Posts Tagged ‘China’

Largest Rare-Earth Metal Mine In US Is Open

Tuesday, June 21st, 2011

Molycorp, Inc. (NYSE:MCP) announced that it has secured the final funds necessary for the capital build-out of its estimated $781 million expansion and modernization project at its flagship rare-earth oxides facility at Mountain Pass, California. The first phase of its mining project is expected to be operational by next year. When completed, the mine will be the first time in a decade that rare-earth oxides are being produced in the United States, which once lead the world in such production. The alloys and magnets that are produced from the rare-earth metals are needed for a range of today’s emerging high-tech and electronic systems and devices, from wind turbines to computer batteries to smartphones to hybrid and electric cars. Today, 95% of the rare-earth metals needed for today’s technologies are extracted in China.

When Phase 1 of the project is completed, expected to occur next year, Molycorp says its manufacturing assets will comprise the world’s first fully integrated rare earth manufacturing supply chain, producing high-purity rare earth oxides, metals, alloys, and neodymium-iron-boron (NdFeB) permanent magnets, widely used in transportation, high tech, clean energy, defense, and other industries. The re-opening of the site, closed in 2002, offers a  hedge against China’s dominance of the world’s supply of rare-earth metals. Worldwide demand for the elements reached 125,000 tons in 2010, and is expected to grow to 225,000 tons by 2015.

According to a report in The Economist, cheap labor in China ate into the profitability of the Mountain Pass site a decade ago:

“A decade ago America was the world’s largest producer of rare-earth metals. But its huge open-cast mine at Mountain Pass, California, closed in 2002—a victim mainly of China’s drastically lower labor costs. Today, China produces 95% of the world’s supply of rare-earth metals, and has started limiting exports to keep the country’s own high-tech industries supplied.”

The rare-earth element of greatest value is is neodymium, the key ingredient of super-strong permanent magnets: “Over the past year the price of neodymium has quadrupled as electric motors that use permanent magnets instead of electromagnetic windings have gained even wider acceptance,” according to The Economist. Cheaper, smaller and more powerful, permanent-magnet motors and generators have made modern wind turbines and electric vehicles viable.” The Economist adds, however, that not all electric car makers seek rare earth metals, including the Tesla Roadster, the BMW Mini-E, or AC Propulsion. “The latest carmaker to seek a rare-earth alternative is Toyota. The world’s largest carmaker is reported to be developing a neodymium-free electric motor for its expanding range of hybrid cars.”

Molycorp, research by Dahlman Rose, one of the research firms that has been most bullish on the stock, has a target on the shares to $120 to reflect potential dilution attributable to the company’s recent issue of $230 million in convertible debt. Dahlman Rose said it still views Molycorp as the best way to participate in the rare earths industry and that the company can still generate outsized returns even in a much lower price environment for rare earths. Speaking of the price environment for rare earths, the Rare Earth Stocks Index is soaring 2.9% on news that Chinese exports of the 17 elements used to make a variety of high-tech and military gadgets fell 8.8% in the first five months of this year compared against the year-earlier period. Declining Chinese exports are believed to be one of the catalysts behind the recent surge in rare earths as China controls 95% of the rare earths export market.

Chinese exports fell to 23,742 metric tons in the January-May 2011 period, the Wall Street Journalreported, citing China’s Economic Information & Agency. Beijing also reiterated its vow to remain vigilant against violators of the export quotas, the Journal reported.

Previous posts of rare-earths and MolyCorp can be found here

Molycorp’s Mine -

Products made from Rare Earths

China’s Inflation & US Data Lift Markets

Tuesday, June 14th, 2011

China’s Data

Chinese consumer inflation accelerated to a three-year high in May, in line with expectations and bolstering the case for tighter credit conditions to help contain prices, while other data helped round out a picture of relatively upbeat economic activity. The consumer price index rose 5.5% in May from a year earlier, compared to April’s 5.3% gain, the fastest rise since a 6.3% gain in July 2008, according to data released Tuesday by the National Bureau of Statistics in Beijing. A Dow Jones Newswires survey had tipped a 5.5% rise in the consumer price index, while a Reuters poll had projected a 5.4% rise. China on Tuesday lifted the proportion of funds banks must set aside as reserves by a half-point effective from June 20, marking the sixth such increase so far this year. The move reinforces its efforts to contain inflation, which is running at a nearly three-year high. The May producer price index rose 6.8%, flat from April and above the 6.5% consensus in the Dow Jones survey. Analysts at IHS Global Insight said it was “worrying” that the PPI reading hadn’t cooled, as many market observers were expecting.

