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China Foreign Reserves$3,660 billionJumped To The Highest In Two Years

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Daily Forex Fundamentals

Written by ICN.com

Oct 15 13 02:23 GMT

China's foreign reserves inclined in the third quarter of this year to the highest in two years, signaling the Chinese market became a safe-haven for investors. The foreign reserves jumped to $3.66 trillion in the quarter ended September from $3.5 trillion.

The released data showed that measures taken by the Chinese government to support the business environment, had a positive effect on the reputation of the world's second largest economy, as it remained the economy with suitable and attractive environment for investments.

Moreover, this came amid a wave of capital withdrawals from other economies such as India and Indonesia, in addition to instability seen in the United States, which gave a chance for China to become the target of investors.

Higher foreign reserves came along with higher yuan value that inclined for five straight quarters, which may force the People's Bank of China to interfere in the currencies market to put an end for the yuan's appreciation, in order to maintain the competitive advantage of Chinese exports.

China Foreign Reserves Jumped To The Highest In Two Years - Action Forex
 
Taking into account of the FX reserves of Hong Kong($303.5 bn),Macau($16.31 bn)and Taiwan($412.61 bn),the total is close to 4400 billion USD。:coffee:
 
You do realize that this is actually a not very good thing for China right?

You mean it is the envy of our southern neighbour?:azn:

Good or bad, it is for others to judge. Even a coin has two sides. Same for having high FX reserves.

It certainly helps the yuan, which should be gaining against the likes of the USD as our productivity improves.

I don't buy the argument that an appreciating yuan would inevitably lead to weaker exports.

Also only 1/3 of China's FX reserves are denominated in USD(US debt and all that).

It is always good to have international investors express confidence in your economy.

The so-called hot money issue is only for the small and the weak.
 
China central bank underlines reform push with record yuan despite weak exports:tup:

Published: Monday, 14 Oct 2013

China's central bank appears to have underlined its commitment to currency reform by allowing the yuan to set record highs against the dollar despite signs of unexpected weakness in exports.

The yuan hit a second consecutive record intraday high of 6.1011 on Tuesday, after the People's Bank of China set its mid-point - the center of the currency's 2 percent daily trading band - at an all-time peak the previous day.

The currency moves came hot on the heels of official data showing Chinese exports slid in September by 0.3 percent from a year earlier.

The export figures confounded expectations for a 6 percent rise and marked the worst performance in three months.

A stronger yuan is a key goal for policymakers trying to wean the economy off a heavy emphasis on exports more towards consumption-led growth.

But they face complaints from Chinese exporters that the yuan's enduring strength is putting their products at a disadvantage in overseas markets even as foreign demand remains tepid.

The yuan is up around 2 percent in 2013, in marked contrast to slides posted by other Asian currencies, and more than 35 percent higher since a revaluation in 2005.

"Domestic businesses hope there won't be more rises for the yuan, because exports are still really weak. If the yuan keeps rising, the results could be really ugly," said a currency trader at a European bank in Shanghai.

In addition, the unexpected weakness in September's exports raised fresh concerns that economic growth - which has fallen in nine of the last 10 quarters - could stumble once again just as it has shown signs of picking up.

A similar surprise dip in exports occurred in June and analysts said at the time that the yuan's strength was partly to blame.

Some economists predicted the central bank would be forced to let the yuan slip back, at least symbolically. Instead, it held a firm line.

The currency has also risen in trade-weighted terms every month since Sept 2012 until finally declining slightly in August, data from the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) shows. BIS data for September should be released later this week.

Are the bulls back?

The spot yuan market has been tightly range-bound since mid-August. The exchange rate has been mostly steady with minimal intraday volatility, so the recent breakout has startled market participants.

"I must say I find it really strange," said a forex dealers at a joint-stock bank in Shanghai. "Fundamentally there's no major factor to push up the yuan. Maybe Big Brother (the PBOC) has stopped interfering, and so the dollar is sliding. We'll have to wait for the afternoon to see if this is sustained."

Traders attributed the market's previous torpor to regular dollar-buying by major state-owned banks, which effectively held back the yuan from appreciating, and many speculated that this was conducted on secret behest of the central bank in order to hold the spot rate flat even while it raised the midpoint.

Some suggested the government was setting the stage for another widening of the official daily trading band - currently 1 percent either side of the midpoint - to allow more two-way movement in the rate, increasing risk and by extension discouraging further aggressive speculation in the currency by Chinese corporations.

However, the yuan broke out of its range-bound cocoon on Monday, moving 1.15 basis points, or 0.015 yuan, in relatively high trading volumes over the course of the day to mark the widest intraday range since Aug. 19.

Need for stability

Despite exporters' complaints Beijing's reformers see a stronger yuan as key to moving China to an economic model focused on producing higher-quality goods for domestic consumption, instead of churning out low-grade exports competing only on price.

A stronger Chinese currency would also discount dollar-denominated energy imports, make it cheaper to acquire overseas companies, and reduce the need for Beijing to maintain massive dollar reserves - the result of years of market intervention to rein in the pace of the yuan's appreciation.

This last policy has come under increasing criticism inside China as the dollar index, which measures the currency against major counterparties, has lost ground and Chinese confidence in the U.S. political ability to meet its outstanding debt obligations has been shaken by repeated budget impasses.

A strong yuan is also seen as beneficial for another key project: to increase the usage of China's currency in international trade and in so doing reduce currency transaction risk for Chinese firms and further diminish China's need to hoard dollars.

