China is hiding $3 trillion of foreign currency in 'shadow reserves,'

Scientific Playa

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That's some stash if accurate. 🤑
What does Stephon Xavier Marbury know that we don't know? 😉

China is hiding $3 trillion of foreign currency in 'shadow reserves,' adding unknown risks to the global economy, former Treasury official says​


Filip De Mott
Jun 30, 2023,

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China's President Xi Jinping attends a meeting with Malaysia's Prime Minister Najib Razak at Diaoyutai State Guesthouse, in Beijing, China, November 3, 2016. REUTERS/Jason Lee
  • China has more foreign exchange reserves than reported, a former Treasury official wrote.
  • An additional $3 trillion is hidden in "shadow reserves," such as state commercial and policy banks.
  • "Not everything that China does in the market now shows up in the PBoC's balance sheet."
Half of China's currency reserves are "hidden," a situation that may add risks to the global economy down the road, former Treasury Department official Brad Setser wrote.

While the country's State Administration of Foreign Exchange reported $3.12 trillion in foreign assets last December, Setser estimates that foreign exchange reserves actually sit at around $6 trillion.

"China is so big that how it manages its economy and currency matters enormously to the world," he wrote in The China Project. "Yet over time the way it manages its currency and its foreign exchange reserves has become much less transparent – creating new kinds of risks for the global economy."

A key indicator about China's reserves is a sudden pause in its reported activity. From 2002 to 2012, China's foreign exchange reserves steadily rose as the central bank bought US dollar assets to prevent China's yuan from appreciating too much, allowing exports to remain cheap.

But over the last 10 years, China's reserves stopped rising, which is puzzling as China's trade surplus has continued growing, and currently stands at an all-time high, he said.

Setser, who previously was deputy assistant Treasury secretary for international economic analysis and is now senior fellow for international economics at the Council on Foreign Relations, has an idea of what's going on.

"Just as China has 'shadow banks' — financial institutions that act like banks and take the kind of risks that a bank might normally take but aren't regulated like banks — China has might be called 'shadow reserves.' Not everything that China does in the market now shows up in the PBoC's balance sheet," he said.

China's state banking system is the main way Beijing hides its reserves, Setser said. That includes state commercial lenders like the Bank of China, Industrial & Commercial Bank of China or ICBC, China Construction Bank, and the Agricultural Bank of China as well as policy banks like the China Development Bank and the Export-Import Bank of China.

China's State Administration of Foreign Exchange did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment.

The vast amount of China's reserves carries enormous weight in financial markets and represents a risk.

For example, Setser said China's earlier accumulation of US Treasurys and agency bonds — such as Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae securities — helped give rise to the 2008 financial crisis, by pushing investors further into riskier mortgage-backed securities.

"China's lack of transparency here is a bit of a problem for the world," he said. "China structurally is so central to the global economy that anything it does, seen or unseen, will eventually have an enormous impact on the rest of the world."

 

Scientific Playa

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The U.S. Sec of State recently visited China now it's our Treasury Secretary's turn.

Bloomberg

Yellen Heads to China This Week Advancing US Bid to Fix Ties​


Viktoria Dendrinou
Mon, July 3, 2023

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Yellen Heads to China This Week Advancing US Bid to Fix Ties

(Bloomberg) -- US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen will travel to Beijing on July 6-9, becoming the second member of Joe Biden’s cabinet to head to the Chinese capital in recent weeks, as the world’s two largest economies look to mend ties after a spate of bilateral tensions.

Yellen’s trip will take place just three weeks after Secretary of State Antony Blinken visited China, highlighting the efforts by the Biden administration to reinstate lines of communication with counterparts in Beijing.

The trip announcement ends months of speculation over when — and whether — the top US economic policymaker would head to Beijing. The Treasury chief has said for months she intends to visit, but an escalation in tensions stemming from then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s trip last year to Taiwan — which Beijing claims as part of China — and the flight of a Chinese balloon over the US left the plans in limbo.

China’s Ministry of Finance confirmed the visit in a statement on Monday.

In Beijing, Yellen will meet with senior Chinese government officials to discuss the importance of responsibly managing the US-China relationship, communicating directly about areas of concern, and working together to address global challenges, the Treasury Department said.

While a senior Treasury official didn’t say which government representatives Yellen will be meeting with in Beijing, they said she was not expected to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Trip Objectives
The official said that through this trip, the US will seek to deepen and increase the frequency of communication between the two countries, stabilize the relationship, avoid miscommunication and expand collaboration where possible.

A key priority for the Treasury with China has been pressing Beijing to boost debt relief for developing nations in distress. Yellen’s visit will follow a recent agreement in principle for Zambia, which she has praised.

The Treasury chief may face questions from her counterparts on the Biden administration’s plans to regulate and potentially cut off US corporate investment in China in sensitive technologies.

In Beijing, Yellen plans to convey US concern and press for corrective action on areas like coercive actions and nonmarket economic practices used by China, the Treasury official said.

The Treasury doesn’t expect significant breakthroughs stemming from this initial travel, the official said. Rather, it hopes to build longer-term channels of communication with the Chinese government’s new economic team and more regularly discuss issues in the bilateral economic relationship.

Consultations between top economic officials typically involve comparing notes on the outlooks for growth, and Yellen will have the opportunity to get Chinese authorities’ assessment of recent data that have spurred private economists to downgrade their estimates. By contrast, resilient US growth and elevated inflation have spurred expectations for further Federal Reserve tightening — a dynamic that’s sent the dollar higher against China’s yuan.

