The U.S. & China Going in Opposite Directions

The Reality of China and the U.S.

Last week we published an article on the advent of the Yuan as a global reserve currency. We believe this event is the most significant event to appear on the global monetary scene. It overshadows the Eurozone debt problems because it will change the monetary world significantly. We don’t believe for one second that the euro will collapse. The euro will receive considerable investment from China overtime at a time when it is needed most. China realizes that as an alternative to the U.S. dollar, the euro is needed in the global monetary system. By investing in the world’s two most powerful trading blocs, China is gaining a foothold that may well swing the [financial] balance of power towards itself, in time. Neither of these two blocs will be able to do without China’s investments shortly. Such dependence protects China as much as it weakens the Eurozone and the U.S.

As to the threat of military action from either side, we believe that China will not even move towards a confrontation. Tacit support for South Korea and a withdrawal of support for North Korea against a considerable softening of U.S. support for Taiwan may well be discussed in the visit of China to the U.S. Any confrontational moves may well be softened by the use of the United Nations as a mediator. The battle for power will be limited to the international trade and monetary scenes, we believe.

Will the Yuan Appreciate?

Senior U.S. Senators are again threatening to legislate against China’s ‘management’ of the yuan. By now most of us see this as a display of testosterone and unlikely to sway China in the least. Chinese wages have to move to the same level as those of the U.S. [whether by falling wages in the U.S. or rising wages in China] before international trade is on a level playing field. A change in the exchange rate of the yuan to the dollar is not likely to dent China’s global trade competitiveness one iota. China has made it clear there will be no change in its stance. As we pointed out in our last article we expect to see a sufficient quantity of Yuan sent into world markets from China to hold it steady or weaken in a ‘free float’. It is part of a very large global strategy unfolding now. To those who doubt this, ask yourself, “If Chinese exporters price their goods in the yuan or even in the other global currencies, what will happen to the dollar?”

How will the Yuan affect Gold

For a number of years now, China has been developing its gold market. Huge precious metals warehouses are now situated in Hong Kong next to its very efficient Airport there. Recently China expanded the number of gold importers permitted to import gold to China. China’s banks have developed gold distribution centers throughout the major cities of China. The Chinese public can see the benefits of owning gold by the price rises it has seen in the gold price over those years. The government itself is accumulating its own local gold production as well as encouraging its citizens to buy gold. If there was any intention of re-valuing the yuan, then the Chinese public could well see this as a betrayal of investors by the government. No, we have no doubt that we will not see a rising yuan. We have stood by this forecast for the last two years, in the face of foreign pressure on the yuan to rise. Instead, we continue to expect the gold price to perform, in the yuan, much as it does in the U.S. dollar now. For that reason and because of the ongoing development of China and the growth of a huge middle class in China, for the foreseeable future, we see a steady growth in the rise of gold investments in China.

Chinese Visit to the U.S.

Whether it is the Obama Administration or any other we expect the change in attitude towards China by the U.S. as being one where both seek mutually beneficial policies. Despite the change in the fortunes of the two nations, there will be a desire to quietly adjust to the situation by both sides. And these adjustments will be huge. Just as Britain in the last century started as the number one world power and had to slip well down the ranks, so the U.S. will see the beginning of a similar process in the next couple of years. The greatest change in that process will be the shrinkage of the use of the U.S. dollar as the use of the yuan grows rapidly.

To that end it is abundantly clear already that any opposition to the growth of the Yuan in global trade by the U.S. will be disruptive and particularly harmful to the interests of the U.S.A. As part of this process, it is inevitable that the U.S. will not oppose the use of the yuan as a petro currency, in sales of oil to China. We cannot see China accepting the pressure to keep using the dollar to impact on its oil imports, just as it is now using the Ruble and the Yuan in its oil trade with Russia already. Be ready for considerable change in the future.

Will China promote the use of gold in the world’s Monetary System?

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