Skip to content
the patient investor

the patient investor

  • Market Analysis
  • Managing Risk
    • Bull/Bear Market Indicator
    • Stock Market Valuation
  • Mega Trends
    • Global population
    • Environmental damage
    • Decarbonization
      • Energy: The coming crisis
      • Lithium
    • Internet
    • Digital communication
    • Automation
    • Health care and medical science
    • Debt & Inflation
    • Globalization
    • Geopolitics and great power conflict
  • About
    • Colin Twiggs
    • Terms of Use
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us
  • Subscribe
  • Login
Posted on August 22, 2015 by ColinTwiggs

China’s dangerous currency manipulation

I am surprised at John Mauldin’s view in his latest newsletter Playing the Chinese Trump Card:

….This whole myth that China has purposely kept their currency undervalued needs to be completely excised from the economic discussion. First off, the two largest currency-manipulating central banks currently at work in the world are (in order) the Bank of Japan and the European Central Bank. And two to four years ago the hands-down leading manipulator would have been the Federal Reserve of the United States.

John is correct that China has in recent years engaged in less quantitative easing than Japan, Europe and the US. And these activities are likely to weaken the respective currencies. But what he ignores is that these actions are puny compared to the $4.5 Trillion in foreign reserves that China has accumulated over the last decade. That is almost 2 years of goods and services imports — far in excess of the 3 months of imports considered prudent to guard against trade shocks. Arthur Laffer highlights this in his recent paper Currency Manipulation and its Distortion of Free Trade:

Foreign Reserves

Accumulation of excessive foreign reserves is the favored technique employed by China, and Japan before that, to suppress currency appreciation over the last three decades. Dollar outflows through capital account, used to purchase US Treasuries and other quality government and quasi-government debt, are used to offset dollar inflows from exports. This allows the exporting state to maintain a prolonged trade imbalance without substantial appreciation of their currency. And forces the target (US) to sustain a prolonged trade deficit to offset the capital inflows. Laffer sums up currency manipulation as:

….. when a country either purchases or sells foreign currency with the intent to move the domestic currency away from equilibrium or to prevent it from moving towards equilibrium.

Even Paul Krugman (whose views I seldom agree with) has been wise to the problem for at least 5 years:

…..economist Paul Krugman and a group of senators led by New York Democrat Chuck Schumer wanted to impose a 25% tariff on Chinese imports.

Prolonged current account imbalances cause instability in global financial markets. A sustained US current account deficit was one of the primary weaknesses cited by Nouriel Roubini in his forecasts of the 2008 financial crisis (the other side of the equation was a sustained Chinese surplus). But currency manipulation is not only dangerous, it is also short-sighted. International trade is a zero-sum game. For every dollar of goods, services, capital or interest that goes out, a dollar of goods, services, capital or interest must come in. For every country that runs a current account surplus, another must run a deficit. Without international regulation, each country will try to engineer a trade surplus in order to boost their domestic economy at the expense of their trade partners. An endless game of beggar-thy-neighbor.

Participants will suffer long-term consequences. The power of financial markets is unstoppable. Central banks attempt to hold back the tide, distorting price signals and shoring up surpluses (or deficits), at their peril. The market will have its way and restore equilibrium in the long term. As Japan in the 1990s and Switzerland recently experienced, the further you move markets away from equilibrium the more powerful the opposing backlash will be. The scale of China’s market manipulation is unprecedented, and caused large-scale distortions in the US. The end result forced the Fed to embark on unprecedented quantitative easing which, in turn, is now impacting back on China.

The impact will not only be felt by China, as John points out:

The low rates and massive amounts of money created by quantitative easing in the US showed up in emerging markets, pushing down their rates and driving up their currencies and markets. Just as [governor of the Central Bank of India, Raghuram Rajan] (and I) predicted, once the quantitative easing was taken away, the tremors in the emerging markets began, and those waves are now breaking on our own shores. The putative culprit is China, but at the root of the problem are serious liquidity problems in emerging markets. China’s actions just heighten those concerns.

Chinese hopes for a soft landing are futile.

Share this:

  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn

Related

CategoriesChina & HK, Forex, US & Canada Tagscapital account flows, currency manipulation, current account, foreign reserves, quantitative easing

Post navigation

Previous PostPrevious Public Debt and the Long-Run Neutral Real Interest Rate | Narayana Kocherlakota
Next PostNext George Soros: Regulation of global financial markets

Login for the latest Market Analysis

  • Australian Jobs versus Rate Cuts
  • ASX Weekly Market Indicators
  • US Weekly Market Indicators
  • ASX Weekly Market Indicators
  • Blow-off or buy the dip?
  • Gold bear trap
  • ASX Weekly Market Snapshot
  • US Weekly Market Snapshot
  • Give War a Chance | Edward Luttwak
  • ASX Weekly Market Snapshot
  • US Weekly Market Snapshot
  • Inflation, the third certainty
  • Fed sits tight as economic outlook darkens
  • Gold rises to a new high while Dow and ASX 200 retreat
  • Bear market confirmed
  • Loaded for bear
  • How tariffs could break America
  • Why Australian CPI is understated
  • Regime change in America
  • ASX Weekly Market Snapshot
  • Strong uptrends in stocks and gold
  • Big Picture reading: Ukraine
  • Gold headed for $3,000
  • Inflation spooks Treasuries and stocks
  • US Weekly Market Snapshot
  • Gold riding high as the Dollar weakens
  • Japanese inflation bullish for US stocks
  • Threat of a US-China trade war boosts gold
  • Tariff Pause
  • Fed takes a pause

Topics

Disclaimer

Everything contained in this web site, related newsletters, emails, discussions, training videos and conferences (collectively referred to as the “Material”) is intended for the purpose of teaching analysis, trading and investment techniques. Advice in the Material is provided for the general information of readers and viewers (collectively referred to as “Reader/s”) and does not have regard to any particular person’s investment objectives, financial situation or needs. Accordingly, no Reader should act on the basis of any information in the Material without properly considering its applicability to their financial circumstances. If not properly qualified to do this for themselves, Readers should seek professional advice.

Investing and trading involves risk of loss. Past results are not necessarily indicative of future results.

The decision to invest or trade is for the Reader alone. We expressly disclaim all and any liability to any person, with respect of anything, and of the consequences of anything, done or omitted to be done by any such person in reliance upon the whole or any part of the Material.

© Copyright 2016 - 2025 The Patient Investor Pty Ltd. All rights reserved.
Powered by WordPress / WordPress Maintenance Service By Website Helper