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‘Dollar to stay anchor of China’s reserves’
WASHINGTON—The US dollar will
remain the anchor currency of China’s massive foreign reserves despite
suggestions that the country is too heavily skewed toward the weakening
greenback, a senior Chinese central bank official said Wednesday.
Yi Gang, the assistant governor of the People’s Bank of China, said the
dollar had to continue as key component of the country’s 1.4 trillion
dollar reserves because it was “the largest currency that we use” in
terms of trade and foreign direct investment as well as financial
clearances and settlements.
“It is also a very firm policy for China that the US dollar is the main
currency in our reserves and that policy is very firm,” he said to a
question at a forum in Washington.
Yi said recent suggestions that Beijing shift its largely dollar-based
reserves toward presently stronger currencies, like the euro, were mere
“opinion.”
“There is some discussion or comment from maybe scholars, maybe other
persons in China in terms of ‘there is huge amount of adjustment of
reserves.’
“I think that probably is opinion ... if they want to express their
opinion, that will be fine, we consider it, we listen (to) it but that
does not change our policy,” Yi said at a monetary conference organized
by Washington-based CATO Institute.
Amid weakening of the dollar, Cheng Siwei, vice chairman of the Standing
Committee of the National People’s Congress of China, the parliament,
said earlier that strong currencies ought to be given more weight in the
Chinese reserves to offset the losses in weak ones.
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke speaks at the Cato Institute’s
25th Annual Monetary Conference in Washington, November 14, 2007.
[Agencies]
However, US Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and Treasury Secretary
Henry Paulson defended the dollar’s position.
“Dollars remain the dominant reserve asset and I expect that to continue
to be the case,” Bernanke said. Noting that the greenback had been the
world’s reserve currency since World War II, Paulson said, “I put the US
economy up against any in the world in terms of competitiveness.” Before
Yi’s remarks Wednesday, the dollar fell close to a new record low
against the euro in London as weak US retail sales bolstered speculation
of another cut in interest rates by the Federal Reserve.
The single European currency was trading at 1.4658 dollars in New York
in early afternoon trading Wednesday, against 1.4600 a day earlier. In
London Wednesday the euro at one point rose to 1.4725 dollars, just off
its record 1.4752, set on November 9.
Yi said while the Chinese central bank diversified the major currencies
making up its reserves, “the point is the principle for our
diversification and the principle that guides us for these reserves is
that it should be proportional to our real economic transactions —
meaning trade, FDI (foreign direct investment) and clearance and
settlement.”
China’s forex reserves, which overtook Japan’s for the world’s top spot
in early 2006 and topped US$1.43 trillion in late September, have been
boosted especially by the nation’s trade surplus.
About 70 percent of its foreign reserves is generally believed to be
held in US dollar-denominated paper, principally US government bonds.
This has proven a less-than-ideal investment, not just due to the low
yields on government debt, but also the weakening of the US currency.
—The Daily Mail, China Daily news exchange item |