New numbers from the U.S. Treasury Department show China’s ownership of Treasury securities dropped from $835.4 billion at the start of July to $821.8 billion at the end of the month – a decline of $13.6 billion.
Meanwhile, fellow BRICS member Brazil pared its Treasury holdings by $2.7 billion in the same time frame, from $227.4 billion to $224.7 billion.
And Saudi Arabia trimmed its holdings from $108.1 billion to $109.2 billion, for a $1.1 billion reduction.
In addition, BRICS founding member India saw its treasury trove shrink from $235.4 billion in June to $233.1 billion in July.
And the United Arab Emirates, another incoming BRICS member, reduced its treasury holdings by $300 million from $65.2 billion in June to $64.9 billion in July.
Adam Kobeissi, founder and editor-in-chief of The Kobeissi Letter, says the sell-off is now impossible to ignore.
“Since their peak roughly a decade ago, China has unloaded nearly $500 billion of US Treasuries. Why is China selling US Treasuries so aggressively?
One answer is a potential slowdown of their economy. Another is that this could be part of a broader strategic shift. Regardless, this is a trend you can’t ignore.”
A bond market sell-off and a rapid rise in Treasury yields has triggered financial chaos in recent days and weeks.
On Friday, a stronger than expected jobs report added more fuel to the flame, with the 10-year yield touching a high of 4.85% as the 30-year crossed 5%.
According to the CME’s FedWatch tracker, 72.9% of investors believe the Fed will keep interest rates where they are next month, while 27.1% believe the Fed will further increase rates by another 25 basis points.
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