns are occupied.

    • @std-ci4ws
      @std-ci4ws Před 7 měsíci +18

      Have to say that the current crisis is much different from that in 2008. There’s not so much subprime mortgage in China, most people that get a mortgage actually make enough money to pay it back, thus the risk is much lower. Although at a cost of economic growth, the Chinese government has a strong grip on the financial system, so the biggest banks should not collapse as they did in 2008. The fact that plenty of ghost cities exist in China perhaps proves that they were mostly purchased by people who buy them for investment instead of living, as no one in their right mind would want to live there. So if the prices of those properties were to collapse, it would not be the average citizens that would take the most damage. That being said, the real concern is that the local governments in China relied on selling land (which was owned by the government) to fund their operations, and they are currently in risk of bankruptcy, which, given that most infrastructure and public services were owned by them, that will certainly become a new type of crisis. Overall, it’s not a situation that one should be happy about, but housing market alone would not destroy China.

    • @Homer-OJ-Simpson
      @Homer-OJ-Simpson Před 7 měsíci +19

      @@std-ci4ws " So if the prices of those properties were to collapse, it would not be the average citizens that would take the most damage."
      But the average citizen does have one home and they would be seriously effected by a price collapse. Those with 2+ homes would also be spending a lot less giving their net worth dropped which means a worse economy which means everyone will be hit.
      > the real concern is that the local governments in China relied on selling land
      That is indeed a major concern. The savings that many have in housing which would lead to reduced spending which will hurt the economy is a major concern but the local govt no longer being able to raise revenue from that might be a bigger concern. It will lead to higher taxes on goods/services that previously had low or no taxes and will lead to cut back on spending which will lead to lower economic output.

  • @Drought-jr6pb
    @Drought-jr6pb Před 7 měsíci +725

    I'm surprised you did not mention the central government targeted GDP rate that the rest of the province/territories have to meet at any cost. Which also includes provincial government using the sale of land to developers to drive their GDP targets and extensive infrastructure projects that have little to no purpose. Which also drives the Provincial debt higher, and this debt is far greater than that of the developers.

    • @humvee2800
      @humvee2800 Před 7 měsíci +75

      I’m surprised he keeps talking about property ownership but doesn’t address that you legally can’t own land in china

    • @luiscanamarvega
      @luiscanamarvega Před 7 měsíci +16

      As I said. Government is always the root cause of the problem.

    • @JB-xm8qi
      @JB-xm8qi Před 7 měsíci

      Wow

    • @bl5608
      @bl5608 Před 7 měsíci +33

      ​@humvee2800 no one in china pays property tax. Property title range from 20 to 70 years. just simply pay a fee to renew it. No property tax during the 20 to 70 years .
      China owns the land , owner owns the unit. No property tax.
      In US, owner owns the unit and land, but need to pay property tax every year. Not paying property tax will evetually lose the house.
      There are pros and cons for both system. China style can develop and acquire land faster ( that's why china can build Bullet train faster than all countries combine). US style more freedom and liberal for the people .

    • @mwk1
      @mwk1 Před 7 měsíci +4

      "poprawność polityczna" ;-)

  • @leoli306
    @leoli306 Před 7 měsíci +42

    Important difference about buying a home in China: the buyer start paying the mortgage as soon as they buy, NOT when the home is completed and the sale is closed. So the buyers have been paying mortgage for a home with no completion timeline in sight...some have been paying for years.

    • @ericfloyd9533
      @ericfloyd9533 Před 7 měsíci +3

      that is not how it is supposed to work, and very unfortunate for any investor

    • @lillyie
      @lillyie Před měsícem

      chinese buyers should learn from video game developers and how they raise money through pre-orders and bundles but never actually deliver on a game they promised

    • @DieNextInLINE
      @DieNextInLINE Před měsícem

      ​@@ericfloyd9533Unfortunately, the Chinese don't have the same economic and legal protections and practices. You have to remember that to become influential and wealthy in mainland China, you have to have some kind of ties to the CCP. So white collar crime is committed by the government itself or government affiliated businessmen, and the CCP has a record of protecting their own and their image. It was basically unthinkable that these Chinese corporations would screw over the average citizen, although that's not to say the entire population didn't see the writing on the wall.

  • @robin2080
    @robin2080 Před 7 měsíci +418

    It is truly concerning when the biggest real estate developer, Country Garden, fails to repay its creditors or deliver the housing units it promised. It's really really bad when the largest state-owned financial firms, Zhongrong, cannot repay their investors because their investments haven't paid them back yet... the dominos have started to fall.

    • @ChristoffelTensors
      @ChristoffelTensors Před 7 měsíci

      Oh yeah China about to collapse (for 25 years now)

    • @ChristoffelTensors
      @ChristoffelTensors Před 7 měsíci +5

      Lmao also this guy doesn’t know the one child policy is a holdover literally from the Qing Dynasty and had nothing to do with Deng.

    • @subcitizen2012
      @subcitizen2012 Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@ChristoffelTensorsYou don't have to go very far back for evidence of Chinese having large families pre-revolution. There's a difference between a cultural norm and a law mandate. Why was the Qing "policy" so ineffective to the point that Deng didn't know to avoid "reimplementing" the policy? Congratulations, your point is pointless. Have to remember, the policy was well intended to curb overpopulation disaster. It's not like policies are set out for negative effects on purpose. It's okay, they're allowed to f*ck up. You don't have to white knight for China, ffs.

    • @luciddoggo5094
      @luciddoggo5094 Před 7 měsíci

      @@ChristoffelTensors Thats not what he said all midwit, we understand u knew that factoid. The entire world had no clue about the one child policy, until David Attenborough asked Deng. China's One Child Policy was a secret from the West, this is very well recorded

    • @MichaelGGarry
      @MichaelGGarry Před 7 měsíci +54

      ⁠@@ChristoffelTensorswhat are you talking about? The modern policy was started in the 1970s and has nothing to do with the Qing dynasty!

  • @luckylanno
    @luckylanno Před 7 měsíci +41

    When a person tries to control every aspect of a society, then that society will only be as strong as that individual.

    • @catsNcode
      @catsNcode Před 3 měsíci

      You clearly don’t know how the Chinese government works if you think one person controls it lmao

  • @glennrush6471
    @glennrush6471 Před 7 měsíci +381

    Cold Fusion is one of the best narrators on CZcams, period!

    • @chriswilkinson2548
      @chriswilkinson2548 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Agreed 👏👍👍👍

    • @CaptivatingAnecdote
      @CaptivatingAnecdote Před 7 měsíci +5

      True, i personally dont like the amount of reeverb on the sound. Everything else is topnotch thoough.

    • @anypercentdeathless
      @anypercentdeathless Před 7 měsíci +10

      Can't pronounce the famous city of Guangzhou? (While hilariously showing Hong Kong.)
      Can't pronounce famous leaders' names?
      Totally butchers Evergrande's founder's name?
      Dude multiple times pronounces the word "women"?!
      Quite the professional communicator.
      (Even here in Arkansas, these things aren't difficult.)

    • @communismisthefuture6503
      @communismisthefuture6503 Před 7 měsíci +4

      @@anypercentdeathless❄️

    • @darius1988
      @darius1988 Před 7 měsíci +1

      I would add Perun to the list

  • @chrimony
    @chrimony Před 7 měsíci +175

    You can't blame population estimates when ghost cities were dotting the countryside. This was an obvious bubble.

