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Obama Urges China to Heed Commitment on Currency Appreciation

Nov. 17 (Bloomberg) -- President Barack Obama called on
Chinese counterpart Hu Jintao to make good on a commitment to
allow the yuan to appreciate to help prevent trade imbalances
that exacerbated the global economic crisis.

“I was pleased to note the Chinese commitment, made in
past statements, to move toward a more market-oriented exchange
rate over time,” Obama said during a joint appearance with Hu
after a meeting in Beijing today. “Doing so based on economic
fundamentals would make an essential contribution to the global
rebalancing effort.”

America’s trade deficit with China widened to a 10-month
high in September, raising concern that the combination of a
recovering U.S. economy and a fixed yuan exchange rate against
the dollar will worsen global imbalances. China’s dollar
purchases to prevent appreciation swelled its foreign-exchange
reserves to $2.3 trillion in the third quarter, more than twice
as much as any other country.

“There is a continued fierce debate in China” on
revaluation, said Michael Pettis, a Peking University finance
professor and former head of emerging markets at Bear Stearns
Cos. “It seems almost impossible that we’re not going to see
more focus on trade and trade tensions.”

Twelve-month non-deliverable yuan forwards weakened 0.2
percent to 6.6215 per dollar as of 3:31 p.m. in Hong Kong and
were little changed after Obama’s comments. The contracts signal
traders are predicting a 3.1 percent advance in a year. In the
spot market, the currency traded at 6.8266, compared with 6.8270
yesterday, according to the China Foreign Exchange Trade System.

Hu Silent on Yuan

Hu, in his remarks, made no mention of the yuan peg to a
weakening dollar, which has forced central banks across Asia to
sell their currencies to limit appreciation and maintain export
competitiveness with China. The Indonesian rupiah gained 11
percent against the yuan in the past six months, and the Korean
won rose 9.4 percent.

Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the managing director of the
International Monetary Fund, said today in Beijing that a
stronger yuan would be in the interests of China and the world.

The yuan has been pegged at about 6.83 to one U.S. dollar
since July 2008. Maintaining the peg has also helped make China
the biggest foreign holder of U.S. government debt, with $797.1
billion in August, up 10 percent from Jan. 1, Treasury data show.

Fighting Protectionism

Hu said China and the U.S. “need to oppose and reject
protectionism in all its manifestations.” He told Asia-Pacific
leaders in Singapore last week that China’s hadn’t foreseen the
number of protectionist measures it would face this year
including U.S. tariffs on Chinese-made steel and tires.

Obama said the two leaders “agreed on maintaining open
markets and free flows of commerce.”

Controlling currency levels is a form of protectionism,
Gempachiro Aihara, the incoming chair of the Asia-Pacific
Economic Cooperation’s Business Advisory Council, said last week.

China and the U.S. agreed to address trade imbalances,
including spurring more domestic demand in China, Obama said.
The deepest U.S. recession in decades triggered a collapse in
world trade as demand for Asian imports slumped. At the height
of the crisis in February, Japan’s exports to the U.S. plunged a
record 58 percent.

Obama’s speeches during his first trip to Asia as president
have focused on the importance of increasing U.S. exports to
achieve greater balance with a region that sells far more goods
to the U.S. than it buys from American companies.

PBOC Signal

China’s central bank last week said foreign-exchange policy
will take into account global capital flows and changes in major
currencies, and scrapped language in a previous report to keep
the yuan “basically stable.” The Chinese economy expanded by
8.9 percent in the third quarter from a year earlier.

Finance ministers gathered for the Asia Pacific Economic
Cooperation forum called for “market-oriented exchange rates
that reflect underlying economic fundamentals” in a statement
last week. China and the U.S. are both APEC members.

China’s partnership has been critical to battling a global
recession, Obama said today. The two leaders discussed the next
steps to sustain a recovery, he said.

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