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China Jan FX reserves fall below $3 trillion for first time in nearly 6 years

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By Kevin Yao | BEIJING
China's foreign exchange reserves unexpectedly fell below the closely watched $3 trillion level in January for the first time in nearly six years, though tighter regulatory controls appeared to making some progress in slowing capital outflows.

China has taken a raft of steps in recent months to make it harder to move money out of the country and to reassert a grip on its faltering currency, even as U.S. President Donald Trump steps up accusations that Beijing is keeping the yuan too cheap.

Reserves fell $12.3 billion in January to $2.998 trillion, more than the $10.5 billion that economists polled by Reuters had expected.

While the $3 trillion mark is not seen as a firm "line in the sand" for Beijing, concerns are swirling over the speed at which the country is depleting its ammunition, sowing doubts over how much longer authorities can afford to defend both the currency and its reserves.

Some analysts fear a heavy and sustained drain on reserves could prompt Beijing to devalue the yuan as it did in 2015, which could throw global financial markets into turmoil and stoke political tensions with the new U.S. administration.

While Beijing quickly downplayed the fall below the $3 trillion level, the breach could bolster China's argument that it not deliberately devaluing its currency, ahead of the U.S. Treasury's semi-annual report in April on currency manipulators.

To be sure, the January decline was much smaller than the $41 billion reported in December, and was the smallest in seven months, indicating China's renewed crackdown on outflows appears to be working, at least for now.

Economists expect more forceful policing of existing regulatory controls after the latest slide, though China's financial system is notoriously porous, with speculators quickly able to find new channels to get funds out of the country.

"With FX reserves below $3 trillion, we can expect capital controls as well as tightening yuan liquidity to continue, as the authorities try to avoid a further drawdown," said Chester Liaw, an economist at Forecast Pte Ltd in Singapore, referring the central bank's surprise hike in short-term interest rates on Friday.

While the world's second-largest economy still has the largest stash of forex reserves by far, it has burned through over half a trillion dollars since August 2015, when it stunned global investors by devaluing the yuan.

The yuan CNY=CFXS fell 6.6 percent against a surging dollar in 2016, its biggest annual drop since 1994.

The crackdown is threatening to squeeze legitimate business outflows from China as well, with some European companies reporting recently that dividend payments have been put on hold and Chinese firms having a tougher time winning approval for overseas acquisitions.

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In their efforts to reduce outflows, the authorities have so far avoided contentious, high profile measures such as formally re-imposing restrictions on outflows or re-introducing

rules on the sale of U.S. dollar receipts by exporters, for fear of damaging the reputation of China’s reform process," said Louis Kuijs, head of Asia Economics at Oxford Economics.

"Our analysis suggests, however, that they are likely to end up taking such steps eventually."



COULD HAVE BEEN WORSE?

The drop in January's reserves would have been worse if not for a sudden reversal in the surging U.S. dollar in January, some analysts said. The softer dollar boosted the value of non-dollar currencies that Beijing holds.

"Based on our calculation, the FX valuation effect alone would lead to a sizeable increase of reserves by US$28 billion," economists at Citi said in a note.

However, despite tighter capital curbs and a bounce in the yuan, Citi estimated net capital outflows still intensified to nearly $71 billion in January from $51 billion in December.

Adding to the pressure, many Chinese may have exchanged yuan for dollars and other currencies to travel overseas during the long Lunar New Year holidays.

"Today’s FX reserve number suggests that the authorities are willing to trade a relatively stable yuan-dollar exchange rate for falling FX reserves because of financial stability concerns," the economists at Citi added.

The yuan has gained nearly 1 percent against the dollar so far this year.

But currency strategists polled by Reuters expect it will resume its descent soon, falling to near-decade lows, especially if the U.S. continues to raise interest rates, which would trigger fresh capital outflows from emerging economies such as China and test Beijing's enhanced capital controls.

