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'Stunning' flight from the dollar led by Japan and ChinaWe've been reading ominous predictions on the economic hit the US would take if other countries started dumping the US dollar. $163 billion in capital flight in a month is very serious; but will the trend hold? And what will be the impact in the US? Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit [And that fool Bush is having a fete for the Dalai Lama. Why not invite the Falun Gong too, while he's at it? Four more years of Bush, that's what we need, and the Evil Empire is No More! -NYTr] 'Stunning' flight from the dollar led by Japan and China Japan and China Lead Flight from the Dollar Japan and China led a record withdrawal of foreign funds from the United States in August, heightening fears of a fresh slide in the dollar and a spike in US bond yields. Data from the US Treasury showed outflows of $163 billion (L80 billion) from all forms of US investments. "These numbers are absolutely stunning," said Marc Ostwald, an economist at Insinger de Beaufort. Asian investors dumped $52 billion worth of US Treasury bonds alone, led by Japan ($23 billion), China ($14.2 billion), and Taiwan ($5 billion). It is the first time since 1998 that foreigners have, on balance, sold Treasuries. Mr Ostwald warned that US bond yields could start to rise again unless the outflows reverse quickly. "Woe betide US Treasuries if inflation does not remain benign," he said. The release comes a day after the International Monetary Fund warned that the dollar was still overvalued and likely to face "some depreciation in the medium term." The dollar's short-lived rally over recent days stopped abruptly on the data, increasing pressure on US Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson to shore up Washington's "strong dollar" rhetoric at the G7 summit this week. The greenback has already fallen below parity against the Canadian Loonie for the first time since 1976 and has touched record lows against a global basket. It closed at $2.032 against the pound. David Woo, an analyst at Barclays Capital, said Washington was happy to see the dollar slide. "They don't care so long as the fall is not disorderly. They see it as a way of correcting the deficit," he said. Mr Woo said a chunk of the August outflows may have come from foreigners borrowing in the US during the liquidity crunch to meet needs in euros. "We think it may be a one-off," he said. The US requires $70 billion a month in capital inflows to cover its current account deficit, but the key sources of finance are drying up one by one. BNP Paribas said America has relied on "hot money" from abroad to cover 25 to 30 percent of the US short-term credit and commercial paper market over the last two years. This flow is now in danger after the seizure in parts of the market over the summer and after the Federal Reserve's half point rate cut, which has shaved the US yield advantage over other countries. Ian Stannard, a Paribas currency analyst, said the data was "extremely negative" for the dollar. "It exceeds the worst fears. It is not just foreigners who are selling US assets. Americans are turning their back as well," he said. Central banks in Singapore, Korea, Taiwan, and Vietnam have all begun to cut purchases of US bonds, or signalled an intent to do so. In effect, they are giving up trying to hold down their currencies because the policy is starting to set off inflation. The Treasury data would have been even worse if it had not been for $60 billion of inflows from hedge funds based in Britain and the Caymans, which needed to cover US positions at the height of the credit crunch. |
'Stunning' flight from the
Oh no, I might have to make a habit of watching foreign currencies again. The dollar is in awful shape; the reason it's not worse is that the USA is the largest trading partner of many other nations, and they all use the dollar. The EU is still too inefficient to challenge us with the euro. Maybe those other countries were just cashing in 'matured' US Treasury bonds? The report only gives half the story though - if they're taking all that money out, where are they investing it in? Hmm... maybe I should convert my money to Australian dollars since Australia still has a lot of minerals, metals, oil, and gas to dig up and sell to China and India.