    • @MrQwertyman111
      @MrQwertyman111 Před 7 měsíci +38

      It's actually a much deeper issue that wasn't touched in this vid, apart from the housing market in China indeed being a massive bubble.
      For quite a while, especially in the rural parts of China, people would have multiple kids but simply not register them with the authorities. You'd have 4 kids, but on paper there would be just one child and that one would actually exist in official registers. This continued for a while, and at some point local authorities made estimates about the number of "unrecorded" people, as the state knew rural populations with less control over them were still breeding rather fast. Well, those estimates would be severely overblown in the last 2 decades, simply because loads of people moved to cities and/or got education and decided to gain some capital before having children. That's what many analysis seem to miss, and just stop at reporting "+100 milion people over estimated", without really explaining how the hell can a country with such strict monitoring systems in place not realize it's got 9% less people in its borders than officially stated. Well, chances are they did know it but simply decided to go along with the lie, as it was beneficial for gaining capital from outside as well as making sure the motor of the economy was running. And the housing bubble just grew and grew.
      So... birth rates were going down, male-female ratio gape got wider, and provincial governments were inflating their estimates of births which were then used for any and all reporting. The outbreak of the epidemic of the virus of unknown origin only made the house of cards topple a bit faster than it would.

    • @biguattipoptropica
      @biguattipoptropica Před 7 měsíci

      @@coybackus7665they had to have known because a lot of the apartments weren’t finished. The ghost cities were being built for the last ten or so years and they were being sold to city dwellers as second or third apartments because they didn’t trust banks. The reason they didn’t trust banks is because, until very recently, banks in China were known to be Ponzi schemes (and this was legal) floated by the central bank (until they weren’t). Shadow banks are still often Ponzi schemes and they are, directly or indirectly, also connected to local and central banks. Now they have been swindled by Ponzi schemes once again in the real estate market. It’s really messed up.

    • @MankindDiary
      @MankindDiary Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@MrQwertyman111bbbbb to n na m. Mm link

    • @linuxguy1199
      @linuxguy1199 Před 7 měsíci

      Not to mention generally everything coming from China is a lie, and if you go outside the cities it quickly becomes a third world country. There isn't just the housing issue, granted it's the worst. There are fields of ride-sharing EVs, electric scooters, etc - just a whole bunch of abandoned projects and a horribly wasteful, dirty, and broken economy.

    • @ArawnOfAnnwn
      @ArawnOfAnnwn Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@MrQwertyman111 "it was beneficial for gaining capital from outside" - investment into China had nothing to do with it having more people. Its population growth has been low for a long while even as per official data, which isn't surprising as they literally had an official policy to achieve just that. Investors knew that, and still invested. Cos this isn't a farming economy.

  • @ScottCooper92
    @ScottCooper92 Před 7 měsíci +145

    David Attenborough asking a simple question leading to all of this is some Butterfly Effect level stuff

    • @jensenraylight8011
      @jensenraylight8011 Před 7 měsíci +28

      *David Attenborough:* Imma ask you a simple question, just a harmless question, nothing will go wrong.
      *China 2023 Timeline:*

    • @RemusKingOfRome
      @RemusKingOfRome Před 7 měsíci +13

      @@jensenraylight8011 There was alot of paranoia back than about world over population (there was even movies - "Soylent Green"), but for a leader to make an off the cuff remark like that ,and force it to be policy, was insane. "1 child" was obviously wrong, you need at least 2 children - boy & girl, to replace the parents alone.

    • @user-wj7bu9zv7i
      @user-wj7bu9zv7i Před 7 měsíci +8

      They had something in the works already before it started, there were policies to limit the birth rate before the one child policy, including forced sterilization.

    • @marlan5470
      @marlan5470 Před 7 měsíci

      I don't think you understand: there is a Death Cult. It requires mass killings as sacrifice. Especially of children, but any and all life will do. @@RemusKingOfRome

    • @Random_dud31
      @Random_dud31 Před 7 měsíci +2

      ​@@RemusKingOfRomebut, in reality 2.1 kids are ideal since you do want the economy to grow

  • @LotharTheFellhanded
    @LotharTheFellhanded Před 7 měsíci +130

    What is the evidence that Evergrande was planning based on the population growth estimates? It seemed more like they were simply in a real estate bubble because everyone kept buying properties as investments and they could get the loans to keep it going.

    • @inuhundchien6041
      @inuhundchien6041 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Yup, I think the top of evergrande just do whatever tf to keep the money rolling and stashing most of those money outside China. They don't care.

    • @jukio02
      @jukio02 Před 7 měsíci +1

      I think it was a plow by the US to collapse China in the future. US invested in Chinese companies, so when they collapsed, they were hoping the Chinese government was stupid to bail them out. That's why Gina was in China last month, begging China to bail out the real estate investors, but China didn't fall for it. US was trying to trap China. If China bailed out the real estate investors, they would be in much deeper trouble later on. Allowing them to collapse would be the better choice for China in the long run. Now, China is heavily investing in the tech sector, that's where their a big portion of their economy is going to come from. Within 10 years from now, China will be a technological power house. You can see this with Huawei. China has the money, and the expertise to do it.

    • @ArawnOfAnnwn
      @ArawnOfAnnwn Před 7 měsíci

      There isn't any evidence of that. China still has loads of people who could buy those homes IF population is all you care about - they're just rural people who can't actually buy it cos it's unaffordable. Evergrande's strategy had nothing to do with population, it was just a classic ponzi scheme. They kept going hard at it cos they kept getting orders from aspirational Chinese middle classes.

    • @saketchaturvedi1073
      @saketchaturvedi1073 Před 7 měsíci +14

      you don't just go half assed into giant projects like this. there variables some concrete some estimated after which it is decided whether to go forward with the project or not. it was most definitely based on estimations of population growth

    • @biguattipoptropica
      @biguattipoptropica Před 7 měsíci

      @@saketchaturvedi1073are you too young to remember 2008…? I recommend The Big Short and any documentary on Madoff, then familiarize yourself with tofu dreg projects and China’s banking system (which was until recently overtly run by Ponzi schemes, still is in P2P lending and many shadow banks), and really anything regarding economics and fraud… they didn’t do it on population estimates, they did it based on greed and an assumption of exponential growth forever

  • @CreativeCutlet
    @CreativeCutlet Před 7 měsíci +51

    Its funny how they do so much surveillance and still got the population numbers wrong 🤣

    • @eddy2fast260
      @eddy2fast260 Před 7 měsíci +12

      Nothing funny about everyday people being financially ruined.

    • @catsNcode
      @catsNcode Před 3 měsíci

      Surveillance makes their country one of the safest

    • @a_ghost5950
      @a_ghost5950 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Not nearly as much surveillance as in the US

  • @me0101001000
    @me0101001000 Před 7 měsíci +347

    When an entire economic sector is based on extreme leverage, and you manage to piss off both the regular person AND the bigwigs, well, what do you think is going to happen? It's not a matter of if you'll fail, or even when. The question to be asked is, "what will fail first?"

    • @MarvinPowell1
      @MarvinPowell1 Před 7 měsíci +1

      To be fair though, the Chinese government is _extremely_ corrupt to the point these companies _have_ to lie and hide things in order to not be punished and imprisoned for angering the CCP. Doing _any_ kind of business in a Communist country is destined for failure (unless you're Tencent.)

    • @jrkastl
      @jrkastl Před 7 měsíci

      So a communist country reliant on the dedicated work force of their citizens didn't try to protect the assets of the middle and lower classes? SURPRISING! /s

    • @ry4nwo0t
      @ry4nwo0t Před 7 měsíci +18

      I agree but most people sweep it under the rug. Example China high speed rail which is over $1T in debt but is praised.

    • @jrkastl
      @jrkastl Před 7 měsíci

      @@ry4nwo0t "Sweep it under the rug" = nationalized. Yes. That's what a communist country can do to "extend and pretend."

    • @alexmipego
      @alexmipego Před 7 měsíci +2

      I think that way of thinking fails in today's developed nations. A city holds about 1 week of food until it runs out, so those in power just need too stop sending people the food… the 'revolution' won't last long. People from developed places aren't equipped to survive without stuff like electricity and food logistics.

