“La sabiduría de la vida consiste en la eliminación de lo no esencial. En reducir los problemas de la filosofía a unos pocos solamente: el goce del hogar, de la vida, de la naturaleza, de la cultura”.
Lin Yutang
Cervantes
Hoy es el día más hermoso de nuestra vida, querido Sancho; los obstáculos más grandes, nuestras propias indecisiones; nuestro enemigo más fuerte, el miedo al poderoso y a nosotros mismos; la cosa más fácil, equivocarnos; la más destructiva, la mentira y el egoísmo; la peor derrota, el desaliento; los defectos más peligrosos, la soberbia y el rencor; las sensaciones más gratas, la buena conciencia, el esfuerzo para ser mejores sin ser perfectos, y sobretodo, la disposición para hacer el bien y combatir la injusticia dondequiera que esté.
MIGUEL DE CERVANTES Don Quijote de la Mancha.
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7 de septiembre de 2015
China's Foreign Exchange Reserves Fall in August on Yuan Support
Foreign-exchange hoard drops to $3.56 trillion at end August
`Heavier the intervention, the deeper the fall,' says Bocom
China’s
foreign-exchange reserves fell by a record last month as the central
bank sold dollars to support the yuan after the biggest devaluation in
two decades spurred bets on continued weakness.
The currency hoard
declined by $93.9 billion to $3.56 trillion at the end of August, from
$3.65 trillion a month earlier. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg had
forecast a median $3.58 trillion. The yuan weakened in offshore trading
and 10-year Treasury futures contracts fell after the data.
The
reserves’ decline illustrates the cost to China as it props up its
currency and seeks to stem an outflow of capital that threatens to
deepen the nation’s economic slowdown. The shrinkage in reserves means
less money flowing into the financial system, creating what Deutsche
Bank AG strategists have termed “quantitative tightening.”
“If
the central bank continues its intervention, China’s foreign-exchange
reserves will continue to shrink -- the heavier the intervention, the
deeper the fall,” said Li Miaoxian, a Beijing-based analyst at Bocom
International Holdings. While the People’s Bank of China is trying to
talk up the yuan exchange rate, it’s “inevitable” the nation will see
continuous capital outflows and yuan depreciation pressure in the coming
months.
The offshore yuan traded in Hong Kong erased gains after
the reserves figures were announced. It was trading down 0.2 percent at
6.4827 a dollar as of 6:07 p.m. local time. Ten-year Treasury futures
contracts fell 10/32, or $3.13 per $1,000 face amount, to 127 15/32.
Chinese
officials telegraphed confidence in the economy’s underlying solidity,
predicting a stabilization in stocks and the currency at a gathering of
Group of 20 finance chiefs Friday and Saturday. The G-20, meeting in
Ankara, pledged to avoid tit-for-tat currency devaluations; the U.S.
Treasury chief separately said that China should avoid persistent
exchange-rate misalignments.
The biggest drop in China’s currency
in 21 years last month spurred concern that a weaker yuan will hurt
countries exporting to China.
China’s
reserves more than tripled in the past decade as the PBOC bought
dollars to slow the yuan’s appreciation amid a swelling trade surplus.
To ensure the influx of money didn’t spur a surge in inflation, the
central bank raised the required reserve ratio for banks. With reserves
now in reverse, the central bank has lowered reserve requirements, with
economists forecasting further reductions.
Expectations that the
U.S. will increase interest rates for the first time since 2006 this
year are also luring funds from China, which has been loosening monetary
policy since November.
“The hope for the PBOC, we believe, is
that extreme selling pressure on the yuan subsides and they can allow a
moderate depreciation to restore export competitiveness,” Bloomberg
Intelligence economists Tom Orlik and Fielding Chen wrote in a note.
“The fear is that today’s data will reinforce the market view that the
only way for the yuan to go is down, and further accelerate capital
outflows.”
A sustained shift from buying to selling from China would add pressure for Treasury yields to rise, the analysts wrote.
“The
central bank won’t be so stupid to let its foreign-exchange reserves
shrink by $100 billion every month,” said Li Jie, head of the
foreign-exchange reserve research center at the Central University of
Finance and Economics in Beijing. “If the market really wants the yuan
to weaken, the PBOC may say ‘ok, let it be’ and reduce its
intervention.”