Boris Schlossberg: All China Worries Will Dollar Be in Trouble?




Chinese central bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan pledged today to act assertively  
in restoring confidence in China's badly shaken financial sector noting that, 
"If we act slowly and less decisively, we're likely to see what happened in 
other countries: a slide in confidence." Mr. Zhou's comments may have simply 
been a rearguard action after markets were clearly disappointed with Chinese 
Premier's Web Jiabao speech on Tuesday that failed to offer any new stimulus 
spending plans aside from the $800 billion program already announced last 
summer. 

Although the world's third largest economy continues to expand, Premier Wen 
Jiabao's assertion yesterday that China's growth will reach 8% this year struck 
many analysts as overly optimistic.  China's internal demand is simply not 
mature enough to generate organic growth and its critical export sector is 
reeling from very sharp fall off in demand from G10 nations.

The quick reaction from Chinese monetary officials indicates the high level of 
anxiety amongst the country's policymakers regarding the economic outlook in 
2009.  China simply cannot grow if US and EZ consumer demand continues to 
erode. To that end, today's US NFP numbers could be a crucial data point for 
global capital markets. If unemployment rises, as some uber bears fear, by 
nearly 1 million jobless, the impact on consumer spending is likely to be 
catastrophic greatly reducing Chinese export income.

Under that scenario the dollar may come under tremendous amount of stress in 
the near future. We have long argued that the worst case scenario for the 
greenback in 2009 would a failed Treasury auction.  If Chinese are forced to 
repatriate some of their $700 Billion portfolio of US Treasury securities in 
order to support domestic demand, they will in effect cut off one of the 
primary sources of financing for US government debt.  US officials may have no 
choice but to engage in a massive quantitative easing program with the Fed 
becoming the buyer of last resort for US government paper. Such a move would  
almost certainly drive the dollar lower as panic will spread in the currency 
market over the massive dilutive impact of such policy.



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