| China Buying more European Debt, less US.. |
| Tuesday, 21 June 2011 | ||
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China began diversifying away from the US dollar in earnest in the first four months of this year, most likely by buying far more European government debt than US dollar assets, according to estimates from Standard Chartered Bank. Beijing, however, routes purchases through custodian banks and overseas financial centres, such as London and Hong Kong, to disguise its offshore dealings. Standard Chartered compared China’s inflow of new foreign exchange reserves to net purchases of US government debt by buyers in China, Hong Kong and London. These purchases fell dramatically in the first four months of this year to $46bn – equivalent to just 24 per cent of the $196bn in foreign exchange that China accumulated over the same period. Mr Green said it was possible that China had found a way to disguise its purchases of US government debt – or could be buying riskier US assets that don’t show up in monthly data. In recent months, Chinese leaders have repeatedly pledged to aid European countries struggling with sovereign debt crises. “Even if Beijing were not concerned about the US fiscal situation and/or the US dollar, the yields on offer in the euro market would likely be attractive enough for it to diversify into Europe at the margin,” Mr Green said. There is no sign China is reducing its existing holdings of US dollar assets, remaining the largest foreign owner of US securities, with $1,611bn by June 30 2010, according to the US Treasury. |
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