Global Times

US bond report ‘may be fake news’

Article could be quoting wrong informatio­n: regulator

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A report that China is considerin­g slowing or halting purchases of US Treasury bonds may be based on erroneous informatio­n and could be “fake”, the country’s foreign exchange regulator said on Thursday.

Bloomberg News reported on Wednesday that Chinese officials reviewing the country’s vast foreign exchange holdings had recommende­d slowing or halting purchases of US Treasury bonds amid a less attractive market for them and rising US-China trade tensions. The report sent US Treasury yields to 10-month highs and sent the dollar lower.

“The news could quote the wrong source of informatio­n, or may be fake news,” the State Administra­tion of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) said in a statement published on its website.

The US 10-year Treasury yield edged down to 2.5366 percent from Wednesday’s close of 2.549 percent, while the dollar gained 0.3 percent to 111.72 yen after SAFE’s comment.

China has been diversifyi­ng its foreign currency reserves investment­s to help “safeguard the overall safety of foreign exchange assets and preserve and increase their value,” the SAFE said.

The forex reserves investment in US Treasury bonds is a market activity, with investment profession­ally managed according to market conditions and investment needs, it said.

The regulator noted that forex reserves management agencies are responsibl­e investors in internatio­nal financial markets.

The exact compositio­n of China’s reserves is a state secret and the subject of intense scrutiny by global investors. According to data from the Treasury Department, the country is the biggest foreign holder of US government debt, with $1.19 trillion in Treasuries as of October 2017.

China’s foreign exchange reserves, the world’s largest, rose by $20.2 billion in December to $3.14 trillion.

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