“Surplus holders dumping the $.
After the seizure of parts of the capital markets over the summer and after the Federal Reserve’s 0.5% rate cut, the U.S. yield advantage over other countries diminished and will drop further as more rate cuts are made. This has triggered serious withdrawals of capital from the U.S. and will keep doing so until growth is safe.
In August, Japan and China led a record withdrawal of foreign funds from the United States in August. Data from the U.S. Treasury showed outflows of $163 billion from all forms of U.S. investments. With the market still affected by the August crises we can expect the outflow to continue into September’s figures and October’s.
- Asian investors dumped $52 billion worth of US Treasury bonds alone.
- Japan ($23 billion).
- China ($14.2 billion)
- Taiwan ($5 billion).
Central banks in Singapore, Korea, Taiwan, and Vietnam have all begun to cut purchases of U.S. bonds, or signaled their intention to do so. In effect, they are giving up trying to hold down their currencies because the policy is starting to set off inflation.
It is the first time since 1998 that foreigners have, on balance, sold Treasuries. And what an impressive outflow in one month we’ve seen. It is not just foreigners who are selling U.S. assets, Americans are turning their back as well.
America has relied on “hot money” from abroad to cover 25% to 30% of the U.S. short-term credit and commercial paper market over the last two years. The U.S. requires $60 billion a month in capital inflows to cover its current account deficit alone and this inflow is slowing down, threatening the U.S. Balance of Payments over a much longer term period, something that will produce global earthquakes in exchange rates, major capital flows and see a battery of national [Exchange Control] walls spring up to protect individual nations.
From what we believed are institutions under the control of the U.S., based in the Cayman Islands capital was brought in to the extent of $60 billion from “hedge funds” based in Britain and the Caymans, which covered U. S. capital shortfall and positions at the height of the credit crunch.
Most of us are still of a mindset to believe that the Fed has full control of U.S. interest rates. If the move out of the $ is not just a reaction to the U.S. banking crisis but a long-term trend, then the sales of Treasuries will of itself lead to higher interest rates, leaving the $ surplus holders of Asia in control of U.S. interest rates. The Fed will be left to react but not control.”