Still, China's economic restructuring is far from complete - in fact, economic data so far has shown little evidence of change in the underlying drivers of growth - and export-focused businesses remain major employers.

Part of the reason for the central bank's apparent indifference to the trade data is that the exports fall from a year earlier may not be indicative of a major economic problem.

Exports actually rose from the month earlier and Louis Kuijs and Tiffany Qiu, economists at Royal Bank of Scotland, cautioned that speculative hot money inflows disguised as trade had distorted the year earlier figures.

These inflows artificially inflated export figures beginning in late 2012 and early 2013, creating an inaccurately high basis for comparison.

"The underlying picture is not as bad as the headline data suggest," they wrote, estimating September's exports actually rose 1.7 percent compared with a year earlier once the distortions are subtracted.

China central bank underlines reform push with record yuan despite weak exports
 
You mean it is the envy of our southern neighbour?:azn:

Good or bad, it is for others to judge. Even a coin has two sides. Same for having high FX reserves.

It certainly helps the yuan, which should be gaining against the likes of the USD as our productivity improves.

I don't buy the argument that an appreciating yuan would inevitably lead to weaker exports.

Also only 1/3 of China's FX reserves are denominated in USD(US debt and all that).

It is always good to have international investors express confidence in your economy.

The so-called hot money issue is only for the small and the weak.

It is quite opposite of what you are thinking.

While having a good amount of foreign reserve is necessary to maintain a health economy, having execessive foreign reserve is actually quite damaging to one's economy especially for country like China that its currency is not freely exchanged. China's foreign reserve mainly come from its trade surplus with other countries, so to simplify the matter let's assume this surplus comes from just one company's export. Since this export is paid with foreign currency, the company in turn has to exchange it back to RMB with the government. The only way for government to paid the exporting company in RMB it has no other means but actually to print the exact amount of RMB to exchange the foreign currency that this export generates. So in the end this become a unnecessary money supply in M2. If you don't know why this is actually dangerous then I don't know what to say.

Another thing is that this this 3.6 trillion USD reserve that China has as an asset is actually not generating any interests or profit at all besides from the bank itself. There are too little to buy or invest from the world compare to the amount it has, that is why China has no other choice but to buy US bonds. It is not even an option.
 
We need to buy not only financial assets (US bonds, EU bonds, Japanese bonds) but we should buy gold, energy (oil and gas), raw materials (iron ore, copper, aluminium, zinc and lead) and technology companies.
 
You mean it is the envy of our southern neighbour?:azn:

Good or bad, it is for others to judge. Even a coin has two sides. Same for having high FX reserves.

It certainly helps the yuan, which should be gaining against the likes of the USD as our productivity improves.

I don't buy the argument that an appreciating yuan would inevitably lead to weaker exports.

Also only 1/3 of China's FX reserves are denominated in USD(US debt and all that).

It is always good to have international investors express confidence in your economy.

The so-called hot money issue is only for the small and the weak.

Evidence?

It's more like 2/3rds, with the rest being Euro.

It is quite opposite of what you are thinking.

While having a good amount of foreign reserve is necessary to maintain a health economy, having execessive foreign reserve is actually quite damaging to one's economy especially for country like China that its currency is not freely exchanged. China's foreign reserve mainly come from its trade surplus with other countries, so to simplify the matter let's assume this surplus comes from just one company's export. Since this export is paid with foreign currency, the company in turn has to exchange it back to RMB with the government. The only way for government to paid the exporting company in RMB it has no other means but actually to print the exact amount of RMB to exchange the foreign currency that this export generates. So in the end this become a unnecessary money supply in M2. If you don't know why this is actually dangerous then I don't know what to say.

Another thing is that this this 3.6 trillion USD reserve that China has as an asset is actually not generating any interests or profit at all besides from the bank itself. There are too little to buy or invest from the world compare to the amount it has, that is why China has no other choice but to buy US bonds. It is not even an option.

The solution is for China to use the US dollar as it's currency. :rofl:
 
Buy something useful...

Sea ports, oil fields, famous football teams, German engineering factories and etc...

Daily Forex Fundamentals

Written by ICN.com

Oct 15 13 02:23 GMT

China's foreign reserves inclined in the third quarter of this year to the highest in two years, signaling the Chinese market became a safe-haven for investors. The foreign reserves jumped to $3.66 trillion in the quarter ended September from $3.5 trillion.

The released data showed that measures taken by the Chinese government to support the business environment, had a positive effect on the reputation of the world's second largest economy, as it remained the economy with suitable and attractive environment for investments.

Moreover, this came amid a wave of capital withdrawals from other economies such as India and Indonesia, in addition to instability seen in the United States, which gave a chance for China to become the target of investors.

Higher foreign reserves came along with higher yuan value that inclined for five straight quarters, which may force the People's Bank of China to interfere in the currencies market to put an end for the yuan's appreciation, in order to maintain the competitive advantage of Chinese exports.

China Foreign Reserves Jumped To The Highest In Two Years - Action Forex
 
We need to buy not only financial assets (US bonds, EU bonds, Japanese bonds) but we should buy gold, energy (oil and gas), raw materials (iron ore, copper, aluminium, zinc and lead) and technology companies.

Yes, we should buy any and all assets across the globe, as long as they have some kind of value to us.

Resources and technology companies should be on the top of the list. Including land resources like the farmland we bought in Ukraine and Ireland.

Much better than USD or US bonds.
 
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