By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
A sharp drop in foreign holdings of US Treasury bonds over the last
five weeks has raised concerns that China is quietly withdrawing its
funds from the United States, leaving the dollar increasingly
vulnerable.
China threatens `nuclear option' of dollar sales
Data released by the New York Federal Reserve shows that foreign
central banks have cut their stash of US Treasuries by $48bn since late
July, with falls of $32bn in the last two weeks alone.
"This comes as a big surprise and it is definitely worrying," said Hans
Redeker, currency chief at BNP Paribas.
"We won't know if China is behind this until the Treasury releases its
TIC data in November, but what it does show is that world central banks
are in a hurry to get out of the US. They don't seem to be switching
into other currencies, so it is possible they are moving into gold
instead. Gold is now gaining momentum across all currencies and has
broken through resistance at 500 euros," he said.
While the greenback has been resilient over recent weeks - even
regaining something of a 'safe-haven' role as banks scrambled to buy
the currency to cover dollar debts - most experts believe that
America's $850bn current account deficit will eventually cause the
dollar to resume its relentless slide.
David Powell, an economist at IDEAglobal in New York, pointed the
finger at Beijing as the main suspect in the sudden bond flight this
summer.
In a client note entitled "Has China started to dump US Treasuries?",
he said the sales appear to coincide with early moves by Beijing to
launch its new $300bn sovereign wealth fund.
The scheme is part of the government's plan to diversify it $1,340bn
reserves from bonds (mostly in the US) to a broader portfolio of
investments and a better yield.
If so, the switch comes at a very delicate time, just as tempers flair
on both sides of the Pacific over China's policy of holding down yuan
by currency intervention. A bill in Congress calls for punitive tariff
sanctions of 27.5pc against Chinese imports, and there has been a
growing outcry over contaminated pet food and lead-tainted toys.
Two top advisers to the Chinese government gave strong hints in August
that Beijing should use its estimated $900bn holdings of US Treasuries
and agency bonds as a "bargaining chip", words taken as an implicit
threat to trigger as US bond crash if provoked.
The Chinese government has since put out an official statement
clarifying that it has no intention in taking such an irresponsible
step, which would in any case backfire by devaluing China's remaining
holding.
Mr Powell said the switch out of Treasuires was a purely commercial
decision. "If if turns out that the Chinese are behind this, it is
merely an attempt to increase returns on investment. It has nothing to
do with settling protectionist scores," he said.
Any evidence that China was pulling out would risk setting off an
unstoppable stampede, which is why such a policy would never be
announced. It holds the world's biggest pool of resrves, followed by
Japan.
Robin Bhar, a metals analyst at UBS, said there was little evidence yet
that Asian central banks were switching heavily into gold. Most of the
recent buying of gold has been on the COMEX futures markets, the
playground of hedge funds.
Central banks tend to buy their bullion in London at the AM and PM
fixings, leaving a footprint that is visible to experts. They seem to
have been largely absent from the market so far.
Original
Source
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