Euro Debt Crisis Now Directly Affecting Chinese Exports

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The pain of the European debt crisis is spreading as the plummeting euro makes Chinese companies less competitive in Europe, their largest market, and complicates any move to break the Chinese currency’s peg to the dollar.

The pain of the European debt crisis is spreading as the plummeting euro makes Chinese companies less competitive in Europe, their largest market, and complicates any move to break the Chinese currency’s peg to the dollar.


The pain of the European debt crisis is spreading as the plummeting euro makes Chinese companies less competitive in Europe, their largest market, and complicates any move to break the Chinese currency’s peg to the dollar.

The pain of the European debt crisis is spreading as the plummeting euro makes Chinese companies less competitive in Europe, their largest market, and complicates any move to break the Chinese currency’s peg to the dollar.

Chinese policy makers reached a consensus last month about breaking the dollar peg, agreeing to let it rise in value somewhat, which would make American goods more competitive against Chinese products.

But Chinese officials have not yet put that intended policy into place.

And in light of the euro’s nose dive, allowing China’s renminbi to rise against the dollar now would also mean a further increase in the renminbi’s value against the euro, creating even more problems for Chinese exporters to Europe.[br]

The euro has plunged against the renminbi in recent weeks, at one point Monday reaching its lowest level since late 2002.

The steep rise of the renminbi, also known as the yuan, prompted a Commerce Ministry official in Beijing to warn Monday that China’s exports could be threatened.

The official’s comments were the most explicit yet on the implications for China of Europe’s recent financial difficulties.

The comments also suggest that even China — the world’s fastest-growing major economy and increasingly the engine of global growth — is not immune to the crisis that started in Greece and threatens to spread across much of Europe

Chinese exporters rely very heavily on bank letters of credit to finance their shipments, according to this article in the New York Times.

The availability of the letters of credit is closely linked to overnight lending rates between banks.

When banks have trouble borrowing money themselves —

as has been happening as a result of worries about European banks’ possible losses from the region’s sovereign debt crisis —

they tend to cut sharply the issuance of letters of credit for trade finance.

The banks see that as a quick, easy way to conserve cash without violating the terms of other financial obligations, like established lines of credit for big corporations.[br]

Interbank lending rates surged late last week and on Monday and must now come back down very quickly to persuade banks to keep issuing letters of credit, Mr. Tao said.

“Without trade finance, trade won’t happen,” he said …

Some Chinese companies are already running into difficulty because of the euro’s fall against the renminbi.

“We have been receiving calls from some European clients who signed contracts with us earlier this month, and they all want to cancel their orders, since the depreciation of the euro has eroded all their margins and then some,”

said Elvin Xu, the sales manager of Guangdong Ouyi Electrical Appliance in Zhongshan, China, which makes gas stoves, heaters and water heaters.

“They say they cannot increase the prices at their end to their customers, given intense competition in their marketplace,” Mr. Xu added.

The renminbi is rising along with the dollar against the euro …

The Chinese government has continued to intervene heavily in currency markets in recent weeks to prevent the renminbi from rising against the dollar, maintaining an informal peg of 6.827 renminbi to the dollar, the level since July 2008.

Because American companies in particular compete in the Chinese market with European companies in many industries,

the euro’s weakness against the renminbi is putting American companies at a disadvantage …

The euro’s difficulties have also inflicted tens of billions of dollars in losses on the value of China’s $2.4 trillion in foreign exchange reserves, according to Western economists.

China had been trying to limit its dependence on United States Treasury securities for those reserves in recent years,

fearing that the United States might someday suffer from budget problems or inflation,

and did so by expanding its holdings of European government bonds.

But China’s State Administration of Foreign Exchange,

which administers the reserves, does not have to mark them to market daily — record their fluctuating value

so it is not clear what effect, if any, the losses will have on policy.

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