  • @Kiddio
    @Kiddio Před 7 měsíci +149

    The fact that you separate the human people who have been affected away from any preconceptions about the CCP/China is one of the reasons I love this channel.
    End of the day, your average human has lost thousands of their money hoping to invest in their own future on promises sold to them.

    • @zakjuly6721
      @zakjuly6721 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Never Invest in the USA stocks

    • @Praisethesunson
      @Praisethesunson Před 7 měsíci +17

      ​@@zakjuly6721Lol you can't afford USA stocks

    • @dashmeetsingh9679
      @dashmeetsingh9679 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Marcia Ann Bice is just a pretend know it all. Just like evergrande your investment will go bust.

    • @anypercentdeathless
      @anypercentdeathless Před 7 měsíci

      Can't pronounce the famous city of Guangzhou? (While hilariously showing Hong Kong.)
      Can't pronounce famous leaders' names?
      Totally butchers Evergrande's founder's name?
      Dude multiple times pronounces the word "women"?!
      Quite the professional communicator.
      (Even here in Arkansas, these things aren't difficult.)

  • @Reinturtle
    @Reinturtle Před 7 měsíci +272

    The miscalculation that lead to the one-child policy may prove to be one of the worst politically sensitive mistakes in history 😬

    • @tylerharry6319
      @tylerharry6319 Před 7 měsíci +64

      "Oops! Our bad!" -the CCP (like over and over again)

    • @Reinturtle
      @Reinturtle Před 7 měsíci +13

      @@tylerharry6319 they are quite good a doing things they regret later... something something admitting mistakes and learning from them 🙃

    • @blueprint7
      @blueprint7 Před 7 měsíci +5

      what government doesn't ?@@Reinturtle

    • @shadowdragon3521
      @shadowdragon3521 Před 7 měsíci +35

      Mao's Great Leap Forward was also a pretty big mistake

    • @NeostormXLMAX
      @NeostormXLMAX Před 7 měsíci +10

      India and japan literally had the same demographic issues 😂😂 nothing to do with the one child policy

  • @benjaminh9664
    @benjaminh9664 Před 7 měsíci +15

    There's also the fact that local governments encouraged overdevelopment as a remedy for their perennial fiscal deficits, as taxes are collected by the central government and only 30% of tax receipts are remitted to provincial and local governments when they bear the burden of social spending.

  • @stischer47
    @stischer47 Před 7 měsíci +132

    In other words, Evergrande's lack of transparency and deceptive data mirror that of the CCP. They had the perfect model.

    • @shinbi6009
      @shinbi6009 Před 7 měsíci +7

      Like the trillions of dollars that goes missing from the pentagon? How about the Panama papers? Okay bro. You need a mirror.

    • @jamespae7019
      @jamespae7019 Před 7 měsíci

      @@shinbi6009 You will find 50 cents in your account shortly.

    • @123shotas
      @123shotas Před 7 měsíci +22

      ​@@shinbi6009ohhhh noool, we never knew ever that every country has plenty of scammers, you're a genius pointing it out, thank you

    • @LightForxes
      @LightForxes Před 7 měsíci +10

      @@shinbi6009 chinese bot

    • @troll2637
      @troll2637 Před 7 měsíci +9

      ​@@shinbi6009nobody is talking about the US here.

  • @mann8098
    @mann8098 Před 7 měsíci +379

    I'm a fan of financial, real estate and economic collapses. They reveal... things.

    • @HerrZenki
      @HerrZenki Před 7 měsíci +34

      Unwanted things that is.

    • @dannylo5875
      @dannylo5875 Před 7 měsíci +3

      Yep.

    • @sunbleachedangel
      @sunbleachedangel Před 7 měsíci +17

      And those things never change

    • @jahjoeka
      @jahjoeka Před 7 měsíci

      Same shit different decade. U think "communism" would stamp out greed but nope!

    • @Judge_Magister
      @Judge_Magister Před 7 měsíci

      They only reveal what we already know, that taxation is theft.

  • @wildfotoz
    @wildfotoz Před 7 měsíci +33

    You kind of touched on it at the end of the video. I watched a documentary on this a while back....maybe on the DW Documentaries channel. The biggest problem is that the population was expected to start paying on their mortgages before the construction even started on their home. In a lot of cases they was a year or more in advance and to had gotten to be the norm for the way the real estate market worked in China. The population had enough and just stopped paying their loans so they would go into default. That's what really killed these companies.

    • @vincewestin
      @vincewestin Před 7 měsíci

      That kills the banks. The banks haven’t stopped loaning for new owners yet. It will be interesting to watch.

  • @originaozz
    @originaozz Před 7 měsíci +23

    I live in SEA and one thing I noticed about Chinese businesses growth strategy usually comes down to GO BIG OR GO HOME. Most companies tend to dump crazy amount of money wherever they invade early on, trying to secure market lead. This meant accept massive loss for potential growth. This seem to be the way they believe to gain strong foundation in the market, however, their business mindset only see growth on growth. It also did not factor in how consumers are emotional beings and each local market have unique ways of operating. None of this is ever going to sustainable.

    • @amirianozakwano
      @amirianozakwano Před měsícem

      Same thing here in Malaysia. Chinese Malaysians are also having the business strategy of throw so much money to become so big and run on debt every year. For example, Grab. They have been running on losses for so long.

  • @FirstLast-cg2nk
    @FirstLast-cg2nk Před 7 měsíci +469

    So, it turns out that strangling future population growth also strangles future economic growth. Having a two-child policy to maintain current population numbers instead of a one-child policy to reduce them wouldn't have been quite so economically devastating in the long run.

    • @ancientsounds6989
      @ancientsounds6989 Před 7 měsíci +10

      Well it goes deeper than that . Dagogo conveniently explains the current population situation nicely but this is just another puzzle 🧩 to a larger friction that’s taking place and can’t be ignored despite it happening in front of our very eyes I wish Dagogo could talk more about that as it will shape or influence how people navigate the nuances of globalisation amidst a not so culturally exchanging world .

    • @dougnapier6441
      @dougnapier6441 Před 7 měsíci +26

      It probably should have been 3 because people will often not have kids or only want 1 or 2.

    • @FLPhotoCatcher
      @FLPhotoCatcher Před 7 měsíci +69

      @@dougnapier6441 There should have been *no* imposed limit.

    • @perfectallycromulent
      @perfectallycromulent Před 7 měsíci +25

      that was combined with the obviously doomed belief among investors that tens of millions of individuals could own multiple apartments, keep the extras empty, and just watch the values rise.

    • @muffemod
      @muffemod Před 7 měsíci

      @@dougnapier6441

  • @sa34w
    @sa34w Před 7 měsíci +63

    Rich gets bailed out and their losses gets socialised while the common people suffer

    • @fmcevoy1
      @fmcevoy1 Před 7 měsíci +5

      Capitalism for the poor; socialism for the wealthy.

    • @tessiepinkman
      @tessiepinkman Před 7 měsíci +6

      "Funny" how that explanation could describe either China or the US.

    • @fmcevoy1
      @fmcevoy1 Před 7 měsíci +3

      @@tessiepinkmanGlad you caught that!

    • @salkoharper2908
      @salkoharper2908 Před 7 měsíci

      Yeah. Ironic how Americans are all 'I hate Socialism'. The USA has the most Socialist laws regarding big business and banker bailouts that could exist. It's only poor people who can't have decent healthcare. You know those Wolf of Wall street characters will get a big fat check when their investment company loses a Billion Dollars on crazy gambles in Chinese real estate.