Analysts believe there will be a soft landing event, and the enlarging gap between bearish perceptions and a much more stable reality could create another money-making opportunity at some point in the second half of 2011. It should be noted in particular that non-food inflation accelerated markedly in May to contribute to higher headline inflation, indicating increasing risk of inflation becoming more generalized.

The move by the The People’s Bank of China will bring the reserve requirement ratio to 21.5% for large banks and 19.5% for smaller ones. The move was unveiled after markets in China closed. The trend signals a greater resolve within China’s central bank to inflation, he said, estimating it will drain about 370 billion yuan ($57.1 billion) from the banking system.

Fixed-asset investment accelerated to 25.8% in the January-May period from a year earlier, picking up from the 25.4% rise in the January-April period, and beating analyst expectations of a 25.3% rise in the to Dow Jones survey.

Meanwhile, industrial production rose 13.3% from the year-ago period, just above the separate Dow Jones and Reuters forecasts of 13.2%, but easing slightly from 13.4% in April.

Retail sales for the month were 16.9% above May 2010’s level, compared to 17.1% growth in April, and March’s 17.4% on-year rise. Analysts said the weaker retail sales growth was attributable to easing auto sales, which fell 3.9% in May from a year earlier, according to monthly figures released by the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers.

US Data

U.S. wholesale prices rose 0.2% in May, the slowest pace in 10 months, as the cost of food fell and the increase in energy prices tapered off, the Labor Department reported Tuesday. The more closely followed core producer index also rose 0.2% in May. Analyst’s had predicted increases of 0.1% for overall producer prices and 0.2% for the core rate. Food costs dropped 1.4% last month, owing mainly to lower vegetable prices, to mark the biggest one-month decline in almost a year. Energy prices, meanwhile, rose 1.5% in May, the slowest rate since September. The price index for intermediate goods rose 0.9% and crude prices dropped 4.0%.

Retail sales, which provide a snapshot of consumption, fell for the first time in 11 months, although the decline was less than expected. Total retail sales slipped 0.2 percent, according to the Commerce Department. Economists had forecast retail sales falling 0.4 percent, according to Reuters.

Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 95 points to 11,980 and Standard & Poor’s 500 index futures were up 13.60 points at 1,279.8. In the context of good growth data in China and an oversold market condition in the US, a short-term bounce makes sense. I think from here on in it will be a sideways moving market for the rest of the year with a few market uptrends in the second of 2011. There are too many economic and political uncertainties — including high weekly jobless claims, high oil prices, an unstable housing market and disagreement over U.S. debt.

US Economic Data: Claims, Trade Deficit, Wholesale Inventories

Thursday, June 9th, 2011

Jobless Claims

The number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment aid unexpectedly edged higher last week, stoking fears of a stalled economic recovery even as a separate report showed record U.S. exports in April. Initial claims for state jobless benefits increased 1,000 to 427,000, the Labor Department said. However, economists polled by Reuters had forecast claims dropping to 415,000 from a previously reported count of 422,000. The rise kept first-time claims perched above the 400,000 mark for the ninth week in a row. Analysts normally associate a level below that with steady job growth.

Fueling concerns about job creation, the U.S. government said on Friday the U.S. unemployment rate ticked up to 9.1 percent in May while non-farm employers added a paltry 54,000 workers to their payrolls. Analysts say the June Report may show a rise in the  unemployment to 9.2%

Trade Deficit

A Commerce Department report showed the U.S. trade deficit narrowed unexpectedly in April, as U.S. exports rose to a new record and imports from Japan tumbled more than 25 percent after its earthquake, tsunami and nuclear disaster. The monthly trade gap totaled $43.7 billion, down 6.7 percent from a revised estimate of $46.8 billion in March which was originally reported as $48.2 billion. The $3 billion drop in imports from Japan from March to April was the largest on record. U.S. auto and auto parts imports from Japan and other suppliers fell $2.8 billion, partly reflecting supply chain disruptions in the aftermath of the triple disaster.

