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China's forex reserve tops US$1.2 trillion
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2007-04-13 10:53 China's foreign exchange reserve reached US$1.2 trillion by the end of March, up 37.36 percent from the same period last year, the People's Bank of China announced here Thursday.
"I'm not surprised at the figure," Cai Zhizhou, an economist with Beijing University, said and added that forex sharp rise has become "normal". China's forex reserve came to US$609.9 billion by 2004, US$818.9 billion by 2005 and US$853.6 billion by the end of last February, making the country overtake Japan to become the biggest foreign reserve holder of the world. "The rising trade surplus is the major factor contributing to the forex reserve boom," Cai said and pointed out that low prices of Chinese goods contributed to the rising trade surplus. "China needs forex reserve to avoid financial risks as the country's dependence on foreign trade is going up," said Cai. China's foreign trade has risen by more than 20 percent annually since 2002 while the ratio of foreign trade to GDP has risen from 30 percent to nearly 70 percent during the same period. The country's trade surplus reached US$46.44 billion in the first quarter, nearly double the US$23.3 billion surplus in the same period last year. However, the rising trade surplus has brought increasing trade frictions between China and its trade partners. To balance, the country has lowered and is considering to further lower export rebates on certain goods, ranging from steel to textile. The trade surplus in March went down to US$6.87 billion, cracking the 10 billion mark for the first time since March 2006 and showing a downward trend. "A large-scale forex reserve may backfire," said Cai. "It is the major reason leading to the excess liquidity in China." The central bank has to spend quantities of basic money to purchase foreign exchange, thus aggravating the problem of surplus fluidity. On the other hand, continuous growth of forex reserve has in fact increased the pressure on appreciation of the Chinese currency, which in turn has exerted greater pressure on value preservation of China's forex reserve. It is estimated that by 2010, China's forex reserve will reach US$2.9 trillion. China thus plans to launch a state forex investment company. The investment company will issue 200 billion to US$250 billion of RMB-denominated bonds. Money to be raised will be firstly used as strategic investment for energy enterprises like CNOOC, earlier reports said. (For more biz stories, please visit Industries)
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