The drop in reserves in January was mainly due to interventions by the central bank as it sold foreign currencies and bought yuan, China's foreign exchange regulator, the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE), said in a statement.

But SAFE said that changes in China's reserves were normal and the market should not pay too much attention to the $3 trillion level.



HOW LOW CAN THEY GO?

While estimates vary widely, some analysts believe China needs to retain a minimum of $2.6 trillion to $2.8 trillion under the International Monetary Fund's (IMF's) adequacy measures.

If the dollar's rally gets back on track, fears of a yuan devaluation would likely spark more intense capital flight.

"The fact that China holds less than $3 trillion in reserves right now means that China has to rethink its intervention strategy," said Zhou Hao, a senior emerging markets economist at Commerzbank in Singapore.

It does not make much sense to keep sharply draining reserves if market expectations of further yuan weakness are unlikely to change, he added.



(Reporting by Beijing Monitoring Desk and Kevin Yao; Editing by Kim Coghill)

http://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-economy-forex-reserves-idUSKBN15M0PH
 
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That's great. Why keep low-yield reserves when the money could be channeled to overseas acquisitions of strategic sectors and industries, strategic materials and oil reserve build-up, more profit-oriented and agile sovereign wealth funds?

No wonder, China's Forex has been in relative decline as SWFs, M&A activity, overseas investment, and strategic reserve build up are all in all-time highs.

The decoupling will likely to continue for the foreseeable future.

@Shotgunner51
 
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That's great. Why keep low-yield reserves when the money could be channeled to overseas acquisitions of strategic sectors and industries, strategic materials and oil reserve build-up, more profit-oriented and agile sovereign wealth funds?

No wonder, China's Forex has been in relative decline as SWFs, M&A activity, overseas investment, and strategic reserve build up are all in all-time highs.

The decoupling will likely to continue for the foreseeable future.

@Shotgunner51
Yes, @Shotgunner51 has reiterated so many times in this forum the importance of alternative methods especially SWFs. It seems there are still members who don't get it.
 
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Peoples Bank of China Added 6.91 Tons of Gold to Reserves in January.
China's gold reserves rose to $71.292 billion at the end of January, from $67.878 billion at end-December as prices rose last month.




 
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Chinese investment targets trade routes
China Daily, February 8, 2017

6c0b840a2e381a04c0fc06.jpg

A ceremony, attended by Chinese and Lao officials, is held to mark the start of China-Laos railway construction in northern Lao city Luang Prabang on Dec 25, 2016. [Photo/Xinhua]

China's overseas acquisitions may press on this year, with new impetus from the Belt and Road Initiative and international expansion of major Chinese companies, analysts said.

"As China has tightened its foreign exchange controls to tackle illegal and reckless activities in overseas markets, the development in countries and regions along the Belt and Road Initiative will become hot places for Chinese investment this year," said Zhang Jianping, director of the Commerce Ministry's research center for regional economic cooperation.

A number of big-ticket infrastructure projects have been launched on the two trading routes, including Sri Lanka's Colombo International Financial City project, the 40 billion yuan ($5.8 billion) China-Laos railway construction project that kicked off in December and the China-Thailand railroad project to be carried out later this year.

Zhang's comments follow a Financial Times report that said $75 billion in overseas mergers and acquisitions involving Chinese enterprises were called off last year. The United States led, with $59 billion in deals scrapped.

Although China's overseas investment hit a record high last year, the total number of mergers and acquisitions that fell through also surged. More than 30 in the US and Europe were halted as a result of regulatory clampdowns. The total value of the canceled deals increased by more than sevenfold from 2015, the report said.

The ministry's Department of Outward Investment and Economic Cooperation said on Tuesday that the $75 billion cited by the Financial Times was much too high and added that it will clarify the situation this week.

Wang Zhile, a senior researcher at the Beijing-based Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation, said many Chinese companies will have advantages in conducting finance and investment activities in global markets this year. The country's overseas direct investment volume will remain stable and diversify this year, Wang said.

"Chinese conglomerates such as Shanghai-based Fosun Group, Dalian Wanda Group and Haikou-based HNA Group have already built financing platforms including an insurance company in the United States and listed companies in Hong Kong's stock exchange via merger and acquisition," said Wang.

Chinese outbound mergers and acquisitions rose globally by 114 percent to $208.6 billion last year compared with 2015. Chinese investment surged by 201 percent in Europe and 412 percent in North America, according to the annual M&A Trends report by the London-based law firm Clifford Chance.

Elaine Lo, head of China practice at Mayer Brown JSM, a global law firm, said the US has already showed its concern about China's rapidly growing investment momentum in overseas markets, especially in the high-end technology and military-related sectors.

"The Trump administration may be even more conservative on China's ODI activities. It won't be changed within a short period," said Lo. "It will also lead to trade protectionism measures. The United Kingdom and Germany may also follow the step of the US government."

Peter Batey, chairman of Vermilion Partners, a global investment bank, said, "As the volume of Chinese outbound acquisitions rises to record heights, it is inevitable that some foreign governments will eventually begin to feel obliged to likewise raise their own levels of scrutiny of such deals."
 
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Chinese investment targets trade routes
China Daily, February 8, 2017

6c0b840a2e381a04c0fc06.jpg

A ceremony, attended by Chinese and Lao officials, is held to mark the start of China-Laos railway construction in northern Lao city Luang Prabang on Dec 25, 2016. [Photo/Xinhua]

China's overseas acquisitions may press on this year, with new impetus from the Belt and Road Initiative and international expansion of major Chinese companies, analysts said.

"As China has tightened its foreign exchange controls to tackle illegal and reckless activities in overseas markets, the development in countries and regions along the Belt and Road Initiative will become hot places for Chinese investment this year," said Zhang Jianping, director of the Commerce Ministry's research center for regional economic cooperation.

A number of big-ticket infrastructure projects have been launched on the two trading routes, including Sri Lanka's Colombo International Financial City project, the 40 billion yuan ($5.8 billion) China-Laos railway construction project that kicked off in December and the China-Thailand railroad project to be carried out later this year.

Zhang's comments follow a Financial Times report that said $75 billion in overseas mergers and acquisitions involving Chinese enterprises were called off last year. The United States led, with $59 billion in deals scrapped.

Although China's overseas investment hit a record high last year, the total number of mergers and acquisitions that fell through also surged. More than 30 in the US and Europe were halted as a result of regulatory clampdowns. The total value of the canceled deals increased by more than sevenfold from 2015, the report said.

The ministry's Department of Outward Investment and Economic Cooperation said on Tuesday that the $75 billion cited by the Financial Times was much too high and added that it will clarify the situation this week.

Wang Zhile, a senior researcher at the Beijing-based Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation, said many Chinese companies will have advantages in conducting finance and investment activities in global markets this year. The country's overseas direct investment volume will remain stable and diversify this year, Wang said.

"Chinese conglomerates such as Shanghai-based Fosun Group, Dalian Wanda Group and Haikou-based HNA Group have already built financing platforms including an insurance company in the United States and listed companies in Hong Kong's stock exchange via merger and acquisition," said Wang.

Chinese outbound mergers and acquisitions rose globally by 114 percent to $208.6 billion last year compared with 2015. Chinese investment surged by 201 percent in Europe and 412 percent in North America, according to the annual M&A Trends report by the London-based law firm Clifford Chance.

Elaine Lo, head of China practice at Mayer Brown JSM, a global law firm, said the US has already showed its concern about China's rapidly growing investment momentum in overseas markets, especially in the high-end technology and military-related sectors.

"The Trump administration may be even more conservative on China's ODI activities. It won't be changed within a short period," said Lo. "It will also lead to trade protectionism measures. The United Kingdom and Germany may also follow the step of the US government."

Peter Batey, chairman of Vermilion Partners, a global investment bank, said, "As the volume of Chinese outbound acquisitions rises to record heights, it is inevitable that some foreign governments will eventually begin to feel obliged to likewise raise their own levels of scrutiny of such deals."

Overseas Chinese acquisitions worth $75 billion cancelled last year
Sunday, 5 Feb 2017 | 6:44 PM ET
Financial Times
CNBC

Chinese overseas deals worth almost $75bn were cancelled last year as a regulatory clampdown and restrictions on foreign exchange caused 30 acquisitions with European and U.S. groups to fall through.

The figures, which reveal a sevenfold rise in the value of cancelled deals from about $10 billion in 2015, highlight a waning appetite for global dealmaking by the world's second-largest economy. But despite more deals being abandoned, the analysis by law firm Baker McKenzie and researcher Rhodium shows that Chinese direct investment into the U.S. and Europe still more than doubled to a record $94.2 billion in 2016.

Sellers of assets in Europe and the U.S. are becoming increasingly wary of large deals with Chinese buyers, according to people involved with several cross-border transactions involving China.

"The Chinese are getting more professional but sellers are giving more priority to potential buyers outside China because of the restrictions imposed on capital," said one person who dealt with mainland buyers.

China notched up a record capital exodus last year, driven by expectations that the renminbi would continue to weaken against the dollar, and as slowing domestic growth diverted investment elsewhere.

Regulators were unnerved as Beijing burnt through dollars to stem currency depreciation, with reserves falling $320 billion last year. In an attempt to save reserves, the foreign exchange watchdog became one of the biggest hurdles for Chinese groups seeking to buy businesses overseas late last year.

Ten U.S. deals worth $58.5bn were scrapped. A Chinese consortium's $3 billion offer for a U.S.-based lighting unit of Philips, the Dutch group, was thwarted by the U.S. Committee on Foreign Investment. U.S. regulatory fears prompted Fairchild Semiconductor to turn down a $2.6 billion bid from state-backed groups China Resources and Hua Capital.

In Europe, 20 deals worth $16.3 billion were cancelled, including the proposed sale of German chip equipment maker Aixtron to Chinese investors for €670 million.

However, Chinese groups are still buying at a rapid pace, given that direct investment was just $2.6 billion a decade ago.

Thomas Gilles, China specialist at Baker McKenzie, said political and regulatory scrutiny in China had made the near-term outlook "more challenging" and made "political risk assessment and regulatory planning" increasingly important for dealmakers.




 
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That's great. Why keep low-yield reserves when the money could be channeled to overseas acquisitions of strategic sectors and industries, strategic materials and oil reserve build-up, more profit-oriented and agile sovereign wealth funds?

No wonder, China's Forex has been in relative decline as SWFs, M&A activity, overseas investment, and strategic reserve build up are all in all-time highs.

The decoupling will likely to continue for the foreseeable future.

@Shotgunner51

Incorrect. Despite higher overseas investment, it DOESN'T explain foreign reserves drawdown.

I will open a new thread about China's current account.
 
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Yes, @Shotgunner51 has reiterated so many times in this forum the importance of alternative methods especially SWFs. It seems there are still members who don't get it.
If you think these experts writing these articles are fools and ignorant, you are wrong.. They well know the financial position , balance of payments and international investment position (IIP) statistics regarding China..

China’s central bank ‘playing dangerous game’ to prop up yuan
China's central bank is playing a dangerous game using the country's foreign reserves to defend the yuan because it could leave the nation defenceless in an increasingly volatile world, a state researcher has warned.
Zhang Ming, senior fellow at the Institute of World Economics and Politics under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said the People's Bank of China (PBOC) should take a hands-off approach to the currency and focus on safeguarding foreign exchange reserves.
"Forex reserves are valuable assets that [China] can use at critical times. It's a pity that they are being sold heavily in the market," Zhang said. "It should be the last resort. Zhang said the PBOC was betting on "the weakening of the US dollar and a domestic economic rebound"The country's forex reserves have shrunk by almost a $1 trillion since June 2014 as the central bank has sought to prevent a large fall in the yuan against the U.S. dollar
Zhang call's for Beijing to reverse tack and abandon its heavy intervention in the foreign exchange market is gaining traction among researchers.
Zhang Bin, another researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, agreed that Beijing should free up controls on the yuan's exchange rate by reducing government intervention in the market.