Once those problems are worked through, many analysts expect the trade gap to widen again. Right now the trade report looks like it’s going to be positive for Q2 GDP, but by the end of June the bounce back will be obvious. The trade gap narrowed despite the biggest month-to-month jump in prices for imported oil in nearly three years. The average price rose to $103.18 per barrel, the highest since September 2008.

However, the volume of crude oil imports fell, pushing the overall U.S. oil import bill lower in April. That, combined with the lower imports from Japan, helped trim total U.S. imports 0.4 percent to $219.2 billion, even as imports of foods, feeds and beverages set a record, the report showed.

U.S. exports, buoyed by a weakening of the U.S. dollar, rose 1.3 percent to a record $175.6 billion, led by record shipments of industrial supplies and materials and capital goods and smaller gains for food, feeds and beverages, consumer goods and autos and auto parts.

The closely watched U.S. trade deficit with China jumped nearly 20 percent in April to $21.6 billion. It continues at a pace to exceed last year’s record of about $273 billion.

Wholesale Inventories

U.S. wholesale inventories rose less than expected in April, held back by the biggest drop in auto inventories since December 2009, a Commerce Department report showed on Thursday. Inventories rose 0.8 percent to $447.2 billion in the first month of the second quarter, below economists’ forecasts for a 1.0 percent rise. Automotive inventories, one of the biggest categories, fell 1.3 percent.

Sales rose to $393.5 billion, the highest since June 2008. But the 0.3 percent month-to-month rise was much less than the 1.2 percent gain analysts had forecast. A 0.9 percent rise in both auto and computer sales was offset by bigger declines in categories such furniture, lumber, professional equipment and metals. The inventory to sales ratio rose slightly to 1.14.

Dollar Is Strengthening, Commodities Falling

Thursday, May 5th, 2011

Dollar re-adjusting Upward +/- 5% ($22.50) before next leg down

In a turn of events, the Dollar is now strengthening while commodities and stocks are faltering. Stocks fell after an unexpected jump in jobless claims, and as the dollar rose on comments from European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet. 

The euro slid against the dollar and yen after European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said inflation risks will be watched “very closely,” signaling the ECB may wait until after June to raise interest rates again. Trichet refrained from using the phrase “strong vigilance” that would have signaled a June rate increase, saying only that the ECB will monitor inflation risks “very closely.” Policy makers may want more time to assess the health of the euro-area economy before adding to April’s monetary tightening. While inflation accelerated to 2.8 percent last month and economic growth is gaining momentum, higher borrowing costs may exacerbate Europe’s debt crisis, which has already forced Greece, Ireland and Portugal to ask for external help. Trichet’s comments seem less hawkish than the market had anticipated and the euro is coming off sharply. While recognizing policy remains accommodative, he is using none of the word cues that point to a June hike.

Monetary policy elsewhere is becoming tighter. Central banks in the Philippines and Malaysia today raised interest rates, and India this week increased its borrowing costs for the ninth time since March 2010. Rates in China, Asia’s biggest economy, may rise further after its central bank said yesterday that taming inflation is its top priority. With surging oil costs fueling price pressures, the period of “abnormally low” interest rates will be ending.

Initial claims for unemployment

Initial claims for unemployment rose 43,000 to 474,000 from an upwardly revised 431,000 the week before, the Labor Department reported Thursday. Economists surveyed by Reuters had expected claims to drop to 410,000. Claims are at the highest level since mid-August. The four-week moving average of unemployment claims rose by 22,250 to 431,250, the highest since November.  The news comes a day after a report showed a slowdown in the pace of private payroll growth and a decline in job cuts. The closely-watched monthly nonfarm payroll report from the government for April will be reported on Friday. Economists expect the nation added 186,000 jobs.

Nonfarm productivity in the first quarter, meanwhile, rose at a 1.6 percent annual rate, down from a 2.9 percent pace in the fourth quarter, the Labor Department also reported.

