Thursday, March 1, 2012

Chinese News

DOLLAR SHARE OF CHINA FX RESERVES DIVES TO 54% IN JUNE FROM 65% IN 2010

By Tom Orlik


BEIJING (Dow Jones)--China has made a sharp shift away from purchases of U.S securities, slashing the dollar's share of the country's foreign reserves in what may signal a change in strategy for managing the massive cash pile, Dow Jones calculations indicate.
The portion of China's reserves parked in the U.S. appears to have sunk to a decade low 54% as of end-June from 65% in 2010 and 74% in 2006, according to the Dow Jones calculations. The calculations are based on data on China's holdings of U.S. securities from an annual U.S. Treasury survey, and China's own data on the value of its FX reserves.
The exact allocation of China's $3.2 trillion reserves--by far the world's biggest war chest--has always been a mystery. But the Treasury survey provides the best guide as to how much the State Administration of Foreign Exchange--the organization charged with managing those reserves--has invested in dollar assets.
Given the size of China's reserves, and the growing global importance of the world's second-biggest economy, Beijing's allocation of its reserves is both a key political issue and a potentially huge factor for foreign-exchange and sovereign debt markets.
The U.S. data show China's holdings of U.S securities edged up $115 billion on year to $1.726 billion at the end of June, but this equates to a much smaller share of the total as China's reserves were growing rapidly during the period. The purchases of U.S. securities equaled just 15% of the growth in China's reserves, a substantial fall from 45% in 2010 and an average of 63% over the last five years.
Calculating the dollar's share in the allocation of flows into China's reserves is complicated by the impact of currency movements on the value of China's reserves. But even accounting for valuation effects, the downshift in dollar purchases appears pronounced.
The new numbers lend credibility to hints from Chinese and European government officials over the last two years that Beijing is ramping up its purchases of European sovereign debt. In February, speaking at the EU-China summit Premier Wen Jiabao said, "Europe is a main investment destination for China to diversify its foreign exchange reserves."
As the euro-zone crisis rumbles on, it suggests that funds from China's reserves could be a critical factor in keeping a lid on rising bond yields in the debt-ridden euro-zone periphery, and in funding Europe's bailout facilities.
Analysts caution that the U.S. data need to be taken with a grain of salt. The Treasury International Capital system collects data on millions of records to calculate foreign holdings of U.S. securities. But correcting for biases in the data, in particular correctly identifying country ownership of securities held in custody in third countries, is difficult. Typically the result of this bias is to underestimate China's holdings of Treasurys.

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