November 18, 2007

Chinese TV: Dump the Dollar

And you think that the US financial house is NOT about to fall! Here it comes, folks! Watch the Japanese news too.
Source: CNBC
Chinese lunchtime television on Friday gave ordinary people a basic tip on how to play the currency markets:

sell the dollar!


A state news program, quoting unnamed "wealth management experts," told residents with dollar accounts on the mainland to convert their holdings into yuan or a range of other foreign currencies, including the pound and the euro.

The prospect of ordinary Chinese ditching the dollar should be less alarming than reports that have roiled global markets of Beijing diversifying its official foreign exchange reserves.
Whereas China's official reserves of more than $1.4 trillion are the world's biggest, private foreign currency deposits in China are a fraction that size: $162.1 billion at the end of October, according to People's Bank of China.

The central bank did not give a currency breakdown of these deposits.

Three Solutions to Dollar Weakness

The state news program, which did not quote any government official, said people were getting squeezed because the pace of yuan appreciation against the dollar was greater than the interest rate earned domestically on dollar accounts.

Analysts expect the yuan to rise anywhere from 5 to 7 percent annually against the dollar, while domestic dollar accounts earn depositors just 3 percent a year.

The program proposed three solutions.

"Selling dollar for yuan as soon as possible may be a safe approach,"
the news program said, adding the yuan could then be used to invest in domestic mutual funds.

"Secondly, you can change the dollar into strengthening currencies,"

it continued.


"Currently, the U.S. dollar is falling against the euro , the British pound , the Australian dollar and the Canadian dollar , and you can change the dollar into these currencies for deposits."

The third recommended strategy was to

invest the dollars abroad,

in search of higher yields, by buying into Qualified Domestic Institutional Investor (QDII) products offered by Chinese banks and fund managers.

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