****The way to play the dollar strength is by buying PowerShares DB US Dollar Index Bullish; (NYSE:UUP) currently $20.99

****Short silver by buying (NYSE:ZSL) now up 22% since my bottom call at $14!

China GDP & CPI/Inflation Higher

Thursday, April 14th, 2011

China Economic Data

China’s first-quarter gross domestic product expanded at a faster-than-expected rate of 9.7% from the year-earlier period, while the consumer price index for March also climbed a faster-than-estimated 5.4%, according to official figures released Friday. Retail sales for March also beat expectations, rising 17.4% from the year-ago period, while urban fixed-asset investment for the January-to-March period increased 25%. The data were all stronger than markets estimated and reaffirmed the strengh of the Chinese growth engine, but also kept worries alive that further monetary tightening from Beijing could be coming soon. According to estimates compiled by Reuters, economists expected first-quarter GDP to rise 9.5%, while March CPI was seen climbing 5.2%.

China’s consumer prices rise in March from a year earlier, accelerating from February’s 4.9 percent to a 32-month high, which was in line with earlier media reports, the National Bureau of Statistics said on Friday. China’s GDP in the first three months was up 2.1 percent from the final quarter of 2010 on a seasonally adjusted basis, the statistics agency added.

Economists had forecast first-quarter growth of 9.5 percent and 5.2 percent inflation in March.

Gold & Silver New Highs and Inflation Expectations

Gold futures hit fresh records in Asian trading hours on Friday, while silver also tracked new highs. Gold futures for June delivery rose $7.30 or 0.5% to $1,479.70 an ounce on Globex, after settling at $1,472.40 on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. Analysts at Barclays Capital said inflation fears are pushing gold and silver prices higher.

“The Federal Reserve’s beige book highlighted inflationary worries amidst the current economic recovery. Despite the improving U.S. economy, the Federal Reserve acknowledged increasing raw-material and energy costs have created upward pressures on the overall price level,” the analysts said in a research note.

A softer U.S. dollar also impacted on gold prices. The dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of six currencies, fell to 74.617, its lowest level since December 2009, during Thursday trading in North America, though it regained some ground in the Asian morning, rising to 74.706.

Silver topped a fresh high, with the May contract adding 69 cents, or 1.7%, to $42.34 an ounce. Prices for silver have rallied nearly 37% this year.

China To Tighten Further

Thursday, February 17th, 2011

China taken drastic steps to rein in liquidity and inflation from the stimulus. The window is open for China’s central bank to raise bank reserve requirement ratios or use other tools as early as this week to mop up excess liquidity, which has seen money rates plunge from multi-year peak hit last month. The main short-term money rate has fallen to just a third of its high in late January when the market was hit by an unprecedented funding squeeze due to combined impact of central bank tightenings and cash calls ahead of a week-long holiday. The market is awash with money and the central bank is unlikely to stay on the sidelines. It is only a matter of which tools it uses, rather than to tighten or not to tighten. The People’s Bank of China could also further raise the reserve requirement ratios (RRR) for selected banks, traders said.

The benchmark Shanghai Composite 2926.96, which has rallied nearly 4 percent over the past week to around 2,920 points on the back of flush liquidity, would likely be capped below the psychologically important 3,000-level. The weighted average seven-day bond repurchase rate, currently around 2.9 percent, is likely to find a floor around 2.5 percent, making short-term funding costs about 50 basis higher than mid-October when the PBOC started its monetary tightening cycle. The weighted average seven-day repo rate fell to 2.6007 percent at Wednesday’s close, having hit a multi-year high of 8.2640 percent on Jan. 27. It rebounded on Thursday after the PBOC resumed draining money via repo business in its regular open market operations.

The PBOC auctioned 10 billion yuan ($1.5 billion) in three-month bills on Thursday, having increased the volume after holding them at 1 billion yuan or no sale since early December, in a sign it wants to partially resume liquidity draining via its regular open market operations.

The PBOC has also signaled recently that it will more frequently use tools other than its traditional open market operations to help drain liquidity from the financial system. The main shift, traders say, is that the PBOC appears to be relying more on RRR increases for all banks to drain liquidity, a trend they see continuing in the near term. A more effective tool, however, will be imposing differentiated RRR for selected banks, which will limit individual banks’ lending ability without harming those which abide by the government’s anti-inflationary policy.

