 By Jamil  Anderlini in
By Jamil  Anderlini in 
Published:  May 24 2009 23:30 
Senior  Chinese officials, including Wen Jiabao, the premier, have repeatedly signalled  concern that US policies could lead to a collapse in the dollar and global  inflation. But Chinese and western officials in Beijing said China was caught  in a “dollar trap” and has little choice but to keep pouring the bulk of its  growing reserves into the US Treasury, which remains the only market big enough  and liquid enough to support its huge purchases.
In March  alone, 
“Because  of the sheer size of its reserves Safe [China’s State Administration of Foreign  Exchange] will immediately disrupt any other market it tries to shift into in a  big way and could also collapse the value of its existing reserves if it sold  too many dollars,” said a western official, who spoke on condition of  anonymity.
The  composition of China’s reserves is a state secret but dollar assets are  estimated to comprise as much as 70 per cent of the $1,953bn total and China  owns nearly a quarter of the US debt held by foreigners, according to US  Treasury data.
The  collapse of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac,  the 
This  approach is widespread in the market because of expectations that the 
But  Safehas not fundamentally changed its strategy of allocating the bulk of its  burgeoning foreign exchange reserves to US Treasury securities, a western  adviser familiar with Safe thinking told the Financial Times.
He said  Safe traders were “very negative” on sterling because of expectations of  renewed weakness of the 
The  pound ended last week at its strongest since December, shrugging off a warning  over the 
The US  dollar fell to its lowest level of the year against major currencies last week.  Treasury yields spiked to six-month highs as investors focused on the  willingness of creditors to fund a deficit that was expected to be about 13 per  cent of gross domestic product this year.
As its  reserves soared in recent years, Safe began trying to diversify away from the  dollar, It has been adding to its gold stocks and taking small equity stakes in  publicly listed companies all over the world.
Over the  long term, 
Chinese  outbound foreign direct investment nearly doubled from 2007 to $52.2bn last  year. 
Source: http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/5b47c8f8-488c-11de-8870-00144feabdc0.html
 
 

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