China Threatens Currency War If Fed Doesn’t Stop Printing

By   |  Market Overview  |  Jan 29, 2013 05:27PM GMT  |  2 Comments
 
The tension between central banks noted yesterday continues to worsen. This time it's China and the EU, not just Germany, that fired warning shots at the U.S. Fed.

From Reuters:
A senior Chinese official said on Friday that the United States should cut back on printing money to stimulate its economy if the world is to have confidence in the dollar.

Asked whether he was worried about the dollar, the chairman of China’s sovereign wealth fund, the China Investment Corporation, Jin Liqun, told the World Economic Forum in Davos: “I am a little bit worried.”

“There will be no winners in currency wars. But it is important for a central bank that the money goes to the right place,” Li said.

Speaking at the same session, French Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici voiced concern that the euro was becoming overvalued as a result of quantitative easing and other stimulus actions taken by other nations’ central banks.

“Certainly, the level of the euro is high and creates some problem,” he said, attributing the single currency’s recent gains partly to the return of confidence created by the European Central Bank and euro zone governments in starting to overcome Europe’s debt crisis.

China Blasts Fed Policy
So first Germany begins pulling its Gold reserves from the U.S., and now China and the EU are saying publicly that the Fed’s policies are damaging confidence in the U.S. Dollar.

This does not bode well for the financial system. The primary role of Central Banks is to maintain confidence in the system. If the Central Banks begin to turn on one another it's only a matter of time before the system breaks down.

Debasement
Remember, every time the Fed debases the U.S. Dollar it forces the Euro and other currencies higher, hurting those countries’ exports. The Fed has recently announced it will be printing $85 billion every month until employment reaches 6.5% (obviously the Fed is ignoring the mountains of data that indicate QE doesn’t create jobs).

How long will the other central banks tolerate this before they initiate a currency war? Both Germany and China have fired warning shots at the Fed. And we all know that just beneath the veneer of goodwill, tensions are building between the primary players of the global financial system. More importantly, how can investors profit from this? Remember, entire fortunes can be made during times of crises.

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Comments
Philip Freely
Philip Freely   Jan 29, 2013 07:06PM GMT
No-one is forcing the chinese to buy treasuries. They could do us all a favour and stop buying them, and actually start spending their US dollars to allow trade imbalances to correct. But no, it seems they would rather protect their own export industries, where there has been a massive misallocation of resources over the last few years!. Well china, don't be surprised then if you get paid back with funny money.......
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Amit Shenoy
Amit Shenoy   Jan 30, 2013 03:34AM GMT
Who is buying the treasuries before u speak do some charting. The Chinese are buying soy, corn and other agricultural commodities. The japanese are now buying the ES if u have been watching the nightly tapes of the futures. They are diversifying away from the yen. So all their companies are buying the US mkt. Please for heaven sake dont make stupid ass comments like wall street with money on sidelines.
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