China’s Dollar Trap

By Kathy Lien • June 25th, 2009
Kathy Lien

Here is a very well written article about China’s predicament with the U.S. dollar and explains why they won’t be talking down the dollar anytime soon:

From the Weekly Standard

The Dollar’s New Best Friend
Beijing warms up to the greenback–because it has to.
by Gordon G. Chang

Last Tuesday, Brazil, Russia, India, and China–the so-called BRIC nations–met in Yekaterinburg, Russia, for what was supposed to be an anti-American gabfest. The main agenda item for the first formal meeting of the four largest developing economies was the future of the dollar. In recent months, Beijing and Moscow have led a global charge against the greenback, and Brasilia has been a willing co-conspirator in the effort. The BRIC post-summit communiqué referred to the world’s currency problems but, to the surprise of observers, did not attack the dollar head on.

What happened? Beijing, apparently, stopped the other nations cold. The Chinese called the tune at the Moscow meeting–their economy is almost as large as the other three combined–and so the surprisingly nonconfrontational tone of the BRIC official statement mirrored Beijing’s recent climbdown on the currency issue.

The Chinese government in the last few weeks seems to have radically changed its tune on this issue. In March, Zhou Xiaochuan, the head of China’s central bank, called for the replacement of the dollar as the world’s reserve currency in a widely reported text released to the public. In May, however, Beijing officials took a different tack, going out of their way to talk about the dollar’s unique status.

Continue Reading

 

Leave a Comment

« Interview Outlook for EUR/USD and Commodity Currencies | Home | Forex Trading Tips: Hitting High Probability and High Profit »

How To Pick Tops and Bottoms in FX

September 3, 2011 • by: Boris Schlossberg

VIDEO TOURSBK Forex Advisor Video

A Video Tour of BK Website

Come join us on detailed tour of our website

Boris's Scalping Strategy to Capture 10 Pips Per Day

Watch high probability day trading in action

see our BK Forex Advisor YouTube Channel
How To Bounce Back After Getting Hit By a Bus

February 3, 2012 • by: Boris Schlossberg

Morons Increase Margin

January 26, 2012 • by: Boris Schlossberg

Losers Add to Losers

January 20, 2012 • by: Boris Schlossberg

How Much Do You Want To Make?

January 13, 2012 • by: Boris Schlossberg

Moonshot

January 6, 2012 • by: Boris Schlossberg

see all posts by Boris Schlossberg
CNBC Video: My Outlook for Euro

January 31, 2012 • by: Kathy Lien

What EZ Bond Yields Imply About S&P Downgrades

January 19, 2012 • by: Kathy Lien

CNBC Video: Whats in Store for Euro

January 13, 2012 • by: Kathy Lien

CNBC Video: Whats in Store for Euro

January 13, 2012 • by: Kathy Lien

What are Central Banks Expected to do in 2012?

January 10, 2012 • by: Kathy Lien

see all posts by Kathy Lien
bk-for-testemonials

* Past performance is not indicative of future results.

Forex (and Futures) trading involves high risks, with the potential for substantial losses, and is not suitable for all persons. These testimonials may not be representative of the experiences of other customer sand are no guarantee of future performances or successes.

Kathy Lien and Boris Schlossberg are employed as Co-Heads of Global Research for Global Forex Trading, a division of Global Futures & Forex, Ltd. (GFT). However, the BKTraderFX.com and BKForexadvisors.com web site is maintained by BKForex Advisor, LLC which is a company owned and operated by Kathy and Boris separately and independently from their employment with GFT. GFT is not affiliated with BKForex Advisor LLC and does not control the content of the BKTraderFX.com web site, and opinions expressed by Boris and Kathy on the BKTraderFX.com web site are not necessarily the opinions of GFT.

copyright notice | terms of service | terms of use | website policy