“China is a hostage. China is America’s bank and America basically says there’s nothing you can do to me. If I go down you don’t get paid.”
While the Obama administration has pledged the kind of fiscal
responsibility that would secure its government obligations, its actions
haven’t been so responsible. The Fed recently announced purchases of $1
Trillion in government debt, while the government is set to rack up
Trillion-Dollar deficits over the next decade, even by the most
conservative estimates.
In other words, China is in a quandary; stop lending to the US, and
you might see the value of your existing reserves plummet. Continue
lending, and you risk the same result. Tired of participating in this
apparent no-win situation, China is finally taking action.
First, it will petition the G20 at its upcoming meeting for some
level of protection on its $1 Trillion+ “investment” in the US.
Meanwhile, Zhou XiaoChuan, governor of the Central Bank of China, has
authored a paper calling for a decline in the role that individual
currencies play in international trade and finance. According to Mr.
Zhou, “Most nations concentrate their assets in those reserve currencies
[Dollar, Euro, Yen], which exaggerates the size of flows and makes
financial systems overall more volatile.” His point is well-taken, since
of the $4.5 Trillion in global foreign exchange reserves that can be
identified, perhaps 85% are accounted for by Euros and Dollars alone.
When crises occur, everyone flocks to these currencies.
Mr. Zhou’s proposal is not without precedent. “His idea is to expand the use of ‘special drawing rights,’ or SDRs
— a kind of synthetic currency created by the IMF in the 1960s. Its
value is determined by a basket of major currencies. Originally, the SDR
was intended to serve as a shared currency for international reserves,
though that aspect never really got off the ground.” It’s not clear
exactly how such a system would work, but the idea is straightforward
enough; instead of holding individual currencies, which are inherently
volatile, Central Banks would be able to denominate reserves in a sort
of universal currency. Instead of parking money in US Treasury
securities, they would hold IMF bonds, or some equivalent.
Even before China starting becoming more vocal about its concerns,
analysts had begun questioning the role of the US as reserve currency.
I’m not just talking about the perennial pessimists. Within the context
of the current credit crisis, a bubble may be forming in the market for
Treasury bonds. “Foreign buying of American financial assets by both
private investors and governments averaged $141 billion
from September to December, Treasury data show…Demand was so strong
that, for the first time, investors accepted rates below 0 percent on
three-month Treasury bills to safeguard their capital.”
There is concern that a slight recovery in risk appetite (of which there is already evidence) could ignite a massive sell-off: “People are sitting there holding massive amounts of zero- yielding dollar assets. If th
dollars can drop off very, very quickly.”
Led by China, Central Banks Seek Alternative to Dollar
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Labels:
Central Banks
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment