China
And Japan Dropping Dollar Cross Rate System, Will Transact Directly
26
May, 2012
While
various three letter economic schools of thought continue sprouting
left and right, in an attempt to validate endless spending predicated
on one simple thing: transitory reserve currency status, and we
emphasize transitory,
reality moves on, oblivious of what economic theoreticians believe
it should be
doing.
As
Yomiuri Shimbun reported last night, China and Japan are set to
launch direct currency trading, bypassing the dollar, and the
associated benefits and
risks,
entirely. "But how can that be?" dollar purists will
scream. After all, when one bypasses the dollar, one commits
blasphemy to a reserve currency. Somehow we think China gets that.
"Japan
and China are expected to start direct trading of their currencies as
early as June as part of efforts to boost bilateral trade and
investment, according to reports. With the planned step, exchange
rates between the yen and the yuan will be determined by their
transactions, departing from the current "cross rate"
system that involves the dollar in setting yen-yuan rates, Kyodo News
said on Saturday."
More
specifics on how the world's second and third largest economy will
just say no to dollar hegemony:
The two governments are eyeing setting up markets in Tokyo and Shanghai, the Yomiuri Shimbun said.
The yen-yuan exchange system would help businesses in the world's second- and third-largest economies reduce risks associated with exchange rate fluctuations in the dollar and cut transaction costs, Kyodo said.
It will be the first time that China has allowed a major currency except the dollar to directly trade with the yuan, Kyodo said.
As
usual, why spend time commeting with words, when a simple chart will
suffice.
Chinese Chaos Is The Immediate Threat To The Dollar
John Aziz of Azizonomics
In
twenty or thrity years, I expect future monetary historians looking
back on this period of history to frequently misquote
Ernest Hemingway:
How did the dollar die? First it died slowly — then all at once.
The
slow death began with the dollar’s birth as a global reserve
currency. America was creditor and manufacturer to the world, and the
capitalist superpower. People around the globe transacted
overwhelmingly in dollars. Above all else, people needed dollars to
conduct trade, and they were willing to pay richly for them, and for
dollar-denominated debt.
By
the ’90s America began enjoying a tremendous free lunch — the
world provided America with goods, resources and services, and
Americans provided the global reserve currency, as well as acting as
world military policing global shipping. Why manufacture at home, or
produce resources at home when the world wants your currency? To get
what you want, all you have to do is run your printing press —
which was much easier after 1971, when Nixon ended the gold exchange
standard. In a flat free-trade world, supply chains and technology
agglomerated wherever the labour was cheapest, which was
predominantly Asia. So America let her industrial base and her
domestic supply webs degenerate, to enjoy the free lunch that the
dollar brought:
The
next leg of the story is that foreigners realised that actually maybe
the necessity of the dollar was an illusion. With America no longer
the world’s manufacturer or creditor, who needs America? If you
need a consumer, there are billions of people and trillions of
dollars, and trillions of dollars worth of resources in Asia, and
South America, and Europe. America’s government is deeply-indebted,
and its military is bogged-down in difficult conflicts around the
world.
As
Ron Paul noted:
We are like a man who used to be rich and is in the habit of paying for everybody’s meals and announces at a lavish dinner that he will pay the bill, only to then turn to the fellow sitting nearby and say, “Can I use your credit card? I will pay you back!”
While
fund managers continue to refer to the dollar and the US treasury as
a safe haven, America’s sovereign creditors seem to feel quite
differently.
As Zhang
Jianhua of the People’s Bank of China put
it:
No asset is safe now. The only choice to hedge risks is to hold hard currency — gold.
The
shift away from the dollar has quickly manifested itself in bilateral
and multilateral agreements between nations to ditch the dollar for
bilateral and multilateral trade, beginning with the chief
antagonists China and Russia, and continuing through Iran, India,
Japan, Brazil, and Saudi Arabia.
So
the ground seems to have fallen out from beneath the petrodollar
world order.
Yet
at the same time, the powers moving away from the dollar have a lot
invested in the system. The two biggest sovereign holders of US
treasuries are Japan and China. China alone holds $3 trillion of US
currency, and $1 trillion of debt. They have no reason to crash the
value of their own assets. Their planned
endgame appears
to be a slow, phased and managed transition to a new global reserve
currency. China wants to gradually reduce their exposure to America,
transferring to harder assets.
Yet
history rarely turns out how nations have planned, and China itself
seems increasingly beset with domestic problems.
China’s biggest banks may fall short of loan targets for the first time in at least seven years as an economic slowdown crimps demand for credit, three bank officials with knowledge of the matter said.
A decline in lending in April and May means it’s likely the banks’ total new loans for 2012 will be about 7 trillion yuan ($1.1 trillion), less than an estimated government goal of 8 trillion yuan to 8.5 trillion yuan, said one of the officials, declining to be identified because the person isn’t authorized to speak publicly. Banks are relying on small and mid-sized companies for loan growth after demand from the biggest state- owned borrowers dropped, the people said.
The drying up of loan demand attests to the severity of China’s slowdown and may add pressure on Premier Wen Jiabao to cut interest rates and expand stimulus measures. The economy may grow in 2012 at its slowest pace in 13 years, a Bloomberg News survey showed last week, as Europe’s debt crisis curbs exports, manufacturing shrinks and demand for new homes wanes.
China
may be a manufacturing powerhouse, and the spider at the heart of
global trade, but its domestic and social order looks in a state of
disarray, pock-marked with ghost
cities, industrial
accidents and ecological
disasters.
And throwing stimulus money into an economy already recording
screeching inflation will be like throwing
fuel onto a fire.
As
the Chinese (and wider Asian) economic picture becomes bleaker,
pressure will grow on politicians to take more drastic and rash
measures. They may try to rally the disaffected behind them with an
increasingly confrontational nationalistic attitude to America. And
unable to match America militarily, their major outlet would be
economic warfare — competitive devaluation, threats, tariffs,
export controls, and an all-out assault on the dollar reserve
standard. Additionally, American policymakers also encumbered with
huge economic problems may look to economic warfare as policy — the
standout example is Mitt
Romney’s desire to
brand China as a currency manipulator for accumulating US treasuries
and impose tariffs, even while the Treasury upgrades
the PBOC to primary dealer status.
This
brewing firestorm suggests that rather than the gradual transition
that all parties claim to desire we are likely to see a much faster
and more volatile one. I don’t know which straw will break the
camel’s back, but it is likely to come sooner, rather than later.
First slowly — now all at once.
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