Economists expected China's reserves to fall by around $33 bln in
November. Instead, they fell by
a little more than $87 bln. This is
the third largest decline it has recorded, and a little below the $94 bln drop
reported in |August.
China's reserves peaked in June 2014 near $3.993 trillion. At
the end of November, they were just above
$3.438 trillion, which is essentially
where they stood in October 2014. What happened in November?
There are two main considerations. The first is valuation.
This is an important though often
under-appreciated or overlooked entirely. The reserves are not simply a
quantity of foreign assets that the central bank holds, but it is also a
valuation. For reporting purposes,
the foreign currency holdings are converted into dollars.
The euro fell 4% in November. Although China has begun to adopt
the IMF's best practice about reporting its reserve holdings, it is not yet
fully transparent. Assuming that China's euro holdings matched the global
share of allocated reserves (20.5% at the end of Q2), the depreciation of the
euro alone accounted for an almost $29 bln decline in the value of China's
reserves. The change in the euro's value accounts for a third of the
decline in China's reserve holding.
In November, nearly all the reserve currencies depreciated against the
dollar. The Swiss franc also fell 4%. Sterling lost 2.4%.
The Canadian dollar slipped 2.1%, and the
yen eased 2%. All told, it seems reasonable to assume that
nearly half of the decline in China's reserves may be traced to the vagaries of the foreign exchange market.
That leads us to the second main consideration. Capital
outflows. The yuan had strengthened in September and October following
the devaluation in August. However, in November the yuan's decline
resumed. It fell 1.25% in November. And the gap between the onshore
and offshore yuan (CNY and CNH) widened, spurring talk of official
action.
China will report its November trade balance tomorrow. The Bloomberg consensus is for a $64 bln
surplus. However, we think it is not appropriate to simply assume this
should have translated into an increase of reserves of the same amount, and
that the fact it hasn't, shows the magnitude of capital outflows.
Note that while China reports a merchandise surplus, it runs a deficit on
services. Also, due to
liberalization measures, companies with hard currency earning from trade have
greater latitude and need not convert all with the central bank, which used to
be the case.
This is not to deny that China is
experiencing capital outflows. Rather it is an attempt to keep those
outflows in perspective. The Chinese yuan is not immune to the same
force (divergence) that is lifting the US dollar against most
currencies.
Being selected to be in the SDR change these dynamics. Being in
the SDR has not made the Japanese yen, for example, a more international
currency in terms of reserve usage,
invoicing trade, or the denomination of global bonds. Those looking for
substantial inflows based on last week's IMF decision may have to be very
patient. One of the reasons that implementation of the new basket was delayed apparently was the push back by
many members not wanting to have to rush whatever adjustment they would make in
the year-end conditions.
Still, a September 2016 implementation time frame is more than required to address this concern. Instead, one cannot help bust suspect the extra time is to give China time for additional liberalization efforts. Even if a central bank wanted to boost yuan reserves, there need not be a hurry. The currency is likely to weaken further and there will likely be additional liberalization announced that may boost access, transparency and hedging capabilities.
Disclaimer
Why China's Reserves Fell $87.2 bln in November
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
December 07, 2015
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