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Why is US dollar access so restrained in China as trade war rages on?

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Why is US dollar access so restrained in China as trade war rages on?
  • Foreign financial institutions increasingly reluctant to lend US dollars to Chinese banks given worries about financial risks amid the trade war
  • China holding onto US dollars by increasingly restricting business and individual transfers out of the country


Karen Yeung

This is the second article in a three-part series looking at China’s US dollar shortage risks in the trade war, as it aims to open up its markets.

While China’s capital controls have limited how much access its citizens have to foreign currencies at home, banks and companies are finding it harder to obtain US dollars as the trade war not only hinders the nation’s ability to earn dollar revenue from exports, but also foreign lenders’ willingness to supply the US dollar to a slowing economy.

China’s central bank has been picking up its rhetoric to assure the public that economic fundamentals and policymakers’ competence would ensure that both the safety of the nation’s financial system and the yuan’s exchange rate are well under control.



But Beijing’s decision to step up capital controls, a growing number of analysts have said, underscores the perilous state of the economy, which was also reflected by the recent reluctance of foreign financial institutions to lend to Chinese banks and the nervous behaviour of Chinese citizens.

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Chinese exporters have been reluctant to repatriate dollars earned abroad amid fears over yuan depreciation and escalating trade tensions. Photo: AP
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Recent cases of individuals refused permission to buy US dollars at Chinese banks have started to accumulate, including one which involved a former central bank adviser,
Yu Yongding.
“People are thinking if China’s future is so strong and stable, why aren’t we allowed to buy dollars?” said Michael Every, Asia-Pacific senior strategist at Rabobank. “The harder it is to get around the capital controls, the more people want to obtain dollars.”

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The nation’s foreign exchange regulator, the State Administration of Foreign Exchanges (SAFE), allows every Chinese citizen to exchange and withdraw up to US$50,000 a year in foreign currency, either in a lump sum or in instalments.



The harder it is to get around the capital controls, the more people want to obtain dollarMichael Every

But Chinese individuals and companies still face major hurdles within that quota in the examination of their applications and declarations that indicate how and when the foreign exchange purchases are to be spent.


Additionally, banks are carefully scrutinising foreign currency withdrawals of US$3,000 or more in any single transaction, down from US$5,000 previously.

China had also set rules to ban some banks from allowing customers’ overseas currency transfers to be used for “speculation” buying of overseas insurance policies, foreign stocks or luxurious flats in cities such as Vancouver and San Francisco.

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Companies also require government approval to purchase property abroad, and these approvals are hard to come by unless property acquisitions are their primary business.

Currency transfers abroad are meant to be restricted to “normal and legitimate business activities” such as tourism, schooling, business travel and medical care. But Beijing on Tuesday issued a travel advisory for Chinese citizens planning to go to the US – the latest salvo in the trade battle – citing shootings, robbery and harassment as reasons for the alert.

Last month, in a routine disclosure of its foreign exchange disciplinary cases, SAFE named and shamed 17 banks, companies and individuals for trying to illegal transfer money out of China.

In one case, a man identified only by his surname, Hong, was fined 24.97 million yuan (US$3.6 million) for purchasing 312 million yuan (US$45.2 million) worth of foreign exchanges to buy homes abroad between February 2011 and October 2015.

Beijing is clamping down on outflows because it needs to head off the possibility of a significant economic and financial upheaval, especially if it fails to reach an agreement with the United States at the G20 meeting this month, leading US President Donald Trump to proceed in July with a tariff of up to 25 per cent on the remaining US$300 billion of Chinese imports that are not now subject to sanctions, analysts said.

“[China] is letting very little money to go out. Every time when they try to let [money] go out, the markets get too volatile for [China] to stand and they need to stop it immediately,” said Kevin Lai, chief economist for Asia, excluding Japan, at Daiwa Capital Markets.

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The domestic demand for dollars, coupled with the growing wariness in the global capital markets to provide US dollar funding to Chinese banks, seen as increasingly risky, are raising the possibly of a systemic “
dollar shortage”.

One of Washington’s main demands in talks to end the trade war is for a smaller state role in China’s economy and financial system.

Analyst Greg Gibbs, in a research note published on the fintech research network Smartkarma, said that for Beijing to do that would almost certainly trigger a systemic event, as many inefficient Chinese firms would fail without government intervention.