The PBOC has already imposed differentiated RRR on some small- and medium-sized domestic banks, according to a media report last week. The PBOC will certainly not tolerate fundings costs to pull back to the pre-tightening level because too much liquidity in the system will reignite consumer price rises.

The seven-day repo rate was moving just below 2 percent when the central bank surprised the market by an official interest rate hike on Oct. 19. The PBOC has since raised official rates twice more on top four RRR hikes to tighten liquidity as China’s inflation remained stubbornly high at 4.9 percent in January. The PBOC is also considering means to help it more accurately judge how much liquidity is in the financial system, including introducing new economic indicators. These include a gauge that measures the overall pace of fundraising which will widen than the current benchmark M2 money supply indicator. The “aggregate social fundraising” indicator will be an important step towards managing liquidity more effectively as it includes money flows via debt and equity issues. The existing benchmark money supply indicator, the M2, only reflects liquidity movements in the banking system. The more prudent figure would be the M3 line which was no longer tracked in the US.

World Debt Clock

Tuesday, February 1st, 2011

Debt worries have grown to larger worrisome issues here and abroad. During the financial crisis, it exposed several companies around the globe who have borrowed more than their true net value. In the last few years companies have become leaner by eliminating debt inefficiencies and over-sized payrolls.

Now the hand that rocks the cradle is pointing towards Sovereign Countries. The start of 2010 was the beginning of the debt dilemma with a wealthy emirate nation named Dubai. They then were supported with billions of dollars. Since then Greece and Ireland have fallen prey to the bond vigilantes as borrowing rates have become to excessive to weather. According to the CDS rates, Belgium and Portugal may be next to fall prey soon enough. To make matters more complicated, pressures of inflation and higher commodity/food prices are knocking 3rd world countries to civil unrest. (i.e. Jordan, Yemen, Pakistan, Tunisia, & Egypt.) With excessive unemployment and the ever growing poverty rate, food purchases have become 40-60% of individuals income. Here, in the US food purchases are 10% of one’s income. Though inflation has not hit home in the last year or so, we’re slowly beginning to feel the effects of higher prices especially at the pump. It’s inevitable producers will soon pass the buck onto the consumers.

Let’s take a look at the world debt clock. This is a live link, so feel free to check back once in a while, here

Here’s frozen screen shot on 2-1-2011. We’ll revisit this in the near future and compare from the original image.

 Debt Clock 2-1-2011

Inflations Ticking Up In Europe And China

Tuesday, February 1st, 2011

Consumer price inflation across the euro zone rose at an annual pace of 2.4% in January, according to a preliminary estimate released Monday, likely providing further discomfort for the European Central Bank as policy makers prepare to meet this week. The preliminary estimate by Eurostat, the European Union’s statistics agency, offered no breakdown of price pressures, but the January data put the annual rate of inflation further above the central bank’s target of near but just below 2%. Inflation rose at a 2.2% annual pace in December. The uptick in inflation has been tied largely to rising food and energy prices. Higher inflation, while “unpleasant” for the European Central Bank, shouldn’t cause alarm as long as expectations remain under wraps and show little impact on wage demands.  But the increase is likely to mean more tough talk from Trichet and other policy makers, European Central Bank watchers said. Although the ECB is highly unlikely to act at Thursday’s policy meeting, it will probably step up its anti-inflation rhetoric and stress that it is prepared to hike interest rates despite growth risks if the current spike up in euro-zone consumer price inflation shows any significant sign of leading to a significant pickup in second-round inflationary effects, such as rising wage settlements.

China’s twin measures of the nation’s manufacturing sector painted divergent pictures Tuesday, with the official index showing slowing growth and rising prices, and a privately compiled version indicating the opposite. Still, both readings agreed that inflation remained a problem. China’s official purchasing managers’ index gauge of manufacturing slipped to 52.9 in January, indicating slowing growth in the sector after December’s 53.9 reading, the China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said Tuesday. China’s factories slowed a touch in January under the weight of monetary tightening, but input prices rose quickly, keeping the pressure on the government to tackle inflation despite easing growth.

