The hoopla surrounding the semi-annual release of the Treasury’s
currency report has been awkwardly resolved. As a result of Chinese
Prime Minister Hu Jintao’s last minute decision to participate in a US
conference on nuclear disarmament, the Treasury has agreed to delay the
release of the report for an indeterminate period.
While a handful of commentators saw this as a simple quid pro quo,
the consensus among most of us is that a revaluation of the Chinese Yuan
is now imminent. Technically, the RMB
has been rising steadily for the last few months, and in fact, it
recently touched a 9-month high against the USD. However, this
appreciation has amounted to a mere .3%, certainly not enough to placate
critics, many of whom insist that the RMB is undervalued by 25-40%.
Probably within the next couple months (and as soon as tomorrow), the
RMB peg will probably be lifted by at least 5% against the Dollar, and
allowed to appreciate incrementally from there.
On
the surface, it looks like President Obama deserves much of the credit
for the sudden capitulation by China. From tire tariffs to a meeting
with the Dalai Lama, he signaled that he was willing to play hard ball.
As Senator Charles Schumer, one of the most vocal critics of China’s
forex policy, said recently, “Every administration
has thought it could get something done by talking to China. But years
of experience have shown that the Chinese will not be moved by words;
they only respond to tough action.”
While this game of high-stakes International Poker was being played,
there was an internal debate taking place within China. On one side was
the Central Bank, frustrated by its inability to conduct monetary policy
independent of the currency peg. On the other side was the more
powerful Commerce Ministry, which is responsible for representing the
interests of Chinese exporters, among others. It appears that the
Commerce Ministry has lost the debate, although it isn’t going down
without a fight. After economic data showed the first monthly trade
deficit ($7+ Billion) in 6 years, a press release
argued that, “The continued improvement in our country’s balance of
trade has created the conditions for the renminbi’s exchange rate to
remain basically stable, case received a boost from the March $7 Billion
trade deficit, the first monthly deficit in 6 years.”
At this point, analysts have stopped arguing about whether the
revaluation is necessary (though this debate has not officially been
resolved) and moved on to simply trying to predict the outcome of the
internal Chinese negotiations. Some are skeptical:”Based on off-the-record briefing
from officials in Beijing, one development that does not appear likely
in the short term is any Chinese action to change the currency peg that
ties the renminbi to the dollar.” However, this is contradicted by the
prevailing view among China-watchers, which is that “Beijing will move
on the currency not because they want to placate international pressure
on trade flows but because domestic conditions suggest that such a move
will be in their own interests.”
This is reflected in futures prices, which are now pricing in a 3%
appreciation in the RMB by the end of the year, compared to expectations
of a mere 1.5% appreciation in March. What’s harder to gauge (and
speculate on) is how other currency pairs will be affected. Some
analysts believe that an RMB appreciation will trigger a decline in the
Euro, since China’s currency peg had also necessitated tangential
purchases of Euros: “The euro will be more vulnerable from the perspective that the People’s Bank of China in the past diversified away from Treasuries to buy euro zone bonds.”
Asian currencies should also benefit, since a more expensive Yuan will
trigger a marginal shift of (speculative) capital to regional
competitors, especially those with undervalued currencies. In fact, the Bank of Korea
is already on high alert for any “unusual” (code for sudden
appreciation of the Won) activity in the forex markets, and has
suggested that intervention is always a possibility.
As for me, well, I’m not taking any chances. I just transferred some
of my savings from Dollars into Yuan (of course this wouldn’t really
make sense if I didn’t live in China). I like to think of it as a
rudimentary form of hedging.
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