China says no plan to reduce U.S. Treasury purchases

Yesterday, we notedย a Bloombergย report that indicated some senior Chinese government officials had recommended โ€œslowing or halting purchases of U.S. Treasuries.โ€ Today, the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) published a brief noteย (in Chinese) on its website denying there was any planned change.

  • SAFE saysย it only learned of the supposed plan through media reports, blaming them on โ€œerroneous information sourcesโ€ (้”™่ฏฏ็š„ไฟกๆฏๆฅๆบ cuรฒwรน de xรฌnxฤซ lรกiyuรกn) or โ€œfake informationโ€ (ๅ‡ๆถˆๆฏ jiวŽ xiฤoxฤซ).
  • China holds $1.2 trillionย of the $14 trillion market in T-bills, according to official data, but the Financial Timesย saysย (paywall) some analysts โ€œbelieve that the country also owns several hundred billion via other financial centers.โ€
  • โ€œOfficials may have leakedย the information as a warning to the Trump administration that Beijing could retaliateโ€ against trade pressure, according to speculation by โ€œsome fixed-income strategists,โ€ as reported by the FT.
  • Even if it does happen, some commentators doubt it will affect the demand for U.S. treasuries โ€” โ€œFirst, I don’t think it’s relevant, second, I don’t think it’s going to happen,” one economist toldย CNBC. โ€œThere’s plenty of buyers.โ€
  • Still, some investors are โ€œspookedโ€ at the prospect of reduced demand for T-bills, saysย (paywall) the New York Times.

Losing female reporters

Mei Fong is the author of One Child: The Story of Chinaโ€™s Most Radical Experiment, former Beijing correspondent for the Wall Street Journal,ย and previous Sinica Podcastย guest. She has written an op-ed for the New York Timesย (paywall) in reaction to the BBCโ€™s China editor Carrie Gracie resigning from her post, citing pay inequality with male colleagues. Titled โ€œWhat we lose when we lose female reporters,โ€ Fong argues that, questions of fairness aside, โ€œthe case for equal pay is the case for better reportingโ€ฆ Our understanding of China would be hugely diminished without the contribution of many outstanding female correspondents.โ€