by dr_doom » Fri 20 Oct 2006, 08:55:46
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('AgentR', '
')If you look at valuation of Yuan vs US$ over the last few years, you'll see a trend where China was previously pegging the Yuan very harshly, then they let it rise a little, and now they are letting it rise a little bit each month with the negative rate of return on held dollars, seeming to be very closely matched with the positive rate of return of US Bonds. So I see a very basic Chinese ethic at play here.
1) Destruction of principal is a mortal sin. ie, they take you out the back door and put a bullet in your head.
2) Anything Westerners can tolerate taking 5 years to do, China can tolerate taking 50 years to do.
So where our instinct/culture would say bet big, try it fast, and use it like a weapon, Chinese instinct/culture says, we own x-odd billion US$; and at the end of this exercise, we want to be able to buy the same amount of stuff with whatever we end up with, as we can today.
This all tells *me* that the rate of change in the exchange rate between Yuan and US$ will try to stay even with the rate of return of US Bonds; thus nothing will happen fast.
You're quite right, and this is why the chinese are using their accumulated dollars
to buy anything tangible they can lay their hands on. Be it commmodities like copper,
gold, cement, etc. Or strategical assets such as oil infrastructure.
China are quite happy to not do anything rash, and let their superior
strategies play out smoothly. World events could force them to play their hand.
If the US was to attack Iran, where China has invested $200bn in oil/gas,
China could either retaliate with a nuclear strike (not worth thinking about),
or they could retaliate flooding the market with US T-bonds, simultaneously
destroying the value of US-debt and the currency.
Without the USD as the world's reserve currency, america would no longer be able to
operate the world's biggest military.
The other possibilities are the USD suffering a loss of confidence, which is happening
gradually at the moment, but could accelerate. The Fed could monetise the chinese debt,
all of which would have the same end result.