HMM: China cuts its holdings of US debt to lowest in 2 years.
The largest foreign owner of U.S. debt reduced the level by just shy of $20.5 billion, a slight decrease that brought the total holdings down to $1.12 trillion. But the move represents a continued pattern of declines that comes as the two sides have been unable to hammer out a long-term trade agreement and instead have been engaging in a tit-for-tat tariff fight that has escalated in recent days.
In the 12-month period ending March, the latest month for which data is available, China’s stockpile of U.S. government notes, bonds and bills fell by $67.2 billion, a 5.6% decline. The total has fallen by some $200 billion since the peak in 2012 and now represents 7% of total U.S. debt outstanding, compared to 12% previously, according to UBS.
The threat of the nation either not buying Treasurys or engaging in outright sales has shaken the bond market before.
It isn’t often appreciated, but Beijing has indeed been manipulating the value of the yuan — up versus the dollar, not down. Otherwise the country could wind up with a yuge balance-of-payments problem. Trade insecurity could work against that effort, which is just one more lever in Trump’s trade negotiations.