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Dollar falls as China reveals record stockpiles

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Dollar falls as China reveals record stockpiles


Published: July 15 2009 11:34 | Last updated: July 15 2009 22:18



By Peter Garnham
The dollar fell to its lowest level for a month on Wednesday as China revealed it had amassed record cash stockpiles, while improving investor confidence stemmed haven demand for the US currency.
Analysts said positive earnings surprises from Goldman Sachs, the US bank, and Intel, the chipmaker, had boosted risk appetite, pushing investors away from the relative safety of the dollar and into riskier assets.
Furthermore, news that China’s foreign exchange reserves, the world’s largest, had grown by a record $178.3bn to $2,130bn in the second quarter also weighed on the dollar.
Analysts said the largest increase in reserves had been in May, when the dollar weakened sharply as US Treasury yields rose.
Fear of a weaker dollar contributed to inflows to China, sparking offsetting intervention by the Chinese authorities to stem strength in the renminbi.
Ashley Davies at UBS said over the long term China’s policies were clearly unsustainable and supported his view that the dollar would structurally weaken over 2010 and 2011.
He said the rapid reserve accumulation explained why China had been more vocal of late in calling for an alternative reserve currency.
But Mr Davies added that in the short term, the sheer pace of accumulation would suggest that China was having difficulty in diversifying its FX stockpiles.
Analysts estimate that the Chinese authorities hold about 65 per cent to 70 per cent of their reserves in dollars, with the rest in other currencies including the euro, pound, yen and perhaps the Australian dollar. Thus rapid accumulation of dollars by the Chinese authorities puts downward pressure on the US currency as they seek to maintain the balance within their reserves.
“If the bulk of the intervention was in dollars, then China may need to quietly accelerate diversification going forward, benefiting other major currencies such as the euro, yen and Australian dollar,” Mr Davies said.
Late in New York, the dollar index, which tracks its progress against a basket of six major currencies, was down 1 per cent at 79.36, its weakest level since mid-June. The dollar fell 1.1 per cent to $1.4120 against the euro, lost 0.7 per cent to $1.6426 against the pound and dropped 1.4 per cent to SFr1.0740 against the Swiss franc.
Commodity-linked currencies also advanced against the dollar, with the Australian dollar rising 1.4 per cent to $0.8040, the Canadian dollar climbing 1.7 per cent to C$1.1135 and the Norwegian krone gaining 1.2 per cent to NKr6.3777.
The dollar was 0.9 per cent stronger at Y94.36 against the yen, however.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/c480f2f4-7122-11de-877c-00144feabdc0,dwp_uuid=f6e7043e-6d68-11da-a4df-0000779e2340.html?nclick_check=1

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