Sunday, April 24, 2011

China floats the idea of selling two-thirds of its US debt. Say, I wonder what will happen to gas and food prices when that happens?

With Ben Bernanke's "Quantitative Easing" 2.0 coming to an end, this news from China could represent the proverbial 'perfect storm'.

China Proposes To Cut Two Thirds Of Its $3 Trillion In USD Holdings


All those who were hoping global stock markets would surge tomorrow based on a ridiculous rumor that China would revalue the CNY by 10% will have to wait. Instead, China has decided to serve the world another surprise...

...China appears to be getting ready to cut its USD reserves by roughly the amount of dollars that was recently printed by the Fed, or $2 trillion or so. And to think that this comes just as news that the Japanese pension fund will soon be dumping who knows what. So, once again, how about that "end of QE" again?

...Xia Bin, a member of the monetary policy committee of the central bank, said ... that China should invest its foreign exchange reserves more strategically, using them to acquire resources and technology needed for the real economy...

And as if the public sector making it all too clear what is about to happen was not enough, here is the private one as well:

...China should reduce its excessive foreign exchange reserves and further diversify its holdings, Tang Shuangning, chairman of China Everbright Group, said on Saturday... Tang's remarks echoed the stance of Zhou Xiaochuan, governor of China's central bank, who said on Monday that China's foreign exchange reserves "exceed our reasonable requirement" and that the government should upgrade and diversify its foreign exchange management using the excessive reserves...

...While China is certainly tired of recycling US Dollars, it still has no viable alternative... But that will all change very soon. Once the push for broad Chinese currency acceptance is in play, the CNY and the USD will be unpegged, promptly followed by China dumping the bulk of its USD exposure, and also sending the world a message that US debt is no longer a viable investment opportunity.

In fact, we are confident that the reval is a likely a key preceding step to any strategic decision vis-a-vis US FX exposure (read bond purchasing/selling intentions). As such, all those Americans pushing China to revalue, may want to consider that such an action could well guarantee hyperinflation, once the Fed is stuck as being the only buyer of US debt.

Expect commodity prices -- especially oil and food -- to continue compensating for the insane fiscal policies of the current administration. By that I mean they will skyrocket.

What Obama and the Democrats have done with their deficit spending is truly awful. They have levied the most oppressive tax possible on the poor and middle class, making food and transportation far more expensive than under the evil Bush administration.

Remember in 2012.


6 comments:

Joel said...

Hey Doug, always appreciated your blog, especially your wit and satire. On this post, you provided no links. Could you please do so? Was this a WSJ article or IBD, or AP?

Joel said...

Hey Doug, always appreciated your blog, especially your wit and satire. On this post, you provided no links. Could you please do so? Was this a WSJ article or IBD, or AP?

directorblue said...

Joel, the very top was/is linked to ZeroHedge, the source (Xinhua is the news service).

QueMan said...

WHAT...??? Who would have thought a communist country would do something like this to hurt a Constitutional Republic???

Joel said...

ooops, didn't see that, thx.

Chuck Simmins said...

I am curious who the Chinese believe will buy that debt? If the value has been lost, why would anyone buy it? No one ever provides the other side of the coin, the buyers for Chinese sellers.