|
The New York
Times reports that china will issue yuan-denominated bonds
in Hong Kong.
(emphasis mine) [my
comment]
China
to Issue Yuan-Denominated Bonds in Hong Kong
By
CHRIS V. NICHOLSON
Published: September 8, 2009
The Chinese Ministry of Finance said Tuesday that it would issue 6 billion
yuan worth of government bonds in Hong Kong, a major step to internationalize
its currency at a time of concern about the dollar.
Kin Cheung/Associated Press
This is the first time that government bonds, comparable to U.S. Treasury
securities, are to be issued. Above, a Bank of China in Hong Kong.
The yuan bond issue, the equivalent of $879 million, will “promote
the yuan in neighboring countries and improve the yuan’s international
status,” the ministry said on its Web site.
“The first step toward internationalization is regionalization,”
Shi Lei, a currency analyst at Bank of China in Beijing, said during an
interview. “China wants to develop the offshore market in Hong
Kong.”
While domestic banks like Bank of China and the Export-Import Bank of
China have issued yuan-denominated bonds in Hong Kong for a couple of years
at the encouragement of Beijing, this is the first time that government
bonds, comparable to U.S. Treasury securities, are to be issued. The
sale is set for Sept. 28.
In July, the People’s Bank of China, the country’s central bank,
started a program for local companies to settle trade in yuan, but it has so
far spurred little trade. Zhi Ming Zhang, an analyst at HSBC in Hong Kong,
said the government bond issue might show foreign investors they could rely
on the yuan.
“If I’m doing trade with China, where am I going to park this
money?” Mr. Zhi asked, referring to the yuan. The yuan-bond market
needs security and liquidity to make such settlements attractive, he said,
and government bonds will provide security and a pricing benchmark. The next
step, he added, would be to increase the number of Chinese issuers and
investors in the yuan.
Experts estimate that China holds about 75 percent of its $2 trillion in
foreign reserves in dollar-denominated assets, but since the global financial
crisis began, that position has made Beijing uneasy. Since the beginning of
2007, the dollar has slipped more than 20 percent against the yen, and more
than 12 percent against the yuan, and investors are concerned as the United States
continues to pile up debt to finance its huge stimulus package.
In March, China’s prime minister, Wen Jiabao, expressed concern about
the dollar’s slide and encouraged the United States to ensure its
stability.
While the bond issue announced Tuesday is a step toward making the yuan a
global currency, the size of the sale is small compared with those of U.S.
Treasury securities, and the time it will take to establish the yuan
internationally remains uncertain. [less than a year]
“There is no timetable,” said Mr. Shi, the Bank of China
analyst, adding that developing the market would take “at least three
to five years.” [it happen much faster, driven by panic about the
collapsing dollar.]
In another move to make the yuan accessible to investors, BOC Suisse
Fund Management, Bank of China’s asset-management arm based in Geneva,
said Friday that it had received approval from the Swiss financial regulator
to create a new set of funds, nearly half of them denominated in the Chinese
currency. [This looks interesting]
The Telegraph
reports that China is alarmed by US money printing.
China
alarmed by US money printing
The US Federal Reserve's policy of printing money to buy Treasury debt
threatens to set off a serious decline of the dollar and compel China to
redesign its foreign reserve policy, according to a top member of the
Communist hierarchy.
By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, in Cernobbio, Italy
Published: 9:06PM BST 06 Sep 2009
Cheng Siwei, former vice-chairman of the Standing Committee and now head of
China's green energy drive, said Beijing was dismayed by the Fed's recourse
to "credit easing".
"We hope there will be a change in monetary policy as soon as they have
positive growth again," he said at the Ambrosetti Workshop, a policy
gathering on Lake Como.
"If they keep printing money to buy bonds it will lead to inflation,
and after a year or two the dollar will fall hard. Most of our foreign
reserves are in US bonds and this is very difficult to change, so we will
diversify incremental reserves into euros, yen, and other currencies,"
he said.
China's reserves are more than – $2 trillion, the world's largest.
"Gold is definitely an alternative, but when we buy, the price goes
up. We have to do it carefully so as not to stimulate the markets," he
added.
The comments suggest that China has become the driving force in the
gold market and can be counted on to buy whenever there is a price dip,
putting a floor under any correction.
Mr Cheng said the Fed's loose monetary policy was stoking an unstable asset
boom in China. "If we raise interest rates, we will be flooded with hot
money. We have to wait for them. If they raise, we raise.
"Credit in China is too loose. We have a bubble in the housing market
and in stocks so we have to be very careful, because this could fall
down."
Mr Cheng said China had learned from the West that it is a mistake for
central banks to target retail price inflation and take their eye off assets.
"This is where Greenspan went wrong from 2000 to 2004," he said.
"He thought everything was alright because inflation was low, but assets
absorbed the liquidity."
Mr Cheng said China had lost 20m jobs as a result of the crisis and advised
the West not to over-estimate the role that his country can play in global
recovery.
China's task is to switch from export dependency to internal consumption,
but that requires a "change in the ideology of the Chinese people"
to discourage excess saving. "This is very difficult".
Mr Cheng said the root cause of global imbalances is spending patterns in US
(and UK) and China.
"The US spends tomorrow's money today," he said. "We Chinese
spend today's money tomorrow. That's why we have this financial crisis."