"Floatation does not mean a large devaluation," he said.
More from the South China Morning Post:
China's three-trillion-dollar question: the yuan or forex reserves?
China should 'stand back and let yuan fall against US dollar before Trump takes office'
China tweaks yuan basket to play down US dollar
"Actually, a one-off devaluation [of the yuan] doesn't need to be big, and [the currency] may rebound as well. By doing this it will help the domestic economy," he said.
Tsinghua University professor Zhu Ning also said earlier that Beijing should let the market determine the yuan's exchange rate.
The prospects of this approach becoming a policy option appear to be rising, especially with the decline in the reserves.


Zhang Ming said the real loss in reserves may be higher than $1 trillion because there were ways the central bank could cover some of its interventions in the market, including borrowing dollars by using its overseas assets as collateral or selling dollars in forward markets. But he added that there was no evidence to prove this had happened.
If the central bank had carried out these actions it was because it was pinning its hopes on the dollar finally weakening, Zhang Ming said.
The country's official foreign exchange reserves stood at just above $3 trillion at the end of last year and Beijing has tightened controls over the capital account by restricting outbound investment and individual foreign exchange purchases, even within the annual quota of $50,000 per person.
The risks of the yuan further depreciating against the U.S. dollar and capital flowing out of China remain high, given the prospect of higher interest rates on U.S. dollar assets and uncertainties over China-U.S. trade conflicts under a hardline new U.S. administration.
The yuan would depreciate against the dollar by "about 5 percent" in 2017, according to Zhang Ming. The yuan lost nearly 7 percent against the dollar last year.
Beijing has proved very sensitive to the yuan's exchange rate.
When there were misreports that the yuan had weakened to less than seven against the US dollar last month, the central bank issued a late-night statement reminding the market that the key psychological level remained unbroken.
The central bank also adopted fresh approaches, rather than merely selling U.S. dollars, to maintain the stability of the Chinese currency.
The yuan exchange rate against the U.S. dollar has strengthened in recent weeks and the daily mid-price was set at 6.8693 in trading in China on Friday.
 

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People have short memory.
Wasn't it 10 years ago during the subprime mortgage crisis that the Western media narrative was that China was being stupid to rack up billions of useless dollars?

What happened? Please enlighten me
 
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This is because China are buying assets all over the world, from Pakistan to USA
 
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It's still very high, China should get ride of dollars before it collapse.
easier said than done, that will make their exports expensive to US. Dollar is not going any where as long as china hoards them. If you entertain any idea of china dumping it, forget about it. Simply think about it, cant they use all the excess money to invest in China and get rid of poverty?
 
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easier said than done, that will make their exports expensive to US. Dollar is not going any where as long as china hoards them. If you entertain any idea of china dumping it, forget about it. Simply think about it, cant they use all the excess money to invest in China and get rid of poverty?

Don't know what point you are trying to make, Thread is about decline in China's reserves not hoarding dollars. And in real world China is pushing for use of Yuans wherever it can do so instead of dollars, it is also doing investments and acquisitions globally, yes China can use the reserves to get ride of remaining poverty and it is also doing so, I didn't suggest that it should burn the reserves.
 
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Don't know what point you are trying to make, Thread is about decline in China's reserves not hoarding dollars. And in real world China is pushing for use of Yuans wherever it can do so instead of dollars, it is also doing investments and acquisitions globally, yes China can use the reserves to get ride of remaining poverty and it is also doing so, I didn't suggest that it should burn the reserves.
Simply put, I said china will not dump dollars what ever happens.
 
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