Just
What Is China Buying?
19
December, 2014
Something
strange is going on in China. On one hand, as the chart below shows,
China's trade surplus is growing and growing, and just hit record
highs. In other words, China is - on paper - receiving record amounts
of foreign currencies in exchange for its (mostly) goods export.
That
much is clear in the Chinese (record) trade balance chart below:
Yet
on the other hand, a chart from Deutsche
Bank shows
something very peculiar: even as China's foreign reserves should
be
rising, they are not only dropping,
but just suffered their biggest quarterly drop in the past decade!
This
validates what the TIC data has shown recently, namely that China has
not only not been adding to US Treasury but reduced its TSY holdings
to the lowest
since February 2013,
and that contrary to what some have alleged, China is not using
Belgium as an offshore-based conduit for Treasury accumulation.
A
bigger question is just what is China buying "off the books"
to account for this reserve decline, amounting to about $100 billion
in Q3, or is this merely due to even more off the books "capital
flight" as some has speculated. Or is China indeed actively
buying commodities - either as shown here previously
for Commodity Funding Deals involving gold or
in physical bulk, perhaps to quietly fill up its new Strategic
Petroleum Reserve (see "Record
Oil Tankers Sailing to China Amid Stockpiling Signs")
- and bypassing the official ledger in doing so. If so, which
commodities is China buying, and how big will the foreign reserve
plunge be in the fourth quarter.
For
the answer to the latter we will check back in a little over a month
when the "official" data is released. As for the former,
one can only speculate.
I understand that China has said it will help Russia if Russia asks for help
China
steps into U.S. currency war against Russia and offers Putin major
support
18
December, 2014
Over
the past month, attacks on both oil and the Rouble have created
economic turmoil around the world, and especially in the economies of
Russia and the European Union. And despite the fact that the United
States has chosen Ukraine as ground zero for instigating pressure
against Russia and the Russian currency, one superpower has sat on
the sidelines until today when on Dec. 17, China stepped forward and
offered full aid and assurances to Russia in their ongoing proxy war
with Washington.
Until
yesterday, Russia was believed to be isolated and under immense
economic pressures from both the U.S. and Europe over what has been
labeled 'aggressions against Ukraine'. However, the underlying truth
is that Ukraine has little or nothing to do with the war on the
Rouble and on the Russian economy, and the U.S. is simply using the
Eurasian country as a scapegoat for Putin's chess moves against the
petro-dollar and America's hegemony over the global reserve currency.
Russia
could fall back on its 150 billion yuan (HK$189.8 billion) currency
swap agreement with China if the rouble continues to plunge.
If
the swap deal is activated for this purpose, it would mark the first
time China is called upon to use its currency to bail out another
currency in crisis. The deal was signed by the two central banks in
October, when Premier Li Keqiang visited Russia.
"Russia
badly needs liquidity support and the swap line could be an ideal
tool," said Bank of Communications chief economist Lian Ping.
The
swap allows the central banks to directly buy yuan and rouble in the
two currencies, rather than via the US dollar.
Two
bankers close to the People's Bank of China said it was meant to
reduce the role of the US dollar if China and Russia need to help
each other overcome a liquidity squeeze.
- South China Morning Post
Most
of the sanctions placed upon Russia oil companies and investment
banks stem primarily from several ground-breaking agreements the
Eurasian state has made this year to facilitate the selling of oil
and other products in currencies other than the dollar. In addition,
Russia has established very strong partnerships with China and the
BRICS coalition to offer alternatives to the dollar and the Western
based systems led by the BIS, IMF, and World Bank, and now have
agreements in place that are tied to more than 40% of the global
population, and contain two of the top 10 largest economies.
Many
have wondered when or if China would enter into the proxy war
Washington has declared on Russia, especially as the U.S. is a much
bigger trading partner than Russia is with China at this time.
However, it appears that China now sees a ripe opportunity to take a
stand contrary to that of America and Europe, and by their move to
support the Russian Rouble has changed the entire shape of the
conflict because now, Russia has the opportunity to completely divest
themselves from the dollar and any potential chaos Wall Street's
hedge funds may bring against their currency by opting to peg the
Rouble to the Yuan, and begin an all out program of no longer selling
their oil in dollars, but in the Yuan, Rouble, and even the Euro.
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