[list_indonesia] [ppiindia] China, Greenspan rub salt in dollar wound

  • From: "Ambon" <sea@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <"Undisclosed-Recipient:;"@freelists.org>
  • Date: Sat, 12 Mar 2005 11:00:33 +0100

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http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Global_Economy/GC12Dj01.html

 Mar 12, 2005

China, Greenspan rub salt in dollar wound

The US dollar was struggling near a two-month low against the euro on Friday 
as the market braced for fresh trade data that were likely to show a further 
widening of the trade gap. As if this weren't trouble enough for the 
besieged greenback, US Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan stirred up 
the market Thursday night saying foreign investors would reduce their US 
asset holdings at some point, while new findings came to light that China is 
indeed doing so.

Saying he is not "overly" concerned about the record US trade gap or heavy 
consumer debt, Greenspan said the budget deficit gives him the shivers. The 
US current account deficit widened to a record US$164.7 billion from July 
through September, the most recent figures available, equivalent to 5.6% of 
gross domestic product (GDP). "Our current account deficit and household 
debt burdens do not strike me as overly worrisome, but that is certainly not 
the case for our fiscal deficit," Greenspan told the Council on Foreign 
Relations in New York. "Our fiscal prospects are, in my judgment, a 
significant obstacle to long-term stability, because the budget deficit is 
not readily subject to correction by market forces that stabilize other 
imbalances."

According to the high priest of finance, international investors have only 
modestly shifted their portfolios away from dollar assets so far. But he 
warned that they might at some point decide their portfolios are too 
dollar-centric, ominously adding that if the dollar keeps dropping, foreign 
exporters may start looking elsewhere.

Greenspan's comments came close on the heels of Japanese Prime Minister 
Junichiro Koizumi's startling remark on Thursday that Japan needs to 
diversify its foreign-exchange reserves, reviving fears of Asian central 
banks cutting their giant dollar reserves. Any move by Japan, which has the 
largest foreign-exchange reserve in the world ($840 billion), to reduce its 
dollar holdings could be disastrous for the greenback. The dollar has 
already been dropping against the yen for four straight weeks now. Koizumi's 
statement, though later qualified by his finance minister, will only prolong 
the agony.

US dollars accounted for 63.8% of the world's currency reserves at the end 
of 2003, down from 66.9% two years earlier, according to International 
Monetary Fund (IMF) figures released last April. A survey this January 
commissioned by the Royal Bank of Scotland Plc and conducted by London-based 
Central Banking Publications Ltd showed that central banks across the world 
were boosting euro holdings. Almost 70% of the 56 central banks surveyed 
said they had increased exposure to the euro.

Citing a more recent finding, Asia Times Online reported on Thursday (Dollar 
catching Asian flu) that Asian central banks have been quietly switching 
their dollar holdings to regional currencies for at least three years now. 
A study by the Bank of International Settlements (BIS), which acts as a bank 
for the world's central banks, shows that the ratio of dollar deposits held 
in Asian offshore reserves declined to 67% in September, down from 81% in 
the third quarter of 2001. India was the biggest seller, reducing its dollar 
assets from 68% of total reserves to just 43%. China, which directly links 
the yuan to the dollar and is under US pressure to allow a freer movement of 
its currency, trimmed the dollar share from 83% to 68% over the same period.

Bloomberg reported on Friday that according to an estimate by Lehman 
Brothers Holdings Inc, China's central bank has been cutting the share of 
its currency reserves held in dollars and replenishing them with euros. Some 
76% of China's reserves were in dollars last year, down from 82% in 2003, 
said Lehman, the fifth-largest US securities firm.

There has been debate in China on whether it at all needs such a huge 
foreign-exchange reserve. China's forex chief, Guo Shuqing, a member of the 
National Committee of the China Political Consultative Conference (CPCC) and 
director general of the State Administration for Foreign Exchange Management 
(SAFEM), said that as an item of international payments, the growth of the 
foreign-exchange reserve is the result of the macroeconomic operation, but 
not the objective China is particularly pursuing. An adequate 
foreign-exchange reserve is favorable for payment abilities, comprehensive 
national power and creditworthiness, reducing risks of reform and 
safeguarding financial security, he said.

Guo pointed out, however, that excessive growth could be detrimental. In a 
rare and stern warning against the inflow of speculative funds, or "hot 
money", in the name of investment, he told local governments not to lure 
foreign investment "haphazardly". Regulators have been playing down the 
amount and impact of hot money over the past year, but Guo said China might 
see "no end of trouble in the future" unless local governments are acutely 
aware of risk mitigation in soaking in foreign funds.

"China pays great attention to speculative funds," Guo said in an interview 
with Xinhua on the sidelines of the annual session of the National Committee 
of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, China's top 
advisory body. "Foreign-exchange administration departments and other 
macroeconomic departments are investigating the issue and will punish 
illegal activities severely."

China's foreign-exchange reserve added as much as $206.7 billion last year 
alone. Guo said the overall inflow of capital is "normal and legal" and 
reflects the "market scenario", but there are also some "worrisome" 
problems. "Fake foreign investment" is actually being used to purchase 
yuan-denominated assets and commercial housing on speculative purpose, he 
noted. Hot money has pushed housing prices to a very high level, making 
cities look "prosperous" but doing no good to the investment climate, as it 
leads to higher living and business costs. Typically, this means great risks 
for local financial institutions, enterprises and even individuals. When the 
real-estate bubble bursts, they will suffer from huge losses, Guo said. Hot 
money has also sneaked into China under capital accounts or based on no real 
trade, he claimed.

Guo said China's foreign-exchange reserve, second only to Japan's, is quite 
enough to pay the country's debts. But its debts in foreign currency may 
snowball to an amount that engenders "systematic risks". He revealed that 
newly added foreign-exchange reserves last year include $60.6 billion in 
foreign direct investment, $32 billion in trade surplus, $30 billion from 
foreign-exchange clearing under the account of imports and exports by 
enterprises, $35 billion in foreign debts, more than $10 billion in service 
trade surplus, $30 billion in individual asset transfer and earnings being 
brought about, and more than $10 billion in securities investment, among 
others.

Mountains of foreign-exchange reserves have long been an excuse used by some 
countries, especially the United States, to demand appreciation of the yuan, 
which now floats against the US dollar within a narrow band. But Premier Wen 
Jiabao reiterated in his government work report last week that China would 
keep the yuan "basically stable".

(Asia Pulse/XIC)












 



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