Yet the consequences are not symmetric.
"He who goes borrowing, goes sorrowing," said Mr Cheng.
It was a quote from US founding father Benjamin Franklin.
The Telegraph
reports about China, Bernanke, and the price of gold.
China,
Bernanke, and the price of gold
By Ambrose
Evans-Pritchard Economics Last updated: September 7th, 2009
China has issued what amounts to the “Beijing Put” on gold.
You can make a lot of money, but you really can’t lose.
I happened to see quite a bit of Cheng Siwei at the Ambrosetti Workshop, a
gathering of politicians and global strategists at Lake Como, including a
dinner at Villa d’Este last night at which he listened very attentively
as a number of American guests tore President Obama’s economic and
health policy to shreds.
Mr Cheng was until recently Vice-Chairman of the Communist Party’s
Standing Committee, and is now a sort of economic ambassador for China around
the world — a charming man, by the way, who left Hong Kong for mainland
China in 1950 at the age of 16, as young idealist eager to serve the
revolution. Sixty years later, he calls himself simply “a survivior”.
What he said about US monetary policy and gold – this bit on the
record – would appear to validate the long-held belief of gold bugs
that China has fundamentally lost confidence in the US dollar and is
going to shift to a partial gold standard through reserve accumulation.
He played down other metals such as copper, saying that they could not
double as a proxy currency or store of wealth.
“Gold is definitely an alternative, but when we buy, the price goes
up. We have to do it carefully so as not stimulate the market,” he
said.
In other words, China is buying the dips, and will continue to do so as a
systematic policy. His comment captures exactly what observation of
gold price action suggests is happening. Every time it looks as if
the bullion market is going to buckle, some big force steps in from the
unknown.
Investors long-suspected that it was China. We later discovered that
Beijing had in fact doubled its gold reserves to 1054 tonnes. Fait accompli
first. Announcement long after.
Standing back, you can see that the steady rise in gold over the last eight
years to $994 an ounce last week – outperforming US equities fourfold,
even with reinvested dividends – has roughly tracked the emergence of
China as a superpower in foreign reserve holdings (now $2 trillion).
As I have written in today’s paper, Mr Cheng (and Beijing) takes a dim view of Ben
Bernanke’s monetary experiments at the Federal Reserve.
“If they keep printing money to buy bonds it will lead to inflation,
and after a year or two the dollar will fall hard. Most of our foreign
reserves are in US bonds and this is very difficult to change, so we will
diversify incremental reserves into euros, yen, and other currencies,”
he said.
This line of argument is by now well-known. Less understood is how much
trouble the Fed’s QE policies are causing in China itself, where they
have vicariously set off a speculative boom on the Shanghai exchange and in
property. Mr Cheng said mid-level house prices are now ten times incomes.
“If we raise interest rates, we will be flooded with hot
money. We have to wait for them. If they raise, we raise.”
“Credit in China is too loose. We have a bubble in the housing market
and in stocks so we have to be very careful, because this could fall
down.”
Of course, China cold end this problem by letting the yuan rise to its proper
value, but China too is trapped. Wafer-thin profit margins on exports mean
that vast chunks of Chinese industry would go bust if the yuan rose enough to
close the trade surplus [but China will let the yuan rise anyway when food
crisis really begins]. China’s exports were down 23pc in July from
a year before even at the current exchange rate, and exports make up 40pc of
GDP. “We have lost 20m jobs in this crisis,” he said.
China’s mercantilist export strategy has led the country into a
cul-de-sac. China must continue to run its trade surplus. It must accumulate
hundreds of billions more in reserves. Ergo, it must buy a great deal more
gold.
Where is the gold going to come from?
Chinese buying
drove gold over $1000
My reaction: The news developments above are screaming warning sirens
telling the world to get out of the dollar before it is too late.
China continues to internationalize the yuan
1) On September 28, China will issue 6 billion yuan worth of government bonds
in Hong Kong.
2) This is the first time that China issues bonds comparable to U.S. Treasury
securities.
3) This represents a MAJOR step to internationalize the yuan at a time of
rising concern about the dollar.
China issued "Beijing Put" on gold
1) Comments by Mr Cheng (until recently Vice-Chairman of the Communist
Party's Standing Committee) validate the long-held belief of gold bugs that
China has become the driving force in the gold market and can be counted on
to buy whenever there is a price dip, putting a floor under any correction.
2) Comments by Mr Cheng (on record) also validate the long-held belief of
gold bugs that China has fundamentally lost confidence in the US dollar and
is going to shift to a partial gold standard through reserve accumulation.
3) China is buying the dips in gold prices, and will continue to do so as a
systematic policy. Mr Cheng’s comment captures exactly what observation
of gold price action suggests is happening. Every time it looks as if the
bullion market is going to buckle, some big force (Chinese buying) steps in
from the unknown.
Conclusion: Gold is never going back down. Don’t expect to ever
see gold beneath $900 again. Prices that low would result in too much Chinese
buying, so those short gold can’t allow it to happen.
Meanwhile the yuan continues to strengthen as an alternative to the dollar.
By the time a dollar panic begins at the end of 2009, the currency will be
ready to serve as a makeshift replacement for the dollar in international
trade.
Eric
de Carbonnel
Market Skeptics
Support Market Skeptics with a donation :
please click
here
Also
by Eric de Carbonnel
| |