Money
China's Treasury holdings rise in August to highest in year
Chinese 100 yuan banknotes and a US$1 banknote are seen in this file picture illustration in Beijing, China on January 25, 2016. u00e2u20acu201d Reuters picn

BEIJING, Oct 18 — China’s holdings of US Treasuries rose in August to the highest in more than a year as the world’s second-biggest economy saw a strengthening of its currency.

China’s holdings of US bonds, notes and bills advanced for the seventh straight month to US$1.2 trillion (RM5.05 trillion), an increase of US$34.5 billion from a month earlier, according to Treasury Department data released Tuesday in Washington. That’s the highest level since July 2016.

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China remains the biggest foreign holder of US Treasuries, ahead of Japan, which owned US$1.1 trillion, down by US$11.4 billion from July. The two countries account for more than a third of all foreign ownership of Treasuries, which gained by $19.4 billion to $6.27 trillion in August, the figures showed.

China’s foreign-exchange reserves increased for an eighth month to US$3.11 trillion in September, according to a report released last week. The country’s capital outflows have eased amid tighter controls, helping steady the currency. The yuan has gained as much as 8 percent against the greenback this year, rebounding from a loss of about 6.5 per cent last year.

The yuan may have rallied even higher had China not stepped up the pace of their Treasury purchases, said Thomas Simons, senior economist at Jefferies LLC in New York. China tends to buy Treasuries in long-term trends, according to Simons, and August marked the seventh straight month in which China bought against yuan strength.

"The reason why they’re on this programme is to measure their currency appreciation, so they’re buying US dollars to hold it back a little bit,” Simons said. "It shows they’re still fighting against market forces.”

Belgium’s ownership of Treasuries, often seen as a home to China’s custodial accounts, fell to US$96.9 billion in August from US$99.4 billion a month earlier.

The Treasury report, which also contains data on international capital flows, showed a net inflow of long-term securities of US$67.2 billion after US$1.2 billion in July. It showed a total cross-border inflow, including short-term securities such as Treasury bills and stock swaps, of US$125 billion following outflows of US$7.3 billion the prior month. — Bloomberg

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