    • @MrInuhanyou123
      @MrInuhanyou123 Před 7 měsíci

      What's funny is that people still call china communist or socialist. And Russia for that matter. they never were, it was just a front for authoritarian dictatorship

  • @SuperAstro93
    @SuperAstro93 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Great content as always - was there a change in your Audio format/ recording- this episode really sounded different

  • @firefly1509
    @firefly1509 Před 7 měsíci +23

    The Asianometry video on Evergrande from 2021 is also a great watch for more on this topic, going deeper into the background of how the company came about

    • @harveyhype
      @harveyhype Před 7 měsíci +4

      No kidding. Watching that episode felt like a fast paced thriller movie

  • @somerandomfella
    @somerandomfella Před 7 měsíci +51

    Country Garden their 2nd biggest developer is also about to collapse. Get ready for another financial crisis..

    • @chriswhynder8311
      @chriswhynder8311 Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@peterseth3296why only china?

    • @phuturephunk
      @phuturephunk Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@peterseth3296 The external exposure, at least to the US, to Evergrande is minimal as well. Our banking types may be craven, but they are not stupid.

    • @Devilishlybenevolent
      @Devilishlybenevolent Před 7 měsíci

      You do realise the government on purposely let evergrande fail right? They could bankroll and give it limitless money but chose not to and let it fail. It was calculated.

    • @marnuscoreyempanadaslooseb6760
      @marnuscoreyempanadaslooseb6760 Před 7 měsíci +4

      ​@@phuturephunk The issue is, mate, that China today makes up at least a quarter of luxury consumer goods. China made up 33% of BMW's sales in 2022. BMW is now the most profitable car company in the world and the 30th most profitable company overall worldwide. If China really does collapse, then they could be stuffed, as well as all the other automakers. This would then lead to the collapse of many countries. It also doesn't help when these manufacturers are taking out big debts to ramp up EVs, and EV supply is already outstripping demand. For example, VW boasts on their website that they’re spending $52 billion by 2030 on EVs. The thing is that hopefully China's collapse very quickly leads to the rise of countries such as India, Indonesia, etc. Also being an Australian, we deeply rely on China for exports. If that stops, we could be f***ed. As I say, let’s hope that India and co can develop very quickly.

    • @zukritzeln
      @zukritzeln Před 7 měsíci +1

      Evergrande isn't the problem. Just like real estate in 2008 wasn't the problem. The problem lies in China's banks, which are globally connected and will impact almost every other major economy in the world - especially the US considering how invested American financial entities have been in China over the past decade.

  • @phitsf5475
    @phitsf5475 Před 7 měsíci +66

    Even if there were enough people to buy all those homes, there is a very good chance the quality of construction would be a complete failure in itself.

    • @freshlymemed5680
      @freshlymemed5680 Před 7 měsíci +12

      Bet you could topple the whole building just by punching the walls.

    • @rmglover3191
      @rmglover3191 Před 7 měsíci +3

      I completely forgot about the quality aspect! I recently saw a video of a floor collapsing in a building in China! Fast food hi rises!

    • @idunno6479
      @idunno6479 Před 7 měsíci +6

      Tofu dreg construction, Classic China.

    • @fischX
      @fischX Před 7 měsíci +2

      ​@@rmglover3191there are crappy buildings in China but the problem is way overstated - it's not the standard case

    • @AD-mo5sg
      @AD-mo5sg Před 7 měsíci +2

      ​@@fischXI recently got back from a trip to a few countries in Africa, all countries with a big Chinese presence and all the buildings I stayed in were Chinese constructed. Let me tell you, the build quality was poor to put it in the most charitable way. It's quite scary actually

  • @edgarbar829
    @edgarbar829 Před 7 měsíci

    Great as always!! I have a doubt tho, did you do something to the audio? It sounded to me quite different than your other videos. Like with more reverb/echo

  • @Donkeyearsa
    @Donkeyearsa Před 7 měsíci +9

    All of this was predicted two decades ago and absolutely nothing was done to even slow it down until 2020 when there was nothing that could be done except just to let the chips fall where they may and once the dust settles then start over.

  • @richardwafulaluis2791
    @richardwafulaluis2791 Před 7 měsíci +84

    I get so excited for each episode of Cold Fusion...Kudos Dagogo I learn a lot from this channels 😊

    • @crispysocksss
      @crispysocksss Před 7 měsíci

      Hgsay

    • @yslee1401
      @yslee1401 Před 7 měsíci

      Agreed. It’s so hard for journalists these days to tell the truth. And with the barrage of bombardment from little pink armies, it’s really hard for journalists to stay square these days

    • @hecheng19805
      @hecheng19805 Před 4 měsíci +1

      You will learn shit from this guy. Read more form others.

  • @johndinsdale1707
    @johndinsdale1707 Před 7 měsíci +82

    This is very good first level analysis of Evergrande, however there are many more levels to the property sector. Here are some theme :- local authority land sales / shadow lending / CCP elites properties holdings and there current deleveraging while the CCP prevents property price declines in tier 1 cities / off plan mortgages and the links to the social credit scores for access to services such as transport and jobs (i.e. perpetual indebted servitude) / forced relocation from Beijing to Xi new swamp based new city (Xiongan New Area)

    • @HMaxTube11
      @HMaxTube11 Před 7 měsíci +4

      You are correct - debacle is wide-spread, deep and irreversible.

    • @gregoriohb
      @gregoriohb Před 7 měsíci

      @coldfusion there it is, subject to many more episodes

    • @tbhUSuckOo
      @tbhUSuckOo Před měsícem

      My man cant even spell the party right

  • @Weegee4458
    @Weegee4458 Před 7 měsíci

    Great video documentaries as always.
    But I've noticed there's audible reverberation or echo coming through the audio narration.
    Anything you can do to fix that?

  • @jeffersonjaca199
    @jeffersonjaca199 Před 7 měsíci

    This channel needs more subs and recognition been subscribing since the beggining of youtube i havent seen no one talking about this detailed and very informative channel.. hope you have more and many success ill be with you till you cannot upload videos any more or im not able to watch youtube videos..

  • @jaymacpherson8167
    @jaymacpherson8167 Před 7 měsíci +18

    The underlying thesis of this presentation is China’s population control policy, followed by anticipated reversal, resulted in current property developer woes. And yet I seem to have missed any proof presented herein that property developers anticipated rising reproduction rates. In fact, Evergrande’s scattershot and overleveraged investments are evidence of its poor financial choices.

    • @ericfloyd9533
      @ericfloyd9533 Před 7 měsíci +4

      I agree. How many people would exist to buy them is irrelevant. It is just the way they ran their business. I believe the phrase used was "pyramid scheme." Companies like this don't have their own capital from other solid sources, they sell the idea and spend all the money from investors. Since selling is their only source of capital, they just keep doing it over and over until there is no more money coming in, all projects cease, and all the money is gone.

    • @reappermen
      @reappermen Před 7 měsíci +1

      I would assume that demographic numbers do factor in, though not as the absolute basis, and more as part of the market research. Stuff like 'we could build a new development targeted at early 30s buyers on the east side of city x, as demographic data says there is a lot of people in their early 30s there'.
      Which is just one factor of many

    • @jean-emmanuelrotzetter6030
      @jean-emmanuelrotzetter6030 Před 6 měsíci

      Absolutely.
      I was shocked when I read first time about real estate prices in Chinese provinces that were higher than in European and American cities where average incomes are 10 or more times higher. With even worse buyers using bank credits for purchasing not yet built apartments (not mortgages on build housing) in a corrupt post-communist society.
      The influence of the 1-child rules on that investment fraud (kind of Ponzi scheme) is probably very limited. China will have to face other consequences of that population decline - most probably less problems than if China would not have adopted the 1-child rules.

  • @alexv3357
    @alexv3357 Před 7 měsíci +85

    The role of property sales in local government finance should not be underestimated. Local governments are obliged to share a major part of their tax revenues with the central government, which means that they're generally unable to afford to do the basic work of government on their own, much less meet Beijing's enormous economic growth targets, or handle emergencies like for example mass covid testing expenses. The solution they came across are Local Government Financing Vehicles, shady semi-state-owned companies that sell land to developers to raise revenues, which means that local governments have massively invested themselves in the construction and real estate markets in order to function, while also using their power to encourage overconstruction, then used their overconstruction to claim high GDP growth, which prompted Beijing to push for more growth, rinse and repeat. This problem is coming to a head this year, and will only get worse as consumer demand stays low into the medium and long term.

