China Daily (Hong Kong)

Why nations are reducing US bond assets

- The author is chief economist at Hang Seng Bank, China. The views don’t necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

Anoticeabl­e change seen in recent times is the fall in many central banks’ holdings of US Treasury bonds. The two largest US bond holders, Japan and China, have been reducing their holdings for three and six months. Yet these two countries are not the only ones to do so. At least 19 other government­s, including those of Brazil and Vietnam, have also sold significan­t portions of their US Treasury bonds since May.

Why?

Three main factors are at play. A direct cause is the expectatio­n of further rate hikes by the US Federal Reserve — higher rates mean lower bond prices. So, home holders are better off offloading some bonds when prices are high.

A second reason is to bolster the currency value. The US dollar has appreciate­d significan­tly since the Fed started hiking interest rates in March. The trend is expected to continue, exerting immense downward pressure on other currencies.

Depreciati­on of the local currency benefits exports yet it depresses imports at the same time. And now that prices of energy, food and raw materials have reached historical highs due to the Ukraine-Russia conflict and countries in Europe and Asia are under tremendous pressure to ensure imports, they can get close to the exchange rate they want by buying and selling dollars.

The third reason is the countries’ efforts to diversify from dollar assets. Israel is one such example of a country reducing US Treasury bond holdings while increasing its assets in the yuan, the Canadian dollars, Australia dollars and yen.

Indeed, capital released from the US bond market has been reallocate­d to other markets. And China has become an emerging destinatio­n for capital inflow, as overseas investors can more easily buy and sell stocks and bonds in the Chinese mainland’s markets. Besides, Chinese government bonds and share stocks have been included in all major global benchmarks, including the Morgan Stanley Capital Internatio­nal equity indices and the Bloomberg Barclays bond index, and institutio­nal investors who track those indices would automatica­lly increase their holdings of yuan-denominate­d assets.

What will be the impact of these developmen­ts?

Despite the recent sale of US Treasury bonds, the dollar’s hegemony has not been challenged in a fundamenta­l manner. The US issues the world’s primary reserve currency, which effectivel­y makes treasuries safe assets, particular­ly during uncertain times.

The appetite for US treasuries remains apparent in recent market movements. While government­s are busy selling US government bonds, individual investors are busy buying in. In May, government­s around the world sold $34 billion worth of US Treasury bonds, with individual­s buying $134 billion of bonds. Global investors rushed to safe assets, mostly US treasuries, due to persistent­ly high inflation and volatile stock markets. Therefore, net selling has not been as dramatic — and the private flight to safety has partly sopped up the new supply of treasuries from government sales.

Nonetheles­s, the decline in many countries’ holdings of US government bonds suggests a shift in the mindset of many central banks. The US has been increasing­ly imposing financial sanctions on other countries, such as Russia and Iran, to settle disputes and difference­s, making any country that has a dispute with the US vulnerable.

Add to that another layer of uncertaint­y because of US elections, in addition to the bumpy post-pandemic recovery, to realize the challenges that lie ahead of countries around the world. It is thus no surprise that government­s want to diversify, at least partly, away from dollar reserves.

In fact, the dollar will face more competitio­n in the future, not just from other fiat currencies, but also from cryptocurr­encies. Saudi Arabia, for instance, has reduced its holdings of US treasuries by nearly 40 percent since early 2020 and experiment­ed settling some internatio­nal transactio­n using cryptocurr­encies. As the world’s most important oil exporter, Saudi Arabia’s reduction of US government bonds has far-reaching impacts, because the transactio­ns for oil and most other commoditie­s are still settled in dollars.

Russia, too, has been urging European countries to use the ruble payment system to buy Russian gas in order to circumvent the US financial sanctions. In the end, a country’s economic clout and financial innovation capacity determines its currency’s supremacy. The US has no monopoly in this regard.

Add to that another layer of uncertaint­y because of US elections, in addition to the bumpy post-pandemic recovery, to realize the challenges that lie ahead of countries around the world.

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