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Yuan Floats; U.S. Gloats

Introduction

 
The BIG news yesterday was China floating the Yuan. The Bandit's agent, Treasury Sec Snow, has been after them to do that for months and months. So have Democrats, Labor Unions and most other "right thinking" people on Wall Street.

The BIG news today is "Gee, I didn't think of that." Of course, whatever was not thought in Washington and Wall St has been adequately presented in the responsible financial press.

The Wall St Journal (subscription required) has a number of articles on the subject: the semi-optimistic lead, the pro-Bandit buck-up, and it really won't hurt. The New York Times has a more sober analysis of what this means.

 

 

The Wall St Journal's "financial news" cannot be believed any longer, another victim of the Bandit's iron loyalty collar. At first, this morning, WSJ published a "second thoughts" article about the revaluing of the Yuan. Later in the morning, the article was revised to reflect support for Administration policy. The main point we should derive from that reading is that the Bandit triumphed over evil; i.e., China.

Putting aside all the speculation and posturing, I think the important facts are evident. The Yuan was raised about 2% compared to the U.S. dollar. The Chinese Central Bank will manage the currency according to its own purposes. (The U.S. Federal Reserve Bank manages the dollar according to its own policies.)

The American press has ignored an important consequence of this move: by relatively devaluing the dollar, China discounted its U.S. Treasury holdings by 2%. Since Americans have been buying in volume from China on credit, China holds huge amounts of Treasury notes (IOUs) - more than $200 billion worth. Those IOUs have been reduced in value by floating the Yuan; i.e., the U.S. government was given a $4+ billion gift. That's why they're gloating in Washington. They're also gloating in Washington because they believe they bent the Chinese to their will.

But, beware Chinese bearing gifts. The Yuan has been floated against a basket of currencies which the Chinese Central Bank controls secretly. This implies the Chinese are not giving away $4 billion and more without hope of recovery. They will trade in the currencies markets, where they have the opportunity to sell their American holdings to some sucker or other, in favor of more solid currencies such as the Euro, Pound or Yen. Since oil is traded in dollars - the Saudis are hooked on that - the Chinese could unload a lot of dollars by buying Arab oil. Net effect: the dollar is going to sink a lot more, which will keep oil prices up.

Important note: If the Chinese unload a significant portion of those IOUs, which are used to float the Bandit's huge budget deficits, the U.S. government will have to borrow from others at much higher interest rates. That's the way it was under Reagan-Bush; a problem Bill Clinton solved by raising taxes.

There is a rapidly developing consensus that the rising Yuan will support other Asian currencies as well. While there may be an initial drop in the Japanese Yen, in a year or so the Yen and even Indian Rupees will probably appreciate. Of course, that will move up prices in the United States, because it will be more expensive to buy imported goods. American firms will continue their outsourcing, not hire domestic workers, because the weakening dollar makes it more (not less) profitable to invest overseas and keep the profits there. So, there will be greater rewards for those Americans who invest abroad, and much less for those who can't or won't invest.

The Federal Reserve is determined to raise interest rates until they are neutral; i.e., in balance with growth and inflation. Since we will probably have more inflation, due to the decreasing value of the dollar, rates will keep on getting higher (unless the Fed changes its policy). At some point, this will kill the housing boom, which was engineered by the Fed. Since the driving component of the U.S. economy for several years has been housing, and little else, another recession is likely. (The odds are 65+% in the next year.)

The enemies of China are having their day. I think they will come to rue the day they demanded floating the Yuan. In the end, it will make China stronger and the United States weaker. Moreover, the ultimate consequence will be the fall of Taiwan. Most Americans don't watch Central China TV (CCTV). I do. Beijing has been on a tear about ONE CHINA POLICY, including a spine-chilling threat to use nuclear weapons to recover the island. (I hope the Taiwanese achieve independence.)

I put on one of my favorite CDs the other day: BOB DYLAN'S GREATEST HITS. Among them: "Like A Rolling Stone." Check it out, America, 'you're all alone now', 'how does it feel?' What about 'an offer you can't refuse' ...

From NYT ...
 

China's Opaque Currency Policy

By KEITH BRADSHER

Published: July 22, 2005

An old Chinese saying holds that the longest journey begins with the first step, but in the case of China's currency policy shift yesterday, the destination of the journey has been left completely unclear and the chosen route has many risks.

