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BRIC's add $60 Billion Reserve

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1BRIC's add $60 Billion Reserve Empty BRIC's add $60 Billion Reserve Tue Jun 09, 2009 5:03 am

windreader1



BRICs Add $60 Billion Reserves as Zhou Derides Dollar (Update4)

June 8 (Bloomberg) -- The BRICs are buying dollars at the fastest pace since before credit markets froze in September, protecting exports even as leaders of the biggest emerging markets consider alternatives to the U.S. currency.

Brazil, Russia, India and China increased foreign reserves by more than $60 billion in May to limit currency gains as the first global recession since World War II restricted exports, data compiled by central banks and strategists show. Brazil bought the most dollars in a year, India’s reserves gained the most since January 2008 and Russia added the most foreign exchange since July.

While Russian, Chinese and Brazilian leaders suggest substituting the dollar, the central bank purchases show just how dependant they remain on the world’s reserve currency. Russia is proposing the BRICs consider creating a new unit of exchange when they meet in Yekaterinburg on June 16. China and Brazil said last month they may look at ways of dropping the dollar for trade between the two countries.

“Foreign central banks do not want to see their currencies relentlessly strengthen,” said Daniel Tenengauzer, head of foreign-exchange and emerging-market debt strategy at Banc of America-Merrill Lynch in New York. “Such a move would dampen an already-weak outlook outside the U.S. and potentially risk even more capital-markets chaos if the dollar appeared to be heading toward a disorderly decline.”

Brazil’s real weakened 0.1 percent to 1.9633 per dollar at 5:01 p.m. in New York. The ruble depreciated 1.7 percent to 31.4016 against the U.S. currency, while the Indian rupee fell 1 percent to 47.57. The Chinese yuan’s 12-month forward contract dropped 0.4 percent to 6.7315 per dollar, the steepest decline since March 27.

Real’s Rally
International reserve assets excluding gold held by the BRICs, an acronym coined by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Chief Economist Jim O’Neill in 2001 for the biggest emerging markets, total $2.8 trillion, a 7.8 percent increase from a year ago and 42 percent of the world’s total, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

The real, ruble, and rupee strengthened and the Dollar Index posted its biggest decline in 24 years last month as signs the global recession may be easing spurred investors to seek higher-yielding alternatives to the U.S. currency. A net $26.1 billion has flowed into emerging-market equity funds this year, EPFR Global, which tracks $11 trillion worldwide, said June 4.
The real rallied 11.2 percent last month, the ruble gained 6.9 percent and the rupee 6.4 percent. The yuan appreciated 21 percent between July 2005, when the government allowed it to trade, and July 2008. China has prevented the currency from strengthening since then as the economy slowed.

Currency Alternatives
The Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against the euro, yen, pound, Canadian dollar, Swiss franc and Swedish krona, lost 6.4 percent last month, the biggest decline since March 1985. It rose 0.3 percent today.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev proposed on June 5 that nations use a mix of regional reserve currencies to reduce reliance on the dollar. The subject may be on the agenda when he meets his counterparts in the Ural Mountains city of Yekaterinburg, the Kremlin said this month.
China’s central bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan suggested using the International Monetary Fund unit of account, known as special drawing rights, as an alternative in March. His Indian counterpart Duvvuri Subbarao hasn’t commented on that plan. IMF First Deputy Managing Director John Lipsky said on June 6 it’s possible to take such a “revolutionary” step over time.

Last month, China, the biggest importer of soybeans and iron-ore, and Brazil, whose main exports include soy, metals and petroleum, began studying a proposal to move away from the dollar and use yuan and reais instead.

Dollar ‘Discontent’
“What we are seeing is a public expression of discontent over the dollar, yet nobody knows what needs to be done specifically,” said Elina Ribakova, the chief economist in Moscow for Citigroup Inc.

Brazil, the only country to break down its dollar purchases, acquired $2.8 billion of the greenback in May, Russia bought at least $17 billion of foreign currencies, while India’s reserves rose by $10.6 billion, central bank data show. China may have purchased $30 billion in foreign exchange last month, Hong Kong-based research company SJS Markets Ltd. estimates.
At the end of 2008 the dollar accounted for 64 percent of central bank reserves, up from 62.8 percent in June 2008, according to the IMF in Washington. The currency has underpinned exchange rates since the 1971 collapse of the Bretton Woods system, which linked their value to gold.