This indicates that the economic recovery trend is not yet clear, and we may see economic growth slow down a bit,” Zhang Liqun, a government researcher, said in a statement accompanying the release. The new export orders sub-index continued to fall while the input prices sub-index went on rising, which suggests that enterprises could face relatively big difficulties in rising costs and slowing demand. Consumer price inflation in China ran at an annual pace of 4.6 percent in December, slowing slightly from November’s 28-month of 5.1 percent. Many economists believe inflation is set to accelerate again in January due to a spike in food demand and broader consumption ahead of the Chinese Lunar New Year, which begins this week.

To cool prices, China has leaned heavily on administrative measures, raising banks’ reserve requirements and also capping their monthly lending. This will only reinforce the overriding theme of policy tightening to contain inflationary pressures. The inflationary pressures measured in the PMI may actually have been an under-statement. The survey of China-based businesses was likely conducted before the final days of January, when global oil prices spiked because of the unrest in Egypt. Nevertheless, the official PMI also signaled a sustained period of expansion for the Chinese industrial sector. It is the 23rd straight month that the overall PMI has stood above the threshold of 50 that demarcates expansion from contraction.

China: The LARGEST Creditor Of US Debt

Wednesday, January 19th, 2011

I came across an intriguing article from Reuters on possible scenarios if China stopped or dumped US Treasuries. Economists have been banking the US will  continue to finance it’s debt by selling Treasuries. China has been the biggest buyers, as a matter of fact they have now become the largest ever. This fact alone extends my belief the US will continue to inflate the economy.  Oil, gold, silver, and all other commodities will continue to reach levels never seen before.

When borrowing money it’s always good to have a Plan B in case a big creditor pulls the plug. That should be true whether the sum is a few thousand dollars or about a trillion, the size of the United States government’s debt to China. With Chinese President Hu Jintao currently in Washington, it is worth asking about U.S. officials’ Plan B just in case one day relations take a surprise turn for the worse and Beijing dumps its holdings of U.S. treasuries.

China is officially the United States’ biggest foreign creditor, with roughly $900 billion in Treasury holdings — or over $1 trillion with Hong Kong’s holdings included. That means it could do severe damage to U.S. debt markets if it suddenly started selling large amounts. Most experts say if there were signs of this happening, the U.S. government would go for a combination of persuading Americans to buy more U.S. debt, the same way they did in World War II, and finding friendly foreign governments to make additional purchases. Banks could be called on to increase their holdings of treasuries, and as a last resort, the Federal Reserve could also be called on to fill the gap, though this could risk turning any dollar weakness into a slump. “The U.S. government should have and maybe still could call on the people of the U.S. to invest in U.S. debt,” said David Walker, a former U.S. comptroller general who heads an advocacy group calling on the government to curb the U.S. budget deficit and borrowings.

To be sure, the idea that China would suddenly sell its U.S. debt holdings is almost unimaginable to some. After all, any weakening in the U.S. debt markets and the resulting global markets turmoil, including likely weakness in the dollar, would bounce back on China and could hurt its economy badly, especially as the United States is such a huge Chinese export market.

It likely would take something like a massive rise in tensions over an issue like Taiwan or oil exploration in disputed areas of the South China Sea, including possible military confrontation between the two nations. Such a confrontation would also make it easier for Washington to appeal to the American public to buy its debt for patriotic reasons. But Beijing could also justify pulling back sharply from U.S. Treasuries if the dollar were to plunge, perhaps because of Washington’s failure to curb its budget deficit and debt.

If the Chinese say ‘We’re not buying any more Treasuries,’ this could act as a trigger around which nervous market sentiment coalesces. People could start wondering how the U.S. is going to finance its deficit.

Appeal to Other Countries

In 2009, economist Brad Setser suggested the United States could establish emergency currency swap lines with political allies if a country like China ever abandoned the U.S. debt market. But the list of countries prepared to step in as buyers when U.S. Treasury officials try to hawk U.S. debt or seek foreign currency loans has probably changed somewhat since Europe became mired in a debt crisis.

