The declining Treasuries investment is also read as a sign of Beijing’s unease with Washington’s financial policies. [emphasis added]
China’s hoard of U.S. Treasury bonds has slumped by a shocking 35% since July 2017.
This is a story about China, one of the federal government’s biggest creditors, deciding that maybe U.S. government IOUs aren’t such a great investment after all.
Why? China Daily is happy to explain:
“This is an ongoing reduction of China’s U.S. treasury portfolio and part of China’s reserve management,” said Hong Hao, chief economist at GROW Investment Group.
Key takeaways:
- The Fed’s rate hikes reduce the value of existing U.S. bonds
- China’s not alone in reducing U.S. bond holdings
Yang Haiping, a researcher at the Central University of Finance and Economics’ Institute of Securities and Futures, added another reason:
These political considerations, while interesting, aren’t really applicable to everyday folks like you and me.
However, there’s another major incentive for China, and the rest of the world, to dump their dollars right now – and it’s even more relevant for you and me.
The dollar’s dwindling purchasing power is fading even faster
The dollar’s purchasing has plunged since 1913 (the year the Federal Reserve was officially instituted as the central bank of the U.S.).
If you’re a regular reader, you know this all too well.
I still find this chart quite shocking:
Just to be perfectly clear, the same is true for our dollars – my cash and yours.
Let me ask you – why would anyone want to hold U.S. dollars for the long term?
Well, for global central banks, they have to – so long as the dollar is the global reserve currency, they need a ready supply of dollars for importing and exporting goods and services.
This “perfect storm” may “end of the U.S. dollar”
Recently, former Assistant Treasury Secretary Monica Crowleyclaimed that President Biden’s fiscal policies have damaged America’s economic dominance and threatened the dollar’s global reserve currency status.
She explained that a “perfect storm” of global economic trends spell the “end of the U.S. dollar.”
Reuters reported that de-dollarization picked up pace last year:
The Russian people don’t care whether importers pay for goods with yuan, rubles or Thai baht – as long as those goods keep flowing into the country, they’re happy. The Russian government is happy to do business with China, India, Turkey – anyone who’s willing to work with them.
In fact, just about every nation is currently seeking alternativesto the U.S. dollar (a process called “de-dollarization,” or what I like to call “dumping the dollar”):
- Recently Brazil and Argentina have discussed the creation of a common currency for the two largest economies in South America.
- In a conference in Singapore in January, multiple former Southeast Asian officials spoke about de-dollarization efforts underway.
- The United Arab Emirates and India are in talks to use rupees to trade non-oil commodities, according to Reuters.
- For the first time in 48 years, Saudi Arabia said that the oil-rich nation is open to trading in currencies besides the U.S. dollar.
Brazil wants to dump the dollar for good:
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