Rising Holdings
Federal Reserve holdings of Treasuries on behalf of central banks and institutions rose by $68.8 billion, or 3.3 percent, in May, the third most on record, Bloomberg data show. About 51 percent of the $6.36 trillion in marketable Treasuries are held outside America, up from 35 percent in 2000. China is the biggest foreign owner of Treasuries, increasing its holdings to $768 billion as of March from $60 billion in 2000.

A steeper dollar decline would hurt BRIC exports, devalue their reserves and worsen the global credit crisis, said Mitul Kotecha, head of global foreign-exchange strategy in Hong Kong at Calyon, the investment banking arm of Credit Agricole SA. “It would be shooting yourself in the foot to sell U.S. assets and move away from dollars too quickly,” said Kotecha. “As much as we are seeing in terms of rhetoric, the central banks have so much exposure they will be very careful.” Intervention, where central banks buy or sell currencies to influence exchange rates, may help bolster the dollar, he said.

Currency Forecasts
The median estimate of analysts surveyed by Bloomberg is for the real to fall 7 percent to 2.1 per dollar by year-end, while the rupee will drop 0.6 percent to 48. The yen is forecast to weaken 4.4 percent.

“The dollar will stabilize against its major trading partners around the turn of the quarter,” said Michael Shaoul, chief executive officer at New York-based institutional brokerage Oscar Gruss & Son Inc., who called the emerging-market rally in February. “It got stronger than was warranted during the crisis and weakened rapidly during the recovery.”

Investors abandoned emerging markets after the September bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. eliminated demand for all by the safest, most easily traded assets, such as Treasuries. The MSCI EM Index tumbled 54.5 percent last year.
A shortage of the U.S. currency forced central banks to pump reserves into their economies. The Dollar Index rose 18 percent between June 30 and March 31.

Reserves Reversal
Asian central banks, excluding China, ran down foreign- exchange reserves by more than $300 billion in the 12 months ended April 30, according to London-based HSBC Holdings Plc. Russia’s slid by $213 billion in the eight months ended March 31, central bank data show. Brazil’s reserves dropped $5.7 billion in the six months ended Feb. 27.

Emerging-market central banks are buying dollars as stronger currencies threaten exports while the global economy contracts.

The IMF estimates the world’s gross domestic product will shrink 1.3 percent this year. Trade worldwide will plunge 9 percent, the most since World War II, the World Trade Organization said in March.

Brazil’s $1.3 trillion economy, Latin America’s largest, may drop 0.73 percent in 2009, the biggest contraction in 19 years, according to the median forecast in a May 29 central bank survey. Russia’s economy will contract at least 6 percent, Medvedev said this month. China’s exports, which account for 60 percent of its GDP, slumped 22.6 percent in April from a year earlier, according to the government.

Dollar Strength
“There might be a risk-appetite reversal which could mean some temporary dollar strength,” said Peter Eerdmans, head of emerging-market bonds in London at Investec Asset Management Ltd., which manages $700 million in developing-nation debt. “We have taken profits on some of our emerging-market positions.”

Brazil’s central bank President Henrique Meirelles said last month foreign currency flows are creating a “very favorable” condition for policy makers to boost reserves.
“Given the breadth and depth of the U.S. economy in relation to the world economy, it is unlikely the dollar will be displaced as the principal reserve currency anytime soon,” said Nikhil Srinivasan, who overseas $20 billion of assets as chief investment officer for Asia and the Middle East at Munich-based Allianz SE, Europe’s biggest insurer.
To contact the reporters on this story: Shanthy Nambiar in Bangkok at snambiar1@bloomberg.net; Lilian Karunungan in Singapore at lkarunungan@bloomberg.net
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&sid=aMq6YRJVeb6Q&refer=exclusive

mocha

mocha

June 11 (Bloomberg) -- Brazil, Russia, India and China’s plan to shift some foreign reserves into International Monetary Fund bonds may be more a signal of their growing financial clout than a lack of demand for U.S. assets.

“They’re saying they are part of the big leagues,” Alberto Ramos, an economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., said in a telephone interview from New York. “They’re not buying IMF bonds to diversify reserves. They want to be seen as having a large voice” in global markets, he said.

