(Reuters) -
China can now bypass Wall Street when buying U.S. government debt and go
straight to the U.S. Treasury, in what is the Treasury's first-ever direct
relationship with a foreign government, according to documents viewed by
Reuters.
The
relationship means the People's Bank of China buys U.S. debt using a different
method than any other central bank in the world.
The other
central banks, including the Bank of Japan, which has a large appetite for
Treasuries, place orders for U.S. debt with major Wall Street banks designated
by the government as primary dealers. Those dealers then bid on their behalf at
Treasury auctions.
China,
which holds $1.17 trillion in U.S. Treasuries, still buys some Treasuries
through primary dealers, but since June 2011, that route hasn't been necessary.
The
documents viewed by Reuters show the U.S. Treasury Department has given the
People's Bank of China a direct computer link to its auction system, which the
Chinese first used to buy two-year notes in late June 2011.
China can
now participate in auctions without placing bids through primary dealers. If it
wants to sell, however, it still has to go through the market.
The change
was not announced publicly or in any message to primary dealers.
"Direct
bidding is open to a wide range of investors, but as a matter of general policy
we do not comment on individual bidders," said Matt Anderson, a Treasury
Department spokesman.
While there
is been no prohibition on foreign government entities bidding directly, the
Treasury's accommodation of China is unique.
The
Treasury's sales of U.S. debt to China have become part of a politically
charged public debate about China's role as the largest exporter to the United
States and also the country's largest creditor.
The
privilege may help China obtain U.S. debt for a better price by keeping Wall
Street's knowledge of its orders to a minimum.
Primary
dealers are not allowed to charge customers money to bid on their behalf at
Treasury auctions, so China isn't saving money by cutting out commission fees.
Instead,
China is preserving the value of specific information about its bidding habits.
By bidding directly, China prevents Wall Street banks from trying to exploit
its huge presence in a given auction by driving up the price.
It is one
of several courtesies provided to a buyer in a class by itself in terms of
purchasing power. Although the Japanese, for example, own about $1.1 trillion
of Treasuries, their purchasing has been less centralized. Buying by Japan is
scattered among institutions, including pension funds, large Japanese banks and
the Bank of Japan, without a single entity dominating.
Granting
China a direct bidding link is not the first time Treasury has gone to great
lengths to keep its largest client happy.
In 2009,
when Treasury officials found China was using special deals with primary
dealers to conceal its U.S. debt purchases, the Treasury changed a rule to
outlaw those deals, Reuters reported last June. But at the same time it relaxed
a reporting requirement to make the Chinese more comfortable with the amended
rule.
Another
feature of the U.S.-China business relationship is discretion: The Treasury
tried to keep its motivation for the 2009 rule change under wraps, Reuters
reported.
Documents
dealing with China's new status as a direct bidder again demonstrate the
Treasury's desire for secrecy -- in terms of Wall Street and its new direct
bidding customer.
To
safeguard against hackers, Treasury officials upgraded the system that allows
China to access the bidding process.
Then they
discussed ways to deflect questions from Wall Street traders that would arise
once the auction results began revealing the undeniable presence of a foreign
direct bidder.
"Most
hold the view that foreign accounts only submit 'indirect bids' through primary
dealers. This will likely cause significant chatter on the street and many
questions will likely come our way," wrote one government official in an
email viewed by Reuters.
In the
email, the official suggested providing basic, general answers to questions
about who can bid in Treasury actions.
"For
questions more extensive or probing in nature, I think it prudent to direct
them to the or Treasury public relations area," the official wrote.
The
granting to China of direct bidder status may be controversial because some
government officials are concerned that China has gained too much leverage over
the United States through its large Treasury holdings.
For
example, economist Brad Setser, who is a member of the National Economic
Council and has also served on the National Security Council, has argued
China's large Treasury holdings pose a national security threat.
Writing for
the Council on Foreign Relations in 2009, Setser posited that China's massive
U.S. debt holdings gave it power over U.S. policy via the threat of a swift,
large sale of U.S. debt that could send the market into turmoil and drive up
interest rates.
But
Treasury officials have long maintained that U.S. debt sales to China are kept
separate from politics in a business relationship that benefits both countries.
The Chinese use Treasuries to house the dollars they receive from selling goods
to the United States, while the U.S. government is happy to see such strong
demand for its debt because it keeps interest rates low.
A spokesman
for the Chinese embassy in Washington did not respond to calls and emails
seeking comment.
The United
States has, however, displayed increasing anxiety about China as a
cybersecurity threat. The change Treasury officials made to their direct
bidding system before allowing access to China was to limit access to the
system to a specially designed private network connection controlled by the
Treasury.
China is
among the most sensitive topics for bankers and government officials who court
the country as a financial client because of its size and importance, and none
would agree to comment on the record for this story.
A former
debt management official at the Treasury who did not want to be identified said
that as China's experience in the U.S. Treasury market has deepened over time,
Chinese officials may have felt more comfortable taking the reins in the
management of their holdings.
Their
request to bid directly, in his view, came from a confidence that their money
managers could buy U.S. debt more efficiently on their own than through Wall
Street banks, which can often drive up the price of Treasuries at an auction if
they know how much large clients are willing to pay. Such a practice that is
not specifically illegal, though most traders would deem it unethical.
Evidence of
China's growing sophistication as a money manager in the U.S. markets is clear
in its expansion of operations in New York. Its money management arm, the State
Administration for Foreign Exchange (commonly called SAFE), has an office in
Midtown Manhattan and a seasoned chief investment officer -- former Pacific
Investment Management Co derivatives head Changhong Zhu -- in Beijing.
A woman who
answered the phone at SAFE's New York office said no one in the office was
authorized to talk to the media.

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