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Economy | ||
China dumps 97 percent of short-term T bills | ||
2011-06-04 | ||
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Until October, the Chinese were generally making up for their decreasing holdings in Treasury bills by increasing their holdings of longer-term U.S. Treasury securities. Thus, until October, China's overall holdings of U.S. debt continued to increase. Since October, however, China has also started to divest from longer-term U.S. Treasury securities. Thus, as reported by the Treasury Department, China's ownership of the U.S. national debt has decreased in each of the last five months on record, including November, December, January, February and March. Prior to the fall of 2008, acccording to Treasury Department data, Chinese ownership of short-term Treasury bills was modest, standing at only $19.8 billion in August of that year. But when President George W. Bush signed legislation to authorize a $700-billion bailout of the U.S. financial industry in October 2008 and President Barack Obama signed a $787-billion economic stimulus law in February 2009, Chinese ownership of short-term U.S. Treasury bills skyrocketed. By December 2008, China owned $165.2 billion in U.S. Treasury bills, according to the Treasury Department. By March 2009, Chinese Treasury bill holdings were at $191.1 billion. By May 2009, Chinese holdings of Treasury bills were peaking at $210.4 billion. However, China's overall appetite for U.S. debt increased over a longer span than did its appetite for short-term U.S. Treasury bills. In August 2008, before the bank bailout and the stimulus law, overall Chinese holdings of U.S. debt stood at $573.7 billion. That number continued to escalate past May 2009-- when China started to reduce its holdings in short-term Treasury bills--and ultimately peaked at $1.1753 trillion last October. As of March 2011, overall Chinese holdings of U.S. debt had decreased to 1.1449 trillion.
The publicly marketable segment of the national debt includes Treasury bills, which (as defined by the Treasury) mature in terms of one-year or less; Treasury notes, which mature in terms of 2 to 10 years; Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS), which mature in terms of 5, 10 and 30 years; and Treasury bonds, which mature in terms of 30 years. At the end of August 2008, before the financial bailout and the stimulus, the publicly marketable segment of the U.S. national debt was 4.88 trillion. Of that, $2.56 trillion was in the intermediate-term Treasury notes, $1.22 trillion was in short-term Treasury bills, $582.8 billion was in long-term Treasury bonds, and $521.3 billion was in TIPS. At the end of March 2011, by which time the Chinese had dropped their Treasury bill holdings 97 percent from their peak, the publicly marketable segment of the U.S. national debt had almost doubled from August 2008, hitting $9.11 trillion. Of that $9.11 trillion, $5.8 trillion was in intermediate-term Treasury notes, $1.7 trillion was in short-term Treasury bills; $931.5 billion was in long-term Treasury bonds, and $640.7 billion was in TIPS. Before the end of March 2012, the Treasury must redeem all of the $1.7 trillion in Treasury bills that were extant as of March 2011 and find new or old buyers who will continue to invest in U.S. debt. But, for now, the Chinese at least do not appear to be bullish customers of short-term U.S. debt. Treasury bills carry lower interest rates than longer-term Treasury notes and bonds, but the longer term notes and bonds are exposed to a greater risk of losing their value to inflation. To the degree that the $1.7 trillion in short-term U.S. Treasury bills extant as of March must be converted into longer-term U.S. Treasury securities, the U.S. government will be forced to pay a higher annual interest rate on the national debt. As of the close of business on Thursday, the total U.S. debt was $14.34 trillion, according to the Daily Treasury Statement. Of that, approximately $9.74 trillion was debt held by the public and approximately $4.61 trillion was "intragovernmental" debt. | ||
Posted by:Steve White |
#9 If China sold their bills, they think rates will go up. Makes sense. The players on that last zerohedge chart account for only half of the US public debt. Who holds the rest? Retirees via funds? So China holds 12% of the US public debt - not exactly a death grip. OTOH, they might be more active in the market than that silent half. |
Posted by: KBK 2011-06-04 20:11 |
#8 Zero Hedge debunks the story On "China Dumps US Bonds" Attempts At Clickbaiting |
Posted by: tipper 2011-06-04 19:00 |
#7 China has been buying up US oil fields. They bought up 600,000 acres of drilling rights in the Eagle Ford formation last year. To get that oil, the Chinese are going to need to use "fracking" (hydraulic fracturing) of the shale. I expect EPA opposition to fracking will now end. |
Posted by: crosspatch 2011-06-04 15:33 |
#6 And what are they buying with those dollars? Us. And our energy reserves. |
Posted by: Chavinter Hupavirong3890 2011-06-04 14:27 |
#5 So China is redeeming the bonds for (devalued) cash dollars? And what are they buying with those dollars? Greek debt? (More likely US & global stocks - SOMETHING is supporting their prices, and it isn't earnings or anticipated earnings.) |
Posted by: Glenmore 2011-06-04 12:50 |
#4 They pull a shell game, in which the Treasury redeems the T-bills with "newly printed money", then puts them in a new issue which is sold to the FED. |
Posted by: Anonymoose 2011-06-04 09:26 |
#3 The long-threatened move away from the US dollar and Treasuries has begun in earnest. Lots of heads are firmly buried in sand ... or elsewhere ... to avoid acknowledging this. |
Posted by: lotp 2011-06-04 07:31 |
#2 Half-black. Now if Tiger Woods was president ... |
Posted by: Bobby 2011-06-04 07:13 |
#1 Racist Chinese punishing the first non African state to elect a Black to highest office? |
Posted by: g(r)omgoru 2011-06-04 06:41 |