George Soros
probably shouldn't expect any warm invitations to Beijing -- not with
the much-reviled short seller warning of a giant Chinese crash.
The
billionaire first shook a major government in September 1992, when he
led an attack on the British pound. For his role in humiliating London
and forcing John Major's government to exit the European exchange-rate
mechanism -- essentially the euro -- Soros reportedly netted $2 billion.
Soros made a bundle off America's subprime debt crisis as well. Here in
Asia, his legend has loomed large since 1997, when then-Malaysian Prime
Minister Mahathir Mohamad accused him, bizarrely, of heading a Jewish
conspiracy to spark an Asian crisis.
Now Soros has his eye on China. In a Jan. 2 op-ed
for Project Syndicate, Soros didn't say whether he's shorting China.
But he did connect the dots in a way that can't make President Xi
Jinping happy. To Soros, the main risk facing the world isn't the euro,
the U.S. Congress or a Japanese asset bubble, but a Chinese debt
disaster that's unfolding in plain sight. (more)
Please share this article
No comments:
Post a Comment