The Dumping Begins: Chinese Reserve
Managers Notified That Any Non-USG
Guaranteed Securities Must Be Divested
Tyler Durden
Zero HedgeWednesday, February 10th, 2010
It appears that this time China’s posturing is for real. Following up on our earlier post that Chinese military officials want to “punish” America by selling Treasuries, Asia Times Online is reporting that an explicit directive by the Chinese government has notified reserve managers to sell all risky US assets, including asset backed and corporates, and just hold on to explicitly guaranteed Treasuries and Agency debt.
From Asia Times:
Dollar-denominated risk assets, including asset-backed securities and corporates, are no longer wanted at the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE), nor at China’s large commercial banks. The Chinese government has ordered its reserve managers to divest itself of riskier securities and hold only Treasuries and US agency debt with an implicit or explicit government guarantee. This already has been communicated to American securities dealers, according to market participants with direct knowledge of the events.One thing is certain – China will now focus on doing precisely the opposite of what America would urge Chinese authorities to do.
It is not clear whether China’s motive is simple risk aversion in the wake of a sharp widening of corporate and mortgage spreads during the past two weeks, or whether there also is a political dimension. With the expected termination of the Federal Reserve’s special facility to purchase mortgage-backed securities next month, some asset-backed spreads already have blown out, and the Chinese institutions may simply be trying to get out of the way of a widening. There is some speculation that China’s action has to do with the recent deterioration of US-Chinese relations over arm sales to Taiwan and other issues. That would be an unusual action for the Chinese to take–Beijing does not mix investment and strategic policy–and would be hard to substantiate in any event.
This is further confirmed by carefully worded disclosure in today’s copy of China Securities Journal:
The China Securities Journal, a government-backed daily, accused the U.S. in a tough-worded front page editorial of playing the “exchange rate card.”
It said that, just as China didn’t interfere with Federal Reserve purchases of U.S. Treasuries, “the U.S. has no right to interfere in China’s exchange rate policy.”
“Whether or not to appreciate is our own business,” the newspaper said.
“Whether it will appreciate, when and by how much is an integral part of China’s monetary policy.”
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