Read More: Chinese Regulators Step Up Yuan Surveys as Selloff Worsens

Yellen’s trip comes days after the People’s Bank of China appointed long-serving technocrat Pan Gongsheng as its Communist Party chief, indicating the central bank will stay with its recent approach of modestly cutting interest rates.

Wu Xinbo, dean of the Institute of International Studies at Fudan University, said that while Yellen cannot address contentious trade issues such as tariffs or sanctions, which are the purview of US Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, she is seen as a “rational voice” inside the Biden administration.

“This is why we want to receive her as the first member of the US economic and trade team to visit China,” Wu added, on the sidelines of the World Peace Forum in Beijing, saying she can “create room for easing bilateral economic and trade relations.”

Diminished Ties

US-China engagement today is a shadow of what it once was. The Treasury secretary at one point would meet with China’s equivalent every six months, through the “Strategic Economic Dialogue,” but such forums became defunct in the Trump administration — which levied a raft of import tariffs on Beijing.

Both Yellen and top White House officials in recent months have sought to stress that the US is not seeking to decouple from its geopolitical rival but rather de-risk. Even so, in an April speech she warned that the US is prepared to accept economic costs in order to protect national-security interests from threats posed by China.

Yellen’s new counterpart in Beijing is Vice Premier He Lifeng, a longtime confidant of President Xi. He succeeds Liu He — a fluent English-speaking veteran of the international stage who had studied at Harvard University. When Yellen and Liu met in January in Zurich, their rapport was such that they at one point left their aides behind as they kept talking. Analysts will be keen to monitor the new Yellen-He dynamic.

Among other potential issues in the upcoming talks: a recent crackdown by China on access to information about its companies, and continuing questions about prospects for Chinese firms listing on US exchanges. For their part, Chinese leaders have been continuously emphasizing that their country welcomes overseas firms.

Read More: Xi Vows to Protect Foreign Investors in Charm Offensive

“They’ve got some economic challenges and I think they want to make sure that they maintain a climate for foreign investment that is positive,” Yellen said in a recent interview.

As for a bilateral summit, President Joe Biden said in mid-June he anticipated meeting with Xi in the next several months. The two met in Indonesia in November during the Group of 20 summit.

(Updates with Ministry of Finance statement in the fourth paragraph.)

Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek
 

Scientific Playa

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China makes friends with the Giant of Africa

Chinese navy makes rare foray into West Africa with Nigeria visit​

Reuters
July 3, 2023

BEIJING, July 3 (Reuters) - A naval fleet of China's People's Liberation Army (PLA) led by the destroyer Nanning arrived in Nigeria on Sunday for a rare visit by the Chinese military to Africa's Atlantic coast, where Beijing has long made efforts to grow its influence.

The Chinese ambassador to Nigeria hailed the five-day visit as a milestone in ties, and the Nigerian navy expressed willingness to work with China to tackle maritime security threats and maintain stability in the Gulf of Guinea, the Chinese embassy said in a statement on Monday.

The destroyer and an accompanying frigate, Sanya, along with a supply ship, Weishanhu, arrived off the port of Lagos, with the Nanning berthing for a port call through Thursday, the Nigerian navy said in a statement.

Oil-rich West Africa is an important global exporter of crude. The region, mostly Angola and Nigeria, is among China's top oil suppliers. Major Chinese oil explorer CNOOC Ltd also engages in deep-sea production off the coast of Nigeria.

In January, Nigeria opened a billion-dollar Chinese-built deep seaport in Lagos. The new Lekki deep sea port, one of the region's biggest, is 75%-owned by state-owned China Harbour Engineering Co. and the Singapore-based Tolaram group.

There has also been speculation the Gulf of Guinea could offer a base for China's military. Last year, U.S. defence officials expressed concern that such a base, possibly in Equatorial Guinea, could threaten U.S. national security.

In 2017, China opened its first overseas naval base in Djibouti, one of the world's most important choke points for maritime trade, fanning concern that Beijing might set up more regional "logistics facilities" as its military develops the capacity to operate thousands of kilometres from home.

Over the last three decades, China has widened its influence in almost every African nation through investment, trade and loans.

In 2016, the cash-strapped island nation of Sao Tome and Principe in the Gulf established relations with Beijing after cutting ties with democratically governed Taiwan, which China claims as part of its territory.

Reporting by Ryan Woo; Editing by Clarence Fernandez

Happening now: Chinese warship arrives Nigeria​

2nd July 2023

IMG_20230702_085810_717-2048x2048.jpg


China’s warship, MSL Destroyer NANNING has arrive Lagos on a diplomatic visit to Nigeria.

The Chinese vessel was received by officials of the Western Naval Command led by Flag Officer Commanding(FOC) Rear Admiral Joseph Akpan.

China’s warship, MSL Destroyer NANNING has arrived in Lagos on a diplomatic visit to Nigeria.

The Chinese vessel was received by officials of the Western Naval Command led by Flag Officer Commanding(FOC) Rear Admiral Joseph Akpan.

Details soon…
 

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The majority of the world, especially China, values age and experience and inherently distrusts youth.
And im fine with that. We sending folks who probably wear depends to bed and who have zero progressive thoughts. Send someone who is 40-60. Not these 80 year olds on their death beds
 
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