Selling in Chinese Yuan: A Tool for U.S. Exporters

"China's 'internationalization' of the RMB shouldn't be confused with liberalization; its borders are still far from porous when it comes to moving money, and the process comes with a lot of paperwork and bureaucracy, said Kok-Chi Tsim, managing director for international banking at J.P. Morgan Chase Bank N.A. in Chicago. Still, it could be worth it for many exporters as a means of cutting costs and attracting new customers, Mr. Tsim said at a breakfast seminar organized by the Georgia China Alliance and attended by more than 40 people.On average Chinese exporters charge about a 5 percent premium to settle transactions in U.S. dollars versus RMB." Continue reading

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Chinese RMB likely to replace dollar in global trade

"Globally, the use of RMB has been increasing since 2009, when China launched a pilot programme to internationalise its currency by allowing the RMB to be used to settle cross-border trade. Since then, China’s trading partners have increasingly been able to use the RMB when paying for imports or receiving payments for exports. In 2012, 12 percent of China’s total trade was paid for in RMB, up from three percent in 2010. By 2015, HSBC expects that around 30 percent of China’s total trade — equivalent to around $2 trillion — will be settled in RMB. There are more than 30 markets worldwide conducting over 10 percent of their business with China in RMB." Continue reading

Continue ReadingChinese RMB likely to replace dollar in global trade

China plans to allow yuan trade settlement for individuals this year

"China is looking into how individuals and small businesses can settle trade using yuan this year, a People's Bank of China official told Reuters on Monday, potentially opening a massive new conduit for Chinese currency to flow into global markets. At the same time, by allowing individual traders and companies, Beijing can help eliminate the risk of currency fluctuation for individuals and small enterprises in the import/export sector. Chinese individuals are only permitted to exchange the equivalent of $50,000 per year for use in overseas purchases or investments, but many companies have managed to get around these restrictions through trade." Continue reading

Continue ReadingChina plans to allow yuan trade settlement for individuals this year

Year of the yuan: China’s explosive currency goes global

"Degenerating credit quality across the board has prompted asset managers to turn to the yuan, a currency that 10 years ago was completely off limits to foreign investors. An HSBC forecast projected that by 2015, the yuan will become one of the three most used currencies in global trade, in league with the dollar and euro. The report, issued in April, also foresees a third of China’s cross-border transactions being carried out in yuan. China has been making a concerted effort to establish itself as an international currency reserve. China already has agreements with Russia, Vietnam, Thailand, and Japan allowing trade to be settled in yuan instead of dollars." Continue reading

Continue ReadingYear of the yuan: China’s explosive currency goes global

More countries use Chinese yuan to settle international payments

"Of the 160 countries that settled payments with Hong Kong and the mainland last month, 47 had at least 10 per cent of their transfers made out in the yuan, according to SWIFT, a global member-owned co-operative servicing financial institutions. The number of countries 'crossing the RMB river', or having at least 10 per cent of payments valued in the yuan, grew 9 per cent in the nine months to April this year, SWIFT said in a report yesterday. Italy and Russia are among the major adopters of the yuan. Other places where the currency is increasingly popular for payments include Britain and Singapore, the organisation said." Continue reading

Continue ReadingMore countries use Chinese yuan to settle international payments

Anthony Wile: The Danger Beyond Employment Numbers

"When most people in a country have no money or land or even a house, and take no pleasure in working, and when only half of what may be considered the potential working population is formally employed, then it is probably not too strong a statement to say that the system itself is not producing satisfactory results and is even in danger of breaking apart entirely. The US's advantage throughout the post-War years was its dollar reserve currency; US officials could fund deficit spending by printing dollars without generating price inflation. Countries around the world had to hold dollars because they needed dollars to buy oil. This system is changing now." Continue reading

Continue ReadingAnthony Wile: The Danger Beyond Employment Numbers

76% of Americans are living paycheck-to-paycheck

"Roughly three-quarters of Americans are living paycheck-to-paycheck, with little to no emergency savings, according to a survey released by Bankrate.com Monday. Fewer than one in four Americans have enough money in their savings account to cover at least six months of expenses, enough to help cushion the blow of a job loss, medical emergency or some other unexpected event, according to the survey of 1,000 adults. Meanwhile, 50% of those surveyed have less than a three-month cushion and 27% had no savings at all. Even more disappointing; The savings rates have barely changed over the past three years." Continue reading

Continue Reading76% of Americans are living paycheck-to-paycheck

Obamacare Strikes: Part-Time Jobs Surge To All Time High; Full-Time Jobs Plunge By 240,000

"As a reminder: jobs have quantity and quality components. The quantity component was good enough to convince the 10 Year the taper is imminent (if not stocks, which continue to trade dislocated from any and all fundamentals). But how about the quality? In a word: not good. In June, the household survey reported that part-time jobs soared by 360,000 to 28,059,000 - an all time record high. Full time jobs? Down 240,000. And looking back at the entire year, so far in 2013, just 130K Full-Time Jobs have been added, offset by a whopping 557K Part-Time jobs. And there is your jobs 'quality' leading to today's market euphoria (if only for now)." Continue reading

Continue ReadingObamacare Strikes: Part-Time Jobs Surge To All Time High; Full-Time Jobs Plunge By 240,000

Nigel Farage: There is a Gathering Electoral Storm

"With 62% youth unemployment in Greece, and with Spain not far behind, it is perhaps about time we were honest and admitted we are causing it ourselves. And yet your recipe is more bureaucracy. A youth guarantee scheme, another six billion for the Youth Employment Initiative, the setting up of the European Alliance for Apprenticeships backed up by the Quality Framework for Traineeships, and the list goes on and on and on of yet more highly paid civil servants setting up organisations that will achieve nothing. Until the euro is broken up, until you reverse the social market model you will not help youth unemployment." Continue reading

Continue ReadingNigel Farage: There is a Gathering Electoral Storm

Portugal and Greece highlight eurozone fragility

"Political turmoil in Portugal and concerns about the pace of reform in Greece have raised fears that the eurozone crisis may be about to reignite. Nervous markets pushed up borrowing costs in Portugal to a painful 8 percent Wednesday (3 July) after the governing coalition of Pedro Passos Coelho saw the resignation of its finance and foreign ministers over the social and economic costs of austerity measures. Coelho's weakened position raises doubts about whether Lisbon - until recently routinely praised for putting into place a series of harsh budget-cutting measures - will be able to meet the terms of the its €78 billion bailout, agreed in 2011." Continue reading

Continue ReadingPortugal and Greece highlight eurozone fragility