Last month, China’s bank regulator bailed out city commercial bank Baoshang Bank, which was collapsing under extensive and hidden credit risks after a massive expansion over the past few years.

While the People’s Bank of China (PBOC), the nation’s central bank, gave its assurance that the bailout was a one-off case, the incident has reinforced concerns about financial risks in China.

“Right now, China is viewed as a tremendous and growing risk in terms of economic downside and financial risks,” said Jeffrey Snider, head of research at Alhambra Investments. “The reason for any reluctance to lend US dollars to local Chinese banks freely [especially through Japanese banks] has to do with risk perceptions.”

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Foreign buying of yuan assets, including bonds and equities, has also declined recently, reflecting worries over yuan depreciation and the difficulty for foreigners to justify putting more money into China’s markets and committing to the country, Gibbs said.

The trade war makes matters exponentially worse if China can’t earn US dollars from exports to the US, said analysts, which would rapidly push the current account into deficit.

Domestic demand for US dollars is rising sharply because of exporters’ reluctance to repatriate dollars earned abroad amid fears over yuan depreciation and escalating trade tensions.

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Pedestrians walk past the People's Bank of China headquarters in Beijing. Photo: Simon Song
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For years, US dollars have been entering China as payment for cheap Chinese exports and through foreign investments. At the same time, Chinese firms relied on the US dollars they earned to pay for needed raw materials and technology for making their manufactured goods, as well as to make overseas investments.

But the hot money inflows that stocked the yuan’s rapid appreciation also became China’s headache that was hurting the competitiveness of its exporters in the years leading up to 2014. The PBOC had to regularly buy up excess US dollars flowing into Chinese banks in exchange for yuan to curb the strength of its exchange rate.

As a result, a significant quantity of these dollars ended up in the nation’s foreign exchange reserves, which, at their peak, exceeded US$4 trillion.

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The yuan’s appreciating trajectory started to reverse in 2015 as the economy slowed. The PBOC was forced to burn through US$1 trillion (US$144 billion) of its reserve to defend its currency and safeguard its financial system after it devalued the yuan by nearly 3 per cent against the US dollar over two days triggered investor panic across global financial markets.

The PBOC’s foreign exchange reserves have stabilised at around US$3.1 trillion in recent years but only because authorities have stepped up with the country’s capital controls and clamped down on outbound remittances.

Rabobank’s Every said that while China was trying to hold onto its US dollars by stopping people from taking money abroad through capital controls that will be effective in the short term, it could also be cutting itself off from the rest of the world, rather than integrating with it.

The third instalment will look the dollar shortage problem related to the financing requirements of China’s Belt and Road Initiative.
 
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Chinese are street smart like Indians and unlike Americans. They know how to circumvent any rule & will carry their dollar outside.

Does China have enough US dollars to survive the US trade war?
  • China’s US$3.1 trillion in foreign exchange reserves may not be sufficient to support a crisis in the economy, analysts say
  • Authorities have kept foreign reserves stable at around US$3.1 trillion since burning through almost US$1 trillion between mid-2014 and 2017 to defend the yuan


Karen Yeung

Published: 6:45pm, 30 May, 2019

This is the first article in a three-part series looking at China’s US dollar shortage risks amid the trade war with the United States as it plans to reform and internationalise its economy.

The Chinese government is officially sitting on the world’s largest stockpile of foreign exchange reserves, but it has been scrambling recently to block backchannels for capital outflows as trade tensions with the United States increase.

Beijing’s increasing scrutiny of the usage of the US dollar by Chinese companies and individuals, in the absence of any immediate signs of a financial crisis, along with accelerating efforts to lure in foreign capital, have raised suspicions among analysts that the world’s second-largest economy is worried about the risk of running short of the US dollar.



On the surface, China should be the last country in the world to worry about a shortage – about two-thirds of its US$3.1 trillion worth of foreign exchange reserves, the world’s largest, are believed to be held in US dollar-denominated assets.

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China’s US dollar interest rate for one-year deposits implied by the yuan exchange rate has risen to around 3.4 per cent from 2.4 per cent last August, according to Thomson Reuters data. Photo: Bloomberg
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But the huge foreign reserves and a relatively stable currency do no reflect the true stresses underlying the economy, analysts said, because the concerns are that those reserves may not be enough to provide the safety buffer needed to pay for China’s imports and pay off its debt in adverse circumstances if the yuan faced a devaluation or a sharp drop in value.

Analysts, though, doubt that China would be subject to an imminent balance of payment crisis similar to the one that Argentina experienced last year. The Latin American country was hit by a currency crisis and stagflation because of structural deficiencies that constrained real demand and prevented the economy from growing sustainably.

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“If there was a sudden shock to the country, China would not have enough US dollars to support its own currency,” said Kevin Lai, chief economist for Asia excluding Japan, at Daiwa Capital Markets. “So that is why China needs to stop money outflows while creating inflows to support the yuan.”


Like money of other sovereign nations, the yuan is backed by its foreign exchange reserves, which are largely invested in US Treasury securities. The People’s Bank of China – the country’s central bank – might need those assets not only to prop up the yuan by intervening in the foreign currency market, but also to bail out the domestic banking system.


If there was a sudden shock to the country, China would not have enough US dollars to support its own currencyKevin Lai


The risk is that if China’s capital controls are ineffective, the exodus of funds and a portion of China’s reserves are not easily converted into cash, then the central bank will soon have insufficient funds to maintain currency stability.

Ever since US President Donald Trump started imposing tariffs on Chinese imports in July last year, there have been worries about a sharper-than-expected slowdown of China’s economy, which would accelerate capital outflows and reduce the supply of US dollars in the domestic financial system.

But policymakers worry that by digging further into its savings, even just letting foreign reserves fall below the psychologically important US$3 trillion level, could invite market speculation and set off a vicious cycle of sharp capital outflows and currency depreciation. Authorities have kept foreign reserves stable at around US$3.1 trillion since burning through almost US$1 trillion between mid-2014 and 2017 to defend the yuan.

China’s reserves are now less than 30 per cent of its gross domestic product (GDP), down from 48 per cent in 2010. At the same time, the country’s external debt ballooned to an all time high of US$1.97 trillion last year. This means its US$3.1 trillion in foreign reserves is about 1.6 times of its external debt and would be enough to cover 12 months of goods and services imports.

China’s underlying vulnerability is especially opaque because the government is the ultimate holder of nearly all corporate debt. State-owned enterprises and other public entities enjoy implicit guarantees from the government and other forms of preferential treatment, so even though corporate bond defaults hit a record high last year, the ratio remains at a relatively low 1 per cent of outstanding bonds.

Total Chinese bond issuance rose to US$1 trillion in 2018, up from US$927 million in 2017 and US$774 million in 2015, according to data from Dealogic. At the same time, corporate debt in China stood at 155 per cent of GDP in the second quarter of 2018, much higher than in other major economies and unlikely to be sustainable, said the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development. By comparison, Japan’s corporate debt level is 100 per cent of GDP, and that of the US is 74 per cent.

As the trade war with the US escalates, the government is quietly tightening outbound money flows further, although according to Chinese law, citizens are allowed to withdraw as much as US$50,000 a year.

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Chinese law allows citizens to withdraw a maximum of US$50,000 a year. Photo: AFP
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Former
central bank adviser Yu Yongding
said he was personally refused permission to transfer US$20,000 from his own personal account abroad. According to Yu, the bank refused to provide the service because he is over 65 years old. Chinese banks are also scrutinising foreign currency withdrawals of US$3,000 or more in any single transaction, down from US$5,000 previously.
An apparent reflection of the tighter supply of US dollars and their rising costs, China’s US dollar interest rate for one-year deposits implied by the yuan exchange rate has risen steadily to around 3.4 per cent from 2.4 per cent last August, according to Thomson Reuters data.

“I always support capital account controls, and I always encourage such measures. But sometimes we tend to be too extreme in doing things,” Yu was quoted as saying by Chinese news portal Sina.com. “Legal foreign exchange deals are being hindered.”

In a statement replying a request by the Post, SAFE said it “full guarantees true and legal foreign exchange uses by individuals” and every Chinese citizen in China is entitled to the right to buy up to US$50,000 worth of foreign exchanges a year.

The regulator added that there’s no age limit for dollar purchases.

The second instalment will explain why the US dollar access is so restrained in China.
 
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