Having appealed unsuccessfully to the G20 to create a viable reserve
currency, China is now taking matters into its own hands, by pushing the
Chinese Yuan as a viable alternative.
Earlier this week, it signed a $10 Billion+ swap agreement with
Argentina, involving an exchange of Argentine pesos for RMB. The
agreement is ostensibly designed to benefit Argentina, whose economy has
been hit hard from the global credit crisis: “The peso has been weakening
slowly but consistently since
mid-2008, when a major farm strike here
spooked investors and led many Argentines to trade in their pesos for
dollars.” By guaranteeing a large quantity of RMB – which is generally
considered undervalued- China is effectively providing the peso with
more solid backing.
In actuality, the swap was probably proposed by China in order to
demonstrate its sincerity in seeing the Dollar replaced as reserve
currency. Especially among developing countries and/or Asian countries,
many of which represent major trading partners, China is keen to
increase the supply of Yuan. One analyst wrote that ” ‘We expect more
agreements with other emerging market countries will be in the
pipeline,’ as the swaps will help ‘Chinese slumping exports
by making access to finance easier.’ ” Accordingly, the swap agreement
with Argentina represented the sixth bilateral currency agreement signed
by China in recent months. The other five countries are Belarus, South
Korea, Hong Kong, Malaysia, and Indonesia, with the total nominal swap
value of nearly $100Billion ($650 Billion RMB).
China is also moving to make the Yuan fully convertible, such that it
can be exchanged freely both inside and outside China. It is intended
that Chinese banks and exporters, for example, will now be able to
accept payment directly in foreign currencies, rather than first being
forced to convert them into RMB. In addition, the government “will triple the amount of domestic securities
that overseas funds can buy under the qualified foreign institutional
investors program to $30 billion” in order to make it easier for
foreigners to invest directly in China.
While the moves announced so far are too small to make any meaningful
waves in the forex world, investors seem generally supportive of
China’s efforts. Remember that only two years ago, hedge fund manager Jim Rogers
famously announced that the RMB was due to appreciate 500% over the
next couple decades and subsequently moved much of his personal savings
into RMB-denominated bank accounts.
A recent note by Citigroup analysts perfectly encapsulates this
sentiment: “In the longer term, we think it is China’s strategic
economic and political interest to promote the broader use or internationalization of CNY.
While the internationalization of CNY has a very long way to go, we see
China as using the global crisis as an opportunity to take early
steps.” Of course, China itself is conscious that such a process will
require decades to complete, but it remains cautiously optimistic: “It’s
not really up to China to determine this. It’s up to the market…The
best the government can do is to permit yuan-denominated trade. And
then it’s up to the market to decide whether it wants to use that.”
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment