Benson's Economic
& Market Trends
China's Revaluation: Big
Journeys Begin with Small Steps
By Richard Benson
Aug 3, 2005
Just because the financial
markets and press have responded to the revaluation of the Chinese
currency with a big yawn, as China continues to take small steps
toward making the Yuan a complete convertible currency, the real
question is "could the Chinese Yuan become a world reserve
currency on par with the Dollar, Euro, and Japanese Yen? We are
a believer in the "Big Yuan".
Investors are wondering what
the consequences will be as the Yuan is slowly but steadily revalued
upwards. For starters, the following is likely to occur:
- All Asian currencies will
increase in value so Asians will be able to buy more for their
money (the non-Chinese Asians now have less incentive to buy
dollars to hold their currencies down to stay competitive with
China);
- As the Yuan and other Asian
currencies rise in value, Wal-Mart, and other retailers, who
import billions of dollars worth of goods from Asia, will have
to pay more for imports. Price increases will ultimately have
to be passed on to the American consumer;
- The demand for U.S. treasuries
will go down as the China and Asian central banks move to a currency
"basket" allowing for less dollar asset reserves.
Hundreds of billions of dollars
are pouring into China to take advantage of the rise in the renminbi.
Up until now, the only way to play the Yuan game has been to
invest in China, which has attracted the usual hot-money, speculator
crowd. However, there is something much bigger in the offing.
China has a long way to go
to complete its revaluation. The realization of an ever-rising
Yuan, will rock the status quo. China can now go to Iran, Venezuela,
and Nigeria and exchange renminbi for oil and these countries
will be better off than if they took dollars because the
Yuan is guaranteed to rise against the dollar! Besides,
if any central banks in the Middle Eastern oil producing countries
accepted Yuan over dollars for oil, and they suddenly needed
dollars sometime in the future, the central bank of China now
has $700 billion of dollars to swap. Clearly, over the long term,
the Yuan has the potential to become a great currency.
What about other countries
with resources to sell China (like the rest of Africa, South
America and Australia)? Wouldn't it be in their interests
to exchange Yuan for their raw materials? Why take dollars
when you can take Yuan that will appreciate against the dollar!
Again, if these countries ever needed dollars or even Euros in
the future, they would be able to swap for them later no
problem!
So, what is China really up
to? Not only is China looking at energy deals in Sudan, Zimbabwe,
Algeria, Angola, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan (and any other "oil-stans"),
they seem to be everywhere, particularly showing up in places
that need a big powerful friend to protect them from America,
or the rest of the civilized world. Countries, such as
Iran and Venezuela, clearly need protection from the United States.
(Iran breeds terrorists and wants the bomb, while Hugo Chavez
in Venezuela is a caricature of Castro with oil.) The world
is full of petty dictators that need friends. You may recall
when Iraq wanted to shift from being paid for oil in dollars,
to being paid in euros; the move did not win many friends at
the White House.
China has a one party rule
and dictatorship by committee and they know how to cut deals
with strong men. With China showing up wherever there is oil
and resources, rulers of the less than democratic countries must
see a "win win" situation with China. If they
accept the Yuan in exchange for their resources, not only do
they get money that is better than the dollar, they shake hands
with a very powerful friend that can sell them arms and keep
them in power! Letting China have a reserve currency has
major geo-political implications, and they are not all good for
the United States.
The textbook definition of
a reserve currency is "a foreign currency held by a central
bank or monetary authority for the purposes of exchange intervention
and the settlement of intergovernmental claims". To put
it more simply, the national joy of having a reserve currency
means if a country wants to buy something, all it has to do is
print up some money. Just like in America, China will be
able to purchase any goods and services it wants, simply by printing
up some Yuan.
So, now what happens? We believe
that central banks worldwide are going to be eager to take the
Yuan as a reserve currency because it is guaranteed to go up
in relative value. Indeed, with the U.S. running massive
federal and trade deficits, central banks around the globe remain
eager to diversify away from the dollar.
With a reserve currency, China's
government would be crazy not to start printing and spending.
Before the Yuan revalued, the world was focused on the $700 billion
in U.S. dollar reserves the Chinese could spend. Now, there
are already signs that China is trying to buy U.S. brands, U.S.
oil companies, and almost anything that isn't nailed down around
the world. China's unprecedented and growing foreign exchange
reserves can now be used as the largest exchange stabilization
fund the world has ever seen! In Asia, dollar diplomacy,
pushed by the IMF, will quietly fade into history.
How will all this affect the
stock markets? Remember: Big journeys begin with small steps!
As an investor, shouldn't you be interested in what China
wants to buy?
Aug 3, 2005
Richard Benson
Archives
President
Specialty
Finance Group, LLC
Member FINRA/SIPC
2505 S. Ocean Boulevard
- Suite 212
Palm Beach, Florida 33480
1 800-860-2907
email: rbenson@sfgroup.org
Richard Benson, SFGroup, is a widely-published
author on securitization and specialty finance, and a sought after
speaker at financing conferences on raising equity for mid-market
companies.
Prior to founding
the Specialty Finance Group in 1989, Mr. Benson acted as a trading
desk economist for Chase Manhattan Bank in the early 1980's and
started in the securitization business in 1983 at Bear Stearns,
and helped build the early securitization businesses at Citibank
and E.F. Hutton.
Mr. Benson graduated
from the University of Wisconsin in 1970 in the Honors Program
in Math, and did his doctoral work in Economics at Harvard University.
Mr. Benson is a member of the Harvard Club of New York and Palm
Beach.
The Specialty
Finance Group, LLC is a Florida Limited Liability Company and
is registered with FINRA/SIPC as a Broker/Dealer.
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