    • @felipoto
      @felipoto Před 7 měsíci

      Good insight 👌

    • @TonymanCS
      @TonymanCS Před 7 měsíci +2

      It almost seems like cheating will end badly. This all will depend on Chinese ability to absorb the losses and stimulate the market like US govt did in 2008.

    • @alexv3357
      @alexv3357 Před 7 měsíci +2

      ​@@TonymanCS The chances are that stimulus won't work. Increasing consumption requires faith in logical and predictable government, something that the CCP's handling of covid has thoroughly destroyed. Moreover, even if it did work, it probably wouldn't be enough to stimulate the whole economy, since China's household consumption share of GDP is very low, still under 40%, with the rest being companies, most of them state-owned in part or in whole. In order to stimulate the economy based on consumption China would have to drastically increase that share, something which would involve firstly diluting the CCP's own economic control, while at the same time greatly increasing wages, which would undercut its manufacturing sector. Japan and Korea have both struggled to increase their household consumption past this point, and they have the advantage of much more flexible economies and democratic political systems which can tolerate changes to the status quo.

  • @basic_chain
    @basic_chain Před 7 měsíci +135

    I remember reading a book called "China's Great Wall of Debt" that predicted this almost a decade ago. It does make me question China's economic growth over the past years since many other parts of their economy are held together by this same speculative investing that tanked Evergrande.
    But, as you say in the video, being centrally planned means the government can simply move things around as necessary to prevent total collapse. Would it be for better or worse? Only time will tell 😅

    • @estarossa2387
      @estarossa2387 Před 7 měsíci +2

      see you keep your economy stable by having more facets focusing everything on construction yeah you'll drive it up artificially

    • @rayhanakram9912
      @rayhanakram9912 Před 7 měsíci +15

      government is the number one factor is these failures. government intervention invariably leads to corrupt incentives and counter productive policies, and when their policies fail they will argue that the problem is not that there was too much government but that there was too little.

    • @mysterioanonymous3206
      @mysterioanonymous3206 Před 7 měsíci +5

      You can only stack s*** that high... Eventually it'll collapse.

    • @66kaisersoza
      @66kaisersoza Před 7 měsíci +2

      I remember seeing a video on china (maybe bias). but it says that china are 60% as big/powerful they claim to be.

    • @mikehunt3420
      @mikehunt3420 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@rayhanakram9912the government is really the boggyman innit? We love major generalizations of world politics

  • @thegreenbean5891
    @thegreenbean5891 Před 7 měsíci +2

    China is a real dystopian nightmare. God bless those poor citizens that lost everything.
    Poor sods.

  • @linmal2242
    @linmal2242 Před 7 měsíci +16

    Country Garden is a MUCH bigger problem than Evergrande! There are even some saying that China has built as many as 3 Billion apartments for a claimed population of 1.4 Billion (which is probably much lower). CNBC Quote - "While Country Garden's liabilities are only 59% of those at Evergrande, it has 3,103 projects across China, compared with around 800 for Evergrande - making the company matter to systemic stability while also fueling contagion fears as it shows signs of financial stress."

  • @LoneCanadianPoet
    @LoneCanadianPoet Před 7 měsíci +32

    I think that in actuality China has probably skipped on taking census counts on millions of non-hospital/non-counted rural births, and those births are possibly more low-income than medium-wage. Then you have real estate ready for a population to own or rent housing but the population they were counting on are extremely low income to lower income than able to afford such investments into urban properties. There are probably millions of female births being unaccounted for and if so, they are all in the rural areas and can not afford the overdevelopped real estate in urban areas anyways.

    • @jukio02
      @jukio02 Před 7 měsíci +3

      That's actually a good thing, then. If China has more lower income people in rural areas, they can become workers. China will train them and distribute them where they are needed.

    • @nathanlevesque7812
      @nathanlevesque7812 Před 7 měsíci

      given their birth limit policies I doubt it

    • @tedmoss
      @tedmoss Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@jukio02 What is actually happening is the people out of jobs in the cities are being forced to move to the country or go outside the country to get a job to survive.

    • @jukio02
      @jukio02 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@tedmoss I don't think it is as bad as western media is claiming it to be. I think the media is very biased against China.

    • @GuidoGautsch
      @GuidoGautsch Před 7 měsíci +2

      ​@@tedmossthe great leap backwards?

  • @ishfaqafridi
    @ishfaqafridi Před 7 měsíci +2

    I get so excited for each episode of cold fusion. I learnt a lot from this channel

  • @davidvelasquez336
    @davidvelasquez336 Před 7 měsíci

    Excellent video, I was a little unaware of the subject and I had many doubts about it. Thanks for sharing.

  • @dapple33
    @dapple33 Před 7 měsíci +41

    They paved over alot of productive agricultural land to build those empty monoliths. Reminds me of Easter island 🗿.

    • @alexv3357
      @alexv3357 Před 7 měsíci +12

      That's not what happened to Easter Island. The Moai were made without cutting down trees, and were moved into place with rope by literally walking them, tilting them from side to side, something easily manageable by a small team of workers. The trees were cut down for canoes, and their nuts eaten by rats, leading to eventual deforestation and the extinction of the Easter Island Palm. And even then, centuries afterwards at the time of first contact, the Rapa Nui had a thriving society that had adapted agricultural techniques to prevent erosion and soil loss such as rock gardening. What did them in, and what ultimately led to the island's final ecological ruin, was smallpox, and later Peruvian slave-raiding.

    • @ArawnOfAnnwn
      @ArawnOfAnnwn Před 7 měsíci

      No they didn't. You got both Easter Island wrong, as explained above, and China wrong. Those empty monoliths are in urban areas, not farming areas. There is a problem in that they were built more in tier 2 and 3 cities rather than tier 1, but those are still cities.

    • @Shinzon23
      @Shinzon23 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Instead of quoting tired old debunked myths, why don't you try coming up with something new?

  • @cuckmasterflex9106
    @cuckmasterflex9106 Před 7 měsíci +70

    Very interesting topic, I rarely watch mainstream news nowadays because I can't stand it. So these types of videos are very valuable to me!

    • @Black_Revue
      @Black_Revue Před 7 měsíci +9

      Dude puts out better Documentary/Video Essays than Professionals

    • @LeviathantheMighty
      @LeviathantheMighty Před 7 měsíci

      You could check out serpentza or laowhy86 if you want to learn about China.

    • @Silent002
      @Silent002 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Same here. Thing is, you don't get this level of reporting from mainstream news these days - they're more interested in either pushing their own political views or filling space with "news" about celebrities.

  • @LiveLife1DayatATimee
    @LiveLife1DayatATimee Před 7 měsíci +3

    I would like to point out that the 21% of youth unemployed in China is a number that they released. It is likely a lot higher, potentially even 30%

    • @drphilgee6430
      @drphilgee6430 Před 7 měsíci

      I agree

    • @yslee1401
      @yslee1401 Před 7 měsíci

      You can’t trust any numbers produced by CCP. Need buckets load of salt

  • @HerryPotal-jj6nq
    @HerryPotal-jj6nq Před 7 měsíci +7

    Amazing analysis of the current situation in China, not just the property sector. Kudos for a balanced and fact-based reporting that can easily take an opinionated and editorial bias.

  • @XTony64
    @XTony64 Před 7 měsíci +46

    This is what happens when you think that your country’s unprecedented growth would continue forever.