Russia and Brazil announced plans yesterday to buy $20 billion of bonds from the IMF and diversify foreign-currency reserves. China will purchase $50 billion and India may announce similar funding, Brazil’s Finance Minister Guido Mantega said. The countries are seeking a stronger voice in international financial institutions such as the IMF, according to He Yafei, a vice foreign minister at China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Treasuries declined yesterday, pushing benchmark 10-year yields to the highest since October, after the government sold $19 billion of the securities and Russia said it may move out of U.S. debt to buy the IMF bonds. The so-called BRICs, an acronym coined by Goldman Chief Economist Jim O’Neill in 2001 for the biggest emerging markets, have combined reserves of $2.8 trillion and are among the largest holders of Treasuries.

‘Much Bigger’

“If this was the beginning of something much bigger, then the market would front-run that,” said Dominic Konstam, head of interest-rate strategy at Credit Suisse Securities USA LLC, in an interview from New York. “It wouldn’t be in the interests of Russia or China to watch the value of their assets go down.”

The 10-year yield climbed to as high as 3.99 percent yesterday from 3.86 percent, according to BGCantor Market Data. The yield has surged from 2.21 percent on Dec. 31 as the U.S. steps up debt sales to finance a record budget deficit and pull the economy out of the deepest recession since the 1930s.

Treasuries slid yesterday in part because the announcement by Russia and Brazil was a “sudden shock,” said David Spegel, head of emerging-market strategy at ING Groep NV in New York.

“We are asking to increase the voice and representation of emerging economies,” He said at a June 9 briefing for President Hu’s Jintao’s participation in a BRIC summit next week in Russia.

China has 3.66 percent of votes in the IMF, Russia 2.69 percent, India 1.89 percent and Brazil 1.38 percent, according to the fund’s Web site. The U.S. has a 16.77 percent voting power.

Selling Treasuries

Alexei Ulyukayev, first deputy chairman of Bank Rossii, said Russia would sell some of its $140 billion of Treasuries to make room for the purchase of the IMF bonds. Mantega said Brazil’s central bank would decide which assets to sell from its reserves portfolio for the transaction.

China’s State Administration of Foreign Exchange said last week that it’s “actively” considering buying as much as $50 billion of the IMF bonds.

BRIC nations can’t pull out of the Treasury market because there “aren’t a lot of alternatives out there that are AAA rated,” Spegel said.

“With their reserve levels so high -- $2 trillion from China -- where are they going to put their money?” Spegel said in a telephone interview.

The IMF board may consider late this month or in July the proposal to sell the notes, which would be the fund’s first issue, IMF spokeswoman Conny Lotze said today by e-mail. The plan will likely determine other aspects regarding use of the securities, such as whether they can be traded among countries much like U.S. Treasury bonds.

Russia Meeting

The debt will pay a yield similar to U.S. Treasuries and will be denominated in the fund’s basket of currencies, known as Special Drawing Rights, Mantega said yesterday in Brasilia. The IMF calculates the value of SDRs daily, with 44 percent weighted toward the dollar, 34 percent to the euro and the remainder split between the yen and the pound, according to its Web site.

Officials from the BRIC nations are scheduled to meet next week in Yekaterinburg, Russia, where they plan to discuss the status of the dollar as the world’s reserve currency. Ulyukayev said Russia will sell Treasuries “because a window of opportunity for working with other instruments is opening,” according to Interfax news wire. The remarks were confirmed by a Bank Rossii official who declined to be named, citing bank policy.

Geithner Trip

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said in Beijing on June 2 there will be enough demand for record sales of U.S. debt. The U.S. budget deficit is projected to reach $1.75 trillion in the year ending Sept. 30 from last year’s $455 billion, the Congressional Budget Office says.

The spread between 2- and 10-year Treasuries, which reached a record 2.81 percentage points this month, averaged 0.69 percentage points during the fiscal year 2001. During the four- year period of government budget surpluses from 1998 through 2001, the spread averaged 0.22 percentage points.

Geithner met with Chinese officials after Premier Wen Jiabao called in March for the U.S. “to guarantee the safety of China’s assets” and central bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan proposed a new global currency to reduce reliance on the dollar.

BRIC nations have been adding to their foreign reserves over the past month to stem currency rallies sparked by speculation that the developing nations will help lead the world out of recession. The Brazilian real is up 20 percent against the dollar the past three months. Russia’s ruble has gained 13 percent and the Indian rupee has climbed 10 percent.

The four countries increased international holdings by more than $60 billion last month, according to data compiled by central banks and strategists.

“They want to be seen as good citizens of the IMF,” Goldman’s Ramos said. “It’s an investment that can empower them in the institution.”

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...d=aTJAA8V19ySU

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