China’s Leader Says He Is Worried Over U.S. Treasuries


The Chinese premier Wen Jiabao spoke at a news conference on Thursday at the end of the Chinese parliament’s annual session.

BEIJING — The Chinese premier Wen Jiabao expressed concern on Friday about the safety of China’s $1 trillion investment in American government debt, the world’s largest such holding, and urged the Obama administration to provide assurances that its investment would keep its value in the face of a global financial crisis.

The Chinese premier Wen Jiabao spoke at a news conference on Thursday at the end of the Chinese parliament’s annual session.

Related articles:
China’s Wen Jiabao expresses concern about safety of investments in US (L. A. Times)
Chinese Premier concerned about assets in US (Times Online)
China ‘worried’ about US Treasury holdings
(AP)
Obama Administration Tries to Reassure China on Treasury Debt (Bloomberg)

Speaking at a news conference at the end of the Chinese parliament’s annual session, Mr. Wen said he was “worried” about China’s holdings of Treasury bonds and other debt, and that China was watching United States economic developments closely.

“President Obama and his new government have adopted a series of measures to deal with the financial crisis. We have expectations as to the effects of these measures,” Mr. Wen said. “We have lent a huge amount of money to the U.S. Of course we are concerned about the safety of our assets. To be honest, I am definitely a little worried.”

He called on the United States to “maintain its good credit, to honor its promises and to guarantee the safety of China’s assets.”

Mr. Wen raised the concerns at a session in which he touted China’s comparatively healthy economy and said that his government would take whatever steps were needed to end the country’s economic slump. He also predicted that the world economy would improve in 2010.

The confident performance underscored the growing financial and geopolitical importance of China, one of the few countries to retain massive spending power despite slowing growth.

China has the world’s largest reserves of foreign exchange, estimated at $2 trillion, the product of years of double-digit growth.

Economists say half of that money has been invested in United States Treasury notes and other government-backed debt. Some has also been deployed in major investment projects intended to prop up flagging growth at home.

The Chinese government faces a difficult dilemma. If the United States government borrows less and engages in less fiscal stimulus, this could help prevent interest rates from rising in the United States and would preserve the value of China’s existing bond holdings.

But less government spending in the United States could also mean a slower recovery for the American economy and reduced American demand for Chinese goods. The United States imported 17.4 percent less from China in the first two months of this year compared to the same period last year, contributing to a record drop in Chinese exports that is braking the entire Chinese economy.

The bulk of China’s investment in the United States consists of bonds issued by the Treasury and government-sponsored enterprises and purchased by the State Administration of Foreign Exchange, which is part of the People’s Bank of China.

But some of China’s most controversial investments on the other side of the Pacific Ocean, judging by comments in Internet chat rooms, have been the purchases of shares in American financial institutions in 2007 by the China Investment Corporation, the country’s sovereign wealth fund, which was bankrolled nearly two years ago with $200 billion from its foreign reserves.

The China Investment Corporation’s most-publicized deal came in June 2007, when it spent $3 billion on shares of the Blackstone Group, a big private-equity fund, paying $29.605 a share. The stock closed on Thursday at $6.10, for a loss of 80 percent, or $2.4 billion of the initial investment.

During her visit to China last month, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton publicly assured Beijing that its American holdings remained a reliable investment. On Friday, Mr. Wen neither detailed his concerns about their safety nor said what sorts of new assurances he expected the United States to deliver.

But economists have cited several possible threats, led by the prospect that the dollar’s value will depreciate over time, lowering the value of China’s holdings.

“In the short run, the dollar is appreciating” because global investors see the American currency as a safe haven at a time of crisis, Bai Chong-En, who heads the economics department at Tsinghua University in Beijing, said in a telephone interview. “But we don’t know what’s going to happen in the long run. If the American stimulus package is financed mainly by borrowing, then that may affect the future value of Treasury securities.”

Some specialists also say that high inflation could erode the dollar’s value. Finally, some believe that China’s investment in American debt is now so vast that, should it need foreign exchange in some emergency, it would be unable to sell its Treasury securities without flooding the market and driving down their price.

“The only possibility, really, is that China will have to hold these bonds until maturity,” said Shen Minggao, the chief economist at Caijing, a Beijing-based business magazine. “If you start to sell those bonds, the market may collapse.”

At Friday’s news conference, Mr. Wen said he believed that China’s economic problems were less severe than in many Western nations because, he said, China’s banks remain relatively healthy. While the United States and Europe are battling both a recession and financial-system collapse, he said, “we haven’t had to use money to fill a financial hole.”

But he also conceded that it would be difficult to meet the government’s 2009 goal of an 8 percent growth in G.D.P., a rate that government experts have repeatedly said was needed to create sufficient new jobs and reduce the chance of social unrest.

China has lost millions of jobs in recent months, including at least 20 million factory and construction jobs once held by migrant laborers.

He also defended the government own four trillion yuan, or $585 billion, stimulus program, saying it had been “misunderstood” by some who questioned whether the package was completely new or partly composed of older projects for which money had already been allotted.

He said that the national government’s 1.18 trillion yuan, or $173 billion, contribution to the plan was a new investment in “public welfare, technological innovation, environmental protection and infrastructure projects. The remainder of the package is to be financed by local governments, banks and private investors.

That two-year investment should be sufficient to help China’s recovery, he said, but “we have prepared enough ammunition and we can launch new economic stimulus policies at any time.”

Mr. Wen’s two-hour news conference — by tradition, his only meeting with the media each year — was dominated by questions about the economy. But he also sidestepped a question about North Korea’s apparent plans to launch a new missile capable of delivering a warhead to parts of the United States, saying only that “the most important thing is to resolve the key issues affecting the six-party talks” over rolling back North Korea’s nuclear-weapons program.

Mr. Wen also rejected suggestions that the massive Chinese military presence in Tibet and ethnic Tibetan parts of China — parts of which are under a virtual lockdown this month, the 50th anniversary of a failed uprising against the Beijing government — indicated that China’s policies toward Tibet were flawed.

“The general situation in Tibet is stable and peaceful,” he said. “the peacefulness of Tibet and its ongoing progress have proven that the policies we have adopted are correct.”

By MICHAEL WINES
Published: March 13, 2009

Source: The New York Times

2 thoughts on “China’s Leader Says He Is Worried Over U.S. Treasuries”

  1. China should be worried about their dangerous over investment in US Treasury obligations. Washington ’s long-term choice is either repudiation or monetization. For monetization to be effective, the depreciation in the dollar would have to be substantial and this in turn would dramatically raise prices of imports for American consumers which would mean a tremendous drop in foreign imports. Debt monetization would cause more disruption to exporting nations than selective repudiation of Treasury debt.

    Washington has bailed out the banks, Wall Street & their Washington special interests and much of the cost is added to the national debt to by paid by this and future generations while real estate and investments continue to fall. Find out what a growing repudiate the debt movement could mean for treasury bonds, the dollar, gold and the stock market.

    The Campaign to Cancel the Washington National Debt By 12/22/2013 Constitutional Amendment is starting now in the U.S. See: http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=67594690498&ref=ts
    Thanks, Ron

    Reply

Leave a Reply to mjB Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.