    • @hydrohasspoken6227
      @hydrohasspoken6227 Před 7 měsíci +5

      you didnt watch the video then. 🫵🏾🤥

    • @XTony64
      @XTony64 Před 7 měsíci +4

      @@hydrohasspoken6227 they wrongly predicted their economic growth, leading to a belief that the demand for housing would have been greater than it actually was, and they used high leverage to fund ventures that obviously became worthless. It seems like the behaviour of a country that thinks they’re gonna be on top of the world forever.

    • @inuhundchien6041
      @inuhundchien6041 Před 7 měsíci +3

      Yup, you can't climb the mountain forever. Even if it's the tallest mountain eventually there's the peak. Perpetual growth is like perpetual energy. Not logical or realistic.

    • @renato360a
      @renato360a Před 7 měsíci

      It's not impossible that they would continue to grow tremendously forever. They just failed to do so, and their investors refused to see it.

    • @XTony64
      @XTony64 Před 7 měsíci

      @@renato360a that growth was possible because of great planning and great use of resources at a stage where China was basically a green land of opportunities. With time growth diminishes as with every economic phenomenon, it was only a matter of time. It’s easy to build a whole nation with debt that you think you’ll be able to repay as growth allows it, but when growth stops that’s when the issues come to light.

  • @user-md4lg7hz8u
    @user-md4lg7hz8u Před 7 měsíci +7

    Always glad to see the notification icon for a new ColdFusion video.. Excellent facts and analysis as usual!.

  • @greysessentials8937
    @greysessentials8937 Před 7 měsíci +2

    I was hoping you’d cover evergrande I’ve watched many other CZcams channels cover it, so glad you did too!! From here in anchorage Alaska keep up the amazing work!

  • @SteveGouldinSpain
    @SteveGouldinSpain Před 7 měsíci +23

    The world has to wean itself off of an economic system that relies on infinite growth.

    • @julius43461
      @julius43461 Před 7 měsíci +4

      Any ideas about the alternative?

    • @fidelio9301
      @fidelio9301 Před 7 měsíci

      @@julius43461Go with the flow. That’s all you can do. Can’t fight nature.

    • @useodyseeorbitchute9450
      @useodyseeorbitchute9450 Před 7 měsíci

      Like give up safety net that due population aging is going be unsustainable?

    • @julius43461
      @julius43461 Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@fidelio9301 I often hear complaints about our infinite growth economy, but I am yet to hear about a viable alternative.

    • @fidelio9301
      @fidelio9301 Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@julius43461 You just accept things go up and down and adapt to that, it's really not hard to figure out.

  • @MatterInMyMind
    @MatterInMyMind Před 7 měsíci +9

    Always love your videos brother. Your mic and audio sounded a little off in this one 🤙🏼

    • @GalaxyETH
      @GalaxyETH Před 7 měsíci +1

      sounds horible compared to older vids

    • @bhco
      @bhco Před 7 měsíci +1

      yeah i scrolled through comments for this... mic is off, also sounds like he is in a hall.

    • @MatterInMyMind
      @MatterInMyMind Před 7 měsíci

      @bhco He might of recorded it somewhere on the go. He has awesome music and he is pretty damn intelligent. I am sure it's a one-off because he understands the need for quality ☯️

  • @leftcoaster67
    @leftcoaster67 Před 7 měsíci +75

    Just wondering if this will help or make matters worse on Real Estate in Canada and Australia. A lot of purchases of real estate has money coming from China. If the Chinese market struggles that might mean less money, and maybe a cooling of real estate prices. Or it will spark more overseas investment into real estate. Making it harder for folks in Australia and Canada to afford homes.

    • @ElijsDima
      @ElijsDima Před 7 měsíci +22

      Could trigger really bad results in many international pension/savings funds, if they have had investments in the chinese property/construction market over the years.

    • @TimothyCHenderson
      @TimothyCHenderson Před 7 měsíci +3

      You would think that a decline in Chinese construction would mean cheaper construction costs in Canada but alas, we're still being told that material costs are going up.

    • @johnmartin3735
      @johnmartin3735 Před 7 měsíci

      IT MEANS YOUR SCREWED LONG LIVE THE 🇺🇸

    • @deezeed2817
      @deezeed2817 Před 7 měsíci +7

      Canada is facing the same problem as Australia. High interest rates are killing off developers who would normally be building apartments and houses and in the midst of this crisis both governments are trying to hide the lack of real economic growth through massive immigration. It's a total disaster waiting to happen. Young people will not be able to afford their own homes and rent will be so high that vulnerable people will be left homeless.

    • @ArawnOfAnnwn
      @ArawnOfAnnwn Před 7 měsíci +10

      @@ElijsDima It won't. Almost all of China's debt, much like Japans' debt, is internal. Unlike the American crisis, which was exported to the rest of the world owing to a lot foreign (especially European) buying of American debt. China's reserves are also the highest in the world and their central bank has a lot of leeway to use monetary policy as, unlike the west, they're not having an inflation problem (quite the opposite in fact, they're dealing with deflation). The main concern outside of China is a slowdown in Chinese production, leading to a supply squeeze and less demand for raw materials from Australia and Canada

  • @darkerarts
    @darkerarts Před 7 měsíci

    Brilliant video as always. You appear to have a sound issue. Your mic is lacking the bass and it sounds a bit scratchy and has a slight reverb

  • @thecorpooration
    @thecorpooration Před 7 měsíci +21

    I have a colleague who spent 3.5 yrs in Shanghai. He loved the place and the time that he spent there but remarked that in the end, "nothing there is real".

  • @2handsomeforlaw
    @2handsomeforlaw Před 7 měsíci +37

    Thank you Dagogo, your new angles on familiar news are so good, and so refreshing!

  • @djbenje4019
    @djbenje4019 Před 7 měsíci +2

    How greed and corruption can destroy so much wealth and so many lives... Pre-paying for a home so far in advance, then watching the value of it plummet, not knowing if the home will ever be completed, and then not knowing if you'll ever get your money (life savings) back. Yeah, that's gonna hurt millions of people, and ultimately the economy. I never realized how bad things were there.

  • @JazzApe
    @JazzApe Před 7 měsíci +14

    Always glad to see the notification icon for a new ColdFusion video.

  • @LesterSuggs
    @LesterSuggs Před 7 měsíci +3

    As of 9/25/2023 the Hong Kong dollar is worth $0.13 USD. And Evergrande is trading at $0.41 HKD or $0.06 USD. In the summer of 2018 Evergrande was trading at $27.95 HKD.

    • @MeiinUK
      @MeiinUK Před 7 měsíci

      Really?.... No wonder things were cheap this summer.

  • @ShipraBiswas-cu6id
    @ShipraBiswas-cu6id Před 7 měsíci +1

    I am really surprised when I saw this video.I am so excited for episode of cold fusion. I learn lot of things from this video and channel. I followed 5-6 days in this channel. I really appreciate this video.really this topic is very interesting. Thanks for sharing this video.

  • @cleanfreaks
    @cleanfreaks Před 7 měsíci

    Quite the echo on your voiceover for this video, might wanna check it out! Very informative

  • @eddywong7722
    @eddywong7722 Před 7 měsíci +5

    Thank you for the information of "miscounted/overestimated of 100 million births".

  • @JasonPadman
    @JasonPadman Před 7 měsíci +3

    Always enjoy your videos but the audio is a little off in this one

  • @StratosFair
    @StratosFair Před 7 měsíci +1

    Amazing content, very clear and informative.

  • @colleenhanna5383
    @colleenhanna5383 Před 7 měsíci

    I just found your channel
    And my god ive been up since yesterday binging on your amazing content i cant thank you enough for what your putting out ..very well done great voice fascinating world 🌎 issues and current news ..which isnt fake lol good job 👏 👍 😊😊😊

  • @timothymattson5369
    @timothymattson5369 Před 7 měsíci +36

    I, and all of my neighbors, have been contacted by Chinese investors attempting to persuade us to sell our homes to them.
    They don't just ask, or politely persuade. Some calls have involved claims that our homes have been found to contain deadly levels of radon, and others have been even more off-putting because the caller will shower you with praise for all of your smart decisions like redoing the driveway or roof which begs the question of how an investor located in China is so up to date on personal matters like home improvements.

