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China sells short-term Treasuries but buys long-term U.S. bonds

posted on February 17, 2010 at 12:52 pm
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China sold U.S. Treasuries in December.

At a record pace. (Well, records for this do only go back to 2000 but still…)

The country sold a net $34.2 billion in Treasuries in the month. That brought China’s holdings of Treasuries to a mere $755.4 billion. That’s down from a peak of $801.5 billion in May 2009.

The decline removed China from its position as the No. 1 holder of U.S. Treasury debt. Japan resumed that position as an increase of 1.5% in December moved its holdings of Treasuries to $768.8 billion.

The net decline of $34.2 billion in China’s Treasury portfolio didn’t exactly show that China is abandoning the U.S. dollar, however.

In the month China sold $38.8 billion in short-term 90-day Treasury bills but purchased $4.6 billion on two to 30 year notes and bonds. That shift into longer-dated U.S. debt certainly doesn’t imply flight from the dollar.

 Instead this seems to be a relatively orderly move that reflects China’s assessment that global financial markets are now safe enough so the country doesn’t need the safety of U.S. Treasury bills quite so much. Especially not when they’re yielding just 0.09%.

The big challenge to the U.S. dollar lies in the months ahead when China removes its renminbi/dollar peg. As long as China keeps the exchange rate pegged at 6.83 renminbi to the dollar in order to support Chinese exports by undervaluing its currency, it has to buy dollars to with renminbi to keep its currency from appreciating against the U.S. dollar. Removing the peg and moving back to the controlled appreciation regime would lessen, but certainly not end, China’s need to buy dollars.

Investment alternatives to Treasuries are likely to include adding more funding to the country’s strategic investment fund, China Investment Corp., increasing investments in overseas sources of raw materials, and providing more funding to Chinese companies for overseas acquisitions. In the current state of the euro and the yen, taking lots of money out of dollars and putting it into those currencies isn’t a terribly attractive alternative.

China’s foreign exchange reserves climbed to $2.4 trillion in December.

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5 comments

  • robert1234 on 17 February 2010

    I read somewhere a few years ago, that Japan has a postal savings, where the people save their life saveings.

    The managers of the postal savings invested the money into US Treasuries, and the USA used the money to buy bombs, to bomb the hell out of the people of Iraq for these wars.

    Now the life savings of the people of Japan has been converted into bombs, and the US has no way to pay the debt back,,,,and the Japanese people have yet to find out about it.

  • EdMcGon on 17 February 2010

    robert,
    If true, the irony in that is overwhelming.

  • chemace on 17 February 2010

    if it was true what is worse. that the U.S. did it or that robert1234 inteeligence resource’s are better than Japan’s

  • chemace on 17 February 2010

    of course i cant spell

  • rolfer1 on 23 February 2010

    Jim,

    What is your opinion of the Wisdom Tree Chinese Yuan ETF (CYB)? It uses derivatives to mimic the movement of the renminbi against the U.S. dollar. Will it work and, if the peg is removed, will the appreciation in the ETF correspond to the currency movement?

    Thank you for your feedback on this.

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