China has abandoned one of the world's clearest currency policies, a tightly managed peg of the Yuan to the dollar that had endured since 1997. China has chosen instead to adopt one of the world's most opaque currency policies, with a secret mechanism to reset the Yuan's value each night.

For nearly eight years, Beijing's leaders trusted in Alan Greenspan, assuming that where the dollar went, China could safely follow. Now China's rulers are putting their trust in a much less well-known central banker: Zhou Xiaochuan, the governor of the People's Bank of China, who must manage the more discretionary policy put in place yesterday. Starting with the Asian financial crisis in 1997 and continuing through the rapid economic expansion since then, China has allowed the Yuan to vary less than one-hundredth of a percent from its peg of 8.277 to the dollar. That impressive stability helped prompt business executives and entrepreneurs from around the world to invest $60 billion a year in new factories and other operations in China. These investors were confident that they knew what those businesses and their exports would be worth in dollars.

The People's Bank of China raised the value of the Yuan by 2 percent on yesterday, to 8.11 to the dollar. But more important, the bank said that each evening, it would set a new trading range for the Yuan to move within on the next trading day. To add to the uncertainty, each day's new range may not necessarily be expressed in terms of dollars, the bank warned. It did not provide examples, but the euro would be the most likely alternative.

To determine the new peg, the central bank will look at how a basket of foreign currencies moved the day before. But the central bank did not reveal which currencies it will track or their relative weightings within the basket. This policy gives enormous discretion to China's leaders to push the Yuan up or down as they choose.

The only limit that the central bank put on its moves was a promise yesterday that the center of each day's trading range would not move more than 0.3 percent in either direction from the center of the previous day's range. But with 20 or so trading days in a month, that means China could in theory push its currency up by 6 percent a month - or push it down by the same amount.

Senior officials in China said in interviews last month that they were seriously considering the adoption of a so-called secret basket of currencies, an approach already followed by Singapore in setting the value of the Singapore dollar. But the officials also acknowledged that the secrecy of this approach carried a serious risk: it leaves China vulnerable to accusations from the United States and other countries that it is manipulating its currency so as to gain an advantage in trade.

The United States Treasury came close in May to labeling China as a currency manipulator and demanded that China allow its currency to appreciate before the next official review in October; countries categorized as manipulators can be subject to trade sanctions.

Economists disagreed yesterday about how much change China would allow over the next few months in the value of its currency. Nicholas R. Lardy, a China expert at the Institute for International Economics in Washington, said that Chinese central bankers had had the legal discretion for years to let the Yuan move in a wider range against the dollar, and had chosen not to exercise it.

But Liang Hong, an economist in the Hong Kong office of Goldman Sachs, predicted that China would allow the Yuan to rise gradually against the dollar. She compared the new policy to China's currency policy in late 1994, when Beijing first pegged the Yuan to the dollar and then allowed it to crawl upward by a small fraction of 1 percent each trading day. This resulted in a total increase of 3 percent in 1994 and smaller increases thereafter.

For American consumers, China's new policy is unlikely to have much effect unless it is followed by much bigger currency moves in the months to come. Chinese exporters making everything from clothing to computers incur much of their costs in dollars, importing essentials like fuel, factory machinery and computer chips.

This will mean that the overall costs of good manufactured by Chinese producers will rise by considerably less than 2 percent, limiting their need to raise prices to American retailers. Moreover, China is strongest in the production of cheap goods like toys and T-shirts for which the wholesale price paid to the factory in China may be only a quarter of the price charged by a store in the United States. The stores charge much higher prices because they pay rents and wages at American levels.

"Prices in our stores are not changing any time soon," Amy Wyatt, a Wal-Mart spokeswoman, said.

Rival exporters in Asia, mostly countries with low-wage work forces like China's, are expecting the Yuan's rise to bring them little relief from the relentless expansion of Chinese companies in world markets. "They will not increase their prices unless it really shoots up farther," said Annisul Huq, a textile magnate in Bangladesh.

Executives from more than a dozen Chinese companies said in interviews over the last four months that they expected very little impact on their exports if the yuan rose less than 5 percent, and only a modest effect if it rose by 5 to 10 percent.

A big question mark hanging over China's currency policy shift is not commercial but financial, economists said. If investors decide that China's secret currency policy will result in a stronger Yuan, then they are likely to pour even more money into China - a step that could feed inflation in China and make many Chinese long for the days when China still paid more heed to Mr. Greenspan than Mr. Zhou.

 

 

WalterB - clock 11:29:40 - Friday, 07/22/2005

Last update: 11/11/2007

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