  • @thehoboshack5253
    @thehoboshack5253 Před 7 měsíci +3

    Just letting you know , the audio is a bit off, an echo

  • @gonlaserna
    @gonlaserna Před 7 měsíci

    Yep pretty much the best tech and info channel on CZcams, you the best DG!

  • @Devibaba
    @Devibaba Před 7 měsíci +2

    Wow. Thank you for sharing this rather thought-provoking video. Best wishes ... Fingers crossed.

  • @alef0811
    @alef0811 Před 7 měsíci +105

    Correct me if I’m wrong but the actual amount of foreign direct investment in China from western countries is actually fairly limited because they implemented a bunch of protectionist policies and it’s been shrinking even more over the last several years due to tensions between the countries. Would there really be such a massive effect on the rest of the world, or at least on the west?

    • @MrQwertyman111
      @MrQwertyman111 Před 7 měsíci +30

      Businesses from China hold huge amounts of wide range of assets accumlated in the last 2 decades. Should it become really bad in China, the state and by proxy major companies will try to liquidate said assets, and the scale would shake the markets enough to cause a general panic. Besides that, many businesses from the west (including the financial sector) are pretty much stuck with assets in China and need to play with whatever cards will be dealt in the coming months.
      Should both things happen at the same time (loss of value for China assets, major sale of assets owned by China in the west), a nice global crash will happen. Probably few people know the real scale of things, but if you look at the portfolios of major investment firms from the US and check which and how many business in the US are co-owned by China based companies (so in essence the state)? Not a pretty picture for sure.

    • @biguattipoptropica
      @biguattipoptropica Před 7 měsíci +21

      You are forgetting about the amount of manufacturing that China does and you need to factor that in. Also, the other person is correct in that a lot of people are investing in China on the down low. Not only that, but China launders money abroad (as did Russia). If China has another Great Recession or Depression, Canada’s economy will immediately collapse. That’s the one domino I am immediately sure of, and it would be enough. I’m sure, as the other person said, there are more. Side note: the reason China’s economy doesn’t seem to be significantly impacted is the government is currently keeping everything together with duct tape. That’s not a permanent solution, but it’s possible they’ll find a long-term one before the worst comes.

    • @citoante
      @citoante Před 7 měsíci

      I am sure that USA long term plan is to withdraw all their business from China, and even draw other non US companies to manufacture in USA, and that is why America is letting in all those illegal immigrants to basically create cheap labor of illegal immigrants. A form of modern slave. Chinese slaves isn’t working any more and there is no future in that.

    • @NeostormXLMAX
      @NeostormXLMAX Před 7 měsíci

      He is exaggerating, chinas real estate crash is a good thing because they wont end up like japan, they poped their bubble early

    • @Ottee2
      @Ottee2 Před 7 měsíci

      Gentlemen, we cannot allow the Big Red Financial Juggernaut to come rolling across the Earth. We, in the West, were ever so keen to participate in the burgeoning Chinese economy. It went on for decades; the payoff was good, but nobody stopped to look at or admit to the excesses. It seems, once again, pride and arrogance could, very well, be our undoing. We will have to set aside our political issues, territorial issues, military issues, etc., for the moment, AND MAKE SURE that the Chinese economy can be vibrant, so that global catastrophe does not happen. We're in this together. We cannot standby and ignore the problem.

  • @reporeport
    @reporeport Před 7 měsíci +9

    oh YAY!!! I'm obsessed with China and you make basically the BEST vids on the platform. This is gonna be awesome

  • @user-bt7on6bz9z
    @user-bt7on6bz9z Před 7 měsíci +1

    You sound different. did you change something in the audio setting?

  • @darklordgrif
    @darklordgrif Před 27 dny

    The video of Yangheba village startles me too. Just imagine what we might discover once families start trying to move into some of these distant developments, my heart is broken by their suffering.

  • @prashkd7684
    @prashkd7684 Před 7 měsíci +37

    I remember when I went to Shanghai years back and use to drive past what looked like a facsimily of "Bird's Nest". Right on the other side of the overpass its a complete ghost town. You'll probably miss it during the day but driving back at night looking at those tall half-done buildings with no light.. it boggled my mind as to how their developers can afford leaving them in such condition..

    • @Devilishlybenevolent
      @Devilishlybenevolent Před 7 měsíci

      Its called city planning? Lmao it's just like how journalist report on China's ghost cities and "new abandoned subway station", years later and its flourishing and in use... Because you know... City planning?

    • @qianboyin1872
      @qianboyin1872 Před 7 měsíci +8

      With all respect but “Birds’ Net” (I.e National Stadium) is in Beijing

    • @Devilishlybenevolent
      @Devilishlybenevolent Před 7 měsíci +3

      @@qianboyin1872 That's how you know he's a liar 😂😂😂

    • @prashkd7684
      @prashkd7684 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @qianboyin1872 I may be wrong with the building's name (hence the quotes) but if you live in Shanghai then you know which complex I am talking about. It looks like a facsimile of birds nest, it's lit with neon blue at night and probably 10 kms out of central on the way to Industrial areas in the south. As I said, it's been a while since I went there and the moot point of my comment remains the same.

    • @2005batman
      @2005batman Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@prashkd7684yeah, yeah, dig yourself deeper, Skippy

  • @skmujahidhossain4348
    @skmujahidhossain4348 Před 7 měsíci

    good video. very useful and interesting video.... Thanks a lot for this service that you are doing..

  • @davidholmes9643
    @davidholmes9643 Před 3 měsíci +1

    The biggest problem with the Chinese property market is Many of the residential towers were built with poor quality steel and building materials. The cost to put up the shell is relatively small the main cost is fitting it out. Many of the towers both completed and those that are just shells will have to be demolished added together with the collapse of the property market the money is not there.

  • @HeisenbergFam
    @HeisenbergFam Před 7 měsíci +24

    If Coldfusion mysteriously disappears after making a video on China, we will know why

    • @Cheesecake99YearsAgo
      @Cheesecake99YearsAgo Před 7 měsíci +4

      It is good to implement anti monopoly practice regularly
      Because in the US
      We got to spend our money saving companies that are "too big to fall" while the CEOs gets compensation in the millions

    • @creepycassette
      @creepycassette Před 7 měsíci +2

      im onto you.

    • @MatterInMyMind
      @MatterInMyMind Před 7 měsíci

      HeisenbergFam = Pack of W⚓️s

  • @STAG162
    @STAG162 Před 7 měsíci +55

    I remember learning about the one-child and nannying policy in China back when I was in school in the 1980's. A lot of families were too proud and wanted to continue their family name so they did what we would consider unthinkable, and killed off the female population at birth (not my words, only what I was taught). Whether there's any truth to this is another matter.

    • @Kaosxca
      @Kaosxca Před 7 měsíci +3

      I suggest you watch the documentary:One Child Nation

    • @MA_KA_PA_TIE
      @MA_KA_PA_TIE Před 7 měsíci

      The Chinese have 20 million more males than females. You were taught the truth.

    • @jordanlaramore5430
      @jordanlaramore5430 Před 7 měsíci +24

      Unfortunately it's true. I think there's around 30 million more men than women now

    • @Cincy32
      @Cincy32 Před 7 měsíci

      They also dehydrate & then grind into a powder dead babies and turn them into pills. Every few years they'll get caught trying to smuggle these pills into Korea, Philippines, Japan, etc. and the news will report on it.

    • @metcas
      @metcas Před 7 měsíci +14

      It's true, there are millions of Chinese men without a chance of being with a Chinese woman.

  • @ZoomStranger
    @ZoomStranger Před 5 měsíci

    Always thought provoking, although how to 'have a good one' after watching this Is a head scratcher!
    Boomshanka to you Dagogo, once again you worrying doco wizard.

