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Geithner
& China: Who Are You Fooling?
By
Axel Merk
Merk
Hard Currency Fund
June
2, 2009
Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner’s trip to
Asia has been heralded as a sales trip aimed at convincing the
Chinese to keep buying U.S. Treasuries and thereby finance U.S.
deficits. Such headlines are, in my humble opinion, an insult to the
Chinese. Over and over again, we fall victim of the temptation to
believe that Chinese leaders act in a vacuum, dictating policies out
of a closet. Chinese leaders know very well the state of the
Chinese, the U.S., and the world economy; they don’t need a sales
pitch. So what’s the purpose of Geithner’s trip then?
There’s a saying that when you owe the bank
a dollar, it is your problem. But if you owe the bank a million
dollars, it’s the bank’s problem. Well, the U.S. owes China
$767.9 billion worth of U.S. Treasury securities (Chinese holdings
as of March 2009; see
table) in addition to agency and other securities; in total,
China owns about $1.4 trillion in U.S. assets. This is definitely
China’s problem. If this is a case of “The Emperor Wears No
Clothes” then the Chinese and the U.S. are in the same boat in
trying to convince the world to buy U.S. Treasuries.
At times, however, it may be better for the
world to see the challenges as they are and talk plainly about them.
Maybe it takes a bodybuilder as emperor to have the courage to admit
that clothes are long gone, such as is the case with California’s
finances. In California, with its dysfunctional state government,
the governor is at least trying to rein in spending. Contrast that
with New York where the solution to every financial crisis seems to
be tax increases. The federal level, however, beats them all: the
Federal Reserve’s (Fed’s) printing press attempts to keep up the
illusion of prosperity. Printing money, however, only works when
there are takers. That’s where Treasury Secretary Geithner comes
in. However, Geithner is no bodybuilder but has a lot of heavy
lifting to do if he is to make U.S. debt appear attractive.
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Unfortunately, the situation is far too
serious to talk in puns. While the U.S. government and China are the
most prominent figures in this drama, all of us are participants.
Indeed, while we ponder whether the Chinese may continue to finance
U.S. deficits, we should also be concerned about all other potential
buyers, including domestic buyers. One of the new growth areas in
U.S. finance is to offer services to U.S. institutional investors to
hedge their U.S. dollar risk. It’s virtually unheard of that
institutions in the developed world hedge their domestic currency
risk. Yet this is a very real consequence of present market
interventions. It doesn’t matter whether Americans or foreigners
sell the dollar: a dollar sold is a dollar sold. If the Fed prints
too much money and/or artificially lowers the yield on U.S. Bonds,
Americans and foreigners alike may flee the currency.
Not surprisingly, Geithner assures China –
and with it the rest of the world –U.S. deficits will be brought
under control once the economy recovers. Trouble is: a) the shape of
the recovery is far from certain: trillions may be wasted through
inefficiently applied programs that prop up a broken system rather
than providing incentives for a sustainable recovery; and b)
considering all the Administration’s ambitions, it is difficult to
imagine just how the looming deficits are going to be tackled even
with the most optimistic of assumptions. Aside from the long-term
challenges, the U.S. may need to raise about $3 trillion of new
money in the debt markets this year; this could weigh heavily on the
bond market at a time when a fragile recovery may depend on a strong
bond market.
In addition to the photo-ops, a good deal of
Geithner’s time is likely to focus on discussing the “exit
strategy.” A crisis is too good an opportunity to miss.
Unfortunately, U.S. policies have so far sorely lacked in reform to
promote a more sustainable future. Rather than encourage an economy
more focused on savings and investments, there was no incentive for
businesses to invest in the so-called stimulus bill. On the
contrary, all efforts were aimed at getting consumers to keep up
their borrowing. The U.S. savings rate is slowly moving upward, but
more out of consumer desperation than a new vision for a more
prosperous future being embraced. This may bode badly for a
sustainable recovery in the U.S.
For China, the stakes are high, but China’s
massive reserves give the country room to maneuver. In particular,
China has to decide whether to try to build its recovery on a
fragile U.S. consumer or to find ways to achieve a more balanced
economy. The former implies more of the same: buying Treasuries,
finding ways to jumpstart exports, keeping the yuan pegged to the
dollar. There are many problems with that policy, including:
- Exports to the U.S. may not recover as much
as desired; any recovery may not be sustainable as long as U.S.
consumers continue to have very high debt levels.
- In a best-case scenario, China may face the
same challenges it has today down the road once again. Except
that China’s finances may not be in as good shape as they are
today and China may have less room to maneuver.
- Current policies pursued may be highly
inflationary; loans have grown at an annual rate of 50% in
recent months.
China needs to create a more balanced domestic
economy. More balanced does not mean giving its citizens credit
cards so that they fall into the American debt spiral. More balanced
means more sustainable growth by fostering a growing and stable
middle class. In our assessment, policy makers can achieve this by
providing its citizens a vision of the type of country China wants
to be. A vision that includes a strong private sector, supported by
a tax and regulatory framework that encourages private sector
investment, may unleash tremendous power. Some argue China should
privatize many of its state run enterprises; that may help to jump
start investments, but we believe setting the path for new
investments by domestic entrepreneurs would benefit China most in
the long run. China needs to streamline regulations and enforcement
of regulations to provide a more stable environment that fosters
investment and innovation. Merely privatizing state run institutions
may not be enough to weed out overly bureaucratic structures where
necessary.
Allowing the yuan to appreciate may be the
most effective tool in combating the headwinds of inflation that, in
our view, may impact China before too long. We already see commodity
prices soaring as a result of global reflationary efforts. China’s
industry has done well by shifting more towards products at the
higher-end of the value chain where there is more pricing power. We
have seen the manufacture of low end products increasingly move to
lower cost countries.
A stronger yuan increases China’s purchasing
power. However, given China’s massive holdings of U.S. debt, it
doesn’t want to erode the purchasing power of these assets. China
has already indicated that it wants to deploy its foreign exchange
reserves by buying assets abroad; it may only be a question of when,
not if, China diversifies out of U.S. Treasuries. China has in the
past shown to be very sensitive to the markets; just as China is
reluctant to dump its Treasuries, China has been very careful in not
rocking the markets when building its gold reserves. Despite this,
market forces may force China to accelerate its transitions; change
is painful, but the more it is postponed, the more disruptive it may
be.
China has taken many important steps to have a
more flexible exchange rate, including allowing trade in local
currency with neighboring countries. Most recently, China and Brazil
agreed to settle trades in local currency – an agreement that may
still take years to implement, but shows the direction China is
heading in. For the time being, China and the U.S. are putting on a
show to tell the world the U.S. dollar is strong; China may be well
advised to use this opportunity to put steps in motion for a
sustainable recovery that does not depend on a strong dollar – the
term “strong dollar” increasingly seems an oxymoron in light of
the policies pursued in the U.S.
We manage the Merk Hard and Asian Currency
Funds, no-load mutual funds seeking to protect against a decline in
the dollar by investing in baskets of hard and Asian currencies,
respectively. To learn more about the Funds, or to subscribe
to our free newsletter, please visit www.merkfund.com.
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