Since Setser’s proposal appeared in a memo published by the Council on Foreign Relations, Germany has had to throw billions of euros behind other euro zone countries’ debt to keep the euro zone intact. With other European countries drawing on swap lines established by the Fed, they are hardly in a position to support the United States. Japan could step in with some additional purchases, but they may be limited, given it has a massive domestic debt burden and is currently campaigning for more Japanese savers and companies to buy its own debt.

Other countries in the region that already buy large amounts of U.S. Treasuries to try to keep the value of their currencies from climbing, such as Thailand and India, or countries with large sovereign wealth funds, such as Singapore, could also be called on to increase their purchases.

Then there are the oil producers in the Middle East, such as Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, which have traditionally been seen as American allies. Together, the region’s oil producers hold around $210 billion in Treasuries. These countries all have a massive amount of dollars invested in Treasuries already. It would be hard for them to commit to incrementally increase their holdings.

Nevertheless, analysts think a pledge by several major powers to support U.S. debt prices with scheduled purchasing operations could calm the Treasury market. The price for the United States could be high, though. One banker who wished to remain anonymous suggested that in an extreme scenario, the United States might even need to peg the dollar to a basket of other currencies to reassure foreign investors that their purchases would not suddenly devalue.
       
QE3?

Another quick fix would see the Fed step in — again.

After all, at $600 billion, the size of the Fed’s second quantitative easing program, announced Nov. 3, is larger than the total amount of Treasuries China bought in 2010.

According to Treasury data released on Tuesday, China’s gross purchases of long-term Treasuries totaled roughly $260 billion from January to November last year, with China remaining the largest single holder of Treasuries. But Fed purchases might only work if inflation were still low and the economic recovery sluggish. Otherwise it might backfire as the perception that the Fed was printing money and devaluing the dollar could cause the currency to take a big hit and bring down other U.S. assets, including treasuries, with it. The Fed could try to intervene, but if that led to higher future inflation expectations, it would not hold down rates but rather push them up,” said Benn Steil, senior fellow and director of international economics at the Council on Foreign Relations.

Treasury officials already tout the increasing demand for Treasuries from U.S. domestic savers. But Walker, the former comptroller general, sees potential for a more aggressive effort to market Treasuries to Americans that could help shift the government away from dependence on foreign creditors. In his view, the efforts would have to include an appeal to patriotism and come with a longer-term plan to rein in the budget deficit.

“What we need to do is have a plan that’s reasoned, reasonable, can reassure our foreign lenders and also demonstrate to the American people that Washington can get something done,” Walker said.

Eaton Vance’s Stein said U.S. banks could also be pressured, or even forced, to buy more treasuries as part of their capital cushions. “It seems maybe on some level unbelievable that that would happen in the U.S.,” Stein said. “But other countries even now, if they can’t find anyone to take down their paper, will turn to domestic banks.”

Energy Companies Ink Deals With China

Tuesday, January 18th, 2011

A group of utility and energy-related companies signed deals Tuesday to research and build new cleaner-energy infrastructure in China as part of a government summit in Washington.

General Electric Co., Duke Energy Corp. and Babcock & Wilcox Co. all announced deals Tuesday to develop new power generation infrastructure. The deals were signed to coincide with Chinese President Hu Jintao’s visit to Washington, D.C.

Babcock & Wilcox Co., which makes power equipment for utilities, said it entered a research consortium with Duke, General Electric and West Virginia University to develop new “clean coal,” equipment that would cut down on air pollution from power plants. The so-called U.S.-China Clean Energy Research Center will utilize a $12.5 million federal grant West Virginia University won in September.

The consortium will also include engineering company LP Amina and utility company American Electric Power. Other institutions involved are the University of Wyoming, University of Kentucky, Indiana University, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Los Alamos National Laboratory, National Energy Technology Laboratory, World Resources Institute and the U.S.-China Clean Energy Forum.

Utility company Duke announced Tuesday it also signed an agreement with China-based ENN Group to build clean energy transportation and electrical system for a China’s first smart energy “eco-city” in Langfang, China. Duke said it will work with ENN to develop the city as a test platform for new energy systems, including electric vehicle infrastructure.