Absolutely! With regards to China, no one knows
what will happen but can we exclude a possible hard landing of China?
And the question is when it comes to this, do you believe it will have
an impact on the geopolitical power shift or is it just a short-term
intermezzo for the rise of China?
Marc Faber : Well, I think that there is a very high
chance for a hard landing in the real estate sector, because we have a
gigantic credit bubble. Usually these are created during the periods
when credit expands at a faster pace than the economy and are followed
by some kind of hardship. I do not rule out that government
interventions can postpone the problem. They will bring about new
misallocations of capital and maybe even make things worse. However,
because China is so large I think that many sectors can still thrive in
an environment where, for example, the real estate market collapses, so I
do not think that the impact will be that strong.
We’ve seen what happened before with the bailout of
Mexico in 1994 and the Asian crisis in 1997. If Mexico had failed at the
time, we may have had a more significant setback in emerging economies
in the mid-1990s, but we wouldn’t have had the depression that followed
in 1998. So in my view, government intervention can postpone the problem
but it may also make the situation actually worse by not letting the
market clear as soon as some signs of problems appear. If, for example,
LTCM hadn’t been bailed out, I don’t think the whole system would have
collapsed. Some people would have lost money, I guess Goldman Sachs and
the counterparties of LTCM, but it would not have been a threat to the
global financial system. But this is what’s being presented to the
public by the interventionists, who argue: ‘Had we not intervened, the
whole world would have collapsed’. - in Goldsilverworlds.com
Marc Faber is an international investor known for his uncanny predictions of the stock market and futures markets around the world.Dr. Doom also trades currencies and commodity futures like Gold and Oil.

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