  • @chartaiwan
    @chartaiwan Před 7 měsíci

    Great video. Is it possible to share your sources for these business related videos

  • @shuvrodobay2227
    @shuvrodobay2227 Před 7 měsíci +4

    This video is a great example of why having a low-cost globally diversified index portfolio is a good option. Thanks for sharing this information.

  • @TheShibbybear
    @TheShibbybear Před 7 měsíci +8

    In addition to your usual in depth discussion of the key headlines and points, I appreciate that you touched on the human cost. A sometimes cold reminder of how the top end of town play their power centric games on the backs of the people

  • @andreaslukas2252
    @andreaslukas2252 Před 7 měsíci

    Very good video! You deserve more attention!!

  • @Bikram8110
    @Bikram8110 Před 7 měsíci

    Thank you so much for your video. This is very helpful video. Thank you.

  • @Acolyte_of_Cthulhu
    @Acolyte_of_Cthulhu Před 7 měsíci +5

    No mention of the tofu buildings and lack of inspections?

  • @oscarcastro9316
    @oscarcastro9316 Před 7 měsíci +7

    Sometimes the death of a country is not due to war, but possibly by policies enacted with incorrect data.

    • @Espen.Johannesen
      @Espen.Johannesen Před 7 měsíci

      But how can surveilance state get their population nubers wrong ?
      They have censuses ?
      Babies have birth certificates/social security number/passports ?

    • @replexity
      @replexity Před 7 měsíci

      ⁠@@Espen.Johannesen If you aren’t being sarcastic, the answer lies within “surveillance state.” When you control everything from within, you’re granted the ability to control (most) everything going out. It’s easy to add or lose a zero here & there when the only checks & balances in place is yourself.

  • @shivamprajapati3010
    @shivamprajapati3010 Před 7 měsíci

    Bro did you record this in a hall or something similar???? The sound is different from other videos.

  • @romashkumar659
    @romashkumar659 Před 7 měsíci

    This video is very helpful thanks for information

  • @lauriepenner350
    @lauriepenner350 Před 7 měsíci +4

    I've seen lots of videos on this topic, but never one that explains what happens when homeowners are paying a mortgage on a unit in a property that gets demolished. Are they entitled to any form of compensation?

    • @ericfloyd9533
      @ericfloyd9533 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Nope. Once the company runs out of money, nobody gets paid. Like this video says, essentially a waste.

    • @Gaius__
      @Gaius__ Před 6 měsíci

      That will depend on the contracts they signed, of course. But it is a moot point when the party that is supposed to pay you back stops existing.

  • @KirbyDog
    @KirbyDog Před 7 měsíci +23

    Thank you for another in depth presentation. Personally, I worry that the CCP will seek to distract citizens from a number of economic woes with belligerent behavior abroad.

    • @FU-Utube
      @FU-Utube Před 7 měsíci +1

      Lol all governments do this

    • @howardmaryon
      @howardmaryon Před 7 měsíci

      If Beijing plays the “taiwan card” to distract the chinese population from destroying the ccp, it will have an even bigger mess on its hands.

    • @dirremoire
      @dirremoire Před 6 měsíci

      Of all big nations, China is the least likely to do this. Chinese culture is more concerned with prosperity than war, and war is bad for business.

  • @TheAdamAdy
    @TheAdamAdy Před 7 měsíci +2

    This is what happens when you chase GDP numbers, you end up with misallocation of capital

  • @VitranAccad
    @VitranAccad Před 7 měsíci

    Always like your videos
    Will note. There is an echo on your voice for this episode.

  • @alltheeasynamesweregone
    @alltheeasynamesweregone Před 7 měsíci +54

    Dagogo, as a fellow West Australian resident, are you concerned about the potentially huge impact China's property collapse could have on the Autralian economy and the WA mining sector?

    • @johnmartin3735
      @johnmartin3735 Před 7 měsíci +9

      Should of bet on American 🇺🇸 not Chinese 😂

    • @zootsoot2006
      @zootsoot2006 Před 7 měsíci +18

      @@johnmartin3735 Always bet on America.

    • @alltheeasynamesweregone
      @alltheeasynamesweregone Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@johnmartin3735 Bet on what? A crumbling infrastructure that nobody has attempted to fix in the past 30 years. Sky high national debt in danger of defaulting. Printing money to try and ease that debt but is just delaying the inevitable. Political parties that are so polarised each side is more interested in being right than serving it's voters. Don't get me wrong, America is a much better country than China in every way possible. But honestly America should have bet on America and not relied on cheap labour from China to enrich the few while leaving everyone else to struggle.

    • @AbrahamSamma
      @AbrahamSamma Před 7 měsíci +11

      Having an economy tied to one country is not the best of strategies. Australia should consider that and start setting up contingencies for a more uncertain world order.

    • @MyLittleMagneton
      @MyLittleMagneton Před 7 měsíci +1

      ​@@zootsoot2006 even the Chinese are doing it!

  • @gregormonke4438
    @gregormonke4438 Před 7 měsíci +7

    Excellent facts and analysis as usual!

  • @saima5647
    @saima5647 Před 7 měsíci

    Something different presentation.Excellent presentation.thank you for incredible video 👍

  • @papiyadas3682
    @papiyadas3682 Před 7 měsíci

    Thanks for sharing this informative video. It's very interesting and knowledgeable video. Recommended for everyone...

  • @AmirZaimMohdZaini
    @AmirZaimMohdZaini Před 7 měsíci +15

    It's kinda shocking that "One Child Policy" would bring down the property giant in the long run. They kept build apartments while no one would buy it.

    • @stevenhake7500
      @stevenhake7500 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Imagine takimg all that wealth they built over 40 years and blowing it all on bad investments. Happens all the time, but at a country level? 🍿

    • @KingLarbear
      @KingLarbear Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@stevenhake7500they were over leveraged

    • @MoneyMan28
      @MoneyMan28 Před 7 měsíci

      China has 1.4 Billion and usa has 330 million. 400 million chinese don't have jobs and can't pay rent and food every month

    • @yslee1401
      @yslee1401 Před 7 měsíci

      Mainlanders use the property market as their casino. They now lose big

  • @MrDopeContent
    @MrDopeContent Před 7 měsíci +4

    Dope Content Cold Fusion 🤘🏼😎💯💧

  • @naimakk9211
    @naimakk9211 Před 7 měsíci

    Dagogo A. your attention to detail is impressive

  • @yanai3
    @yanai3 Před 7 měsíci

    Good video!
    Btw The sound in the video is a bit different

  • @br3nto
    @br3nto Před 7 měsíci +5

    10:15 The assumption is that there is not enough young people to support an aging population, yet the youth unemployment is so high… something doesn’t add up.

    • @Gaius__
      @Gaius__ Před 6 měsíci

      Listen to what the Chinese young man interviewed by the Chinese-speaking older white man at the beginning of the video had to say, and it will add up better.

  • @BigBoiiLeem
    @BigBoiiLeem Před 7 měsíci +8

    I think this is less China's Lehman Brothers moment, and more their Japan in the 90s moment. Japan in the early 90s was seeing exactly what China is seeing now, collapsing birth rates, an expanding retired population that is living older than ever before, plus huge speculation and over-investment in asset markets. Especially because of the looming demographic crisis (which is very similar to the crisis Japan experienced), once they hit the recession part of this, their economy will largely be quite stagnant or sluggish, potentially for decades, as we have seen in Japan.

    • @pulse3554
      @pulse3554 Před 7 měsíci

      Well Japan got intentionally fucked over by the US in the late 80s (as is typical). A similar story is playing out here as the world’s hegemonic ruler continues to bully

  • @KP-sg9fm
    @KP-sg9fm Před 7 měsíci +2

    Can you do a video on Country Garden as well?