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China an ally of Europe

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China an ally of Europe

Postby Mikiko » Fri Jan 28, 2011 2:55 pm

http://www.thenewstribune.com/2011/01/06/1490851/chinas-support-helps-struggling.html

Three of the eurozone’s most financially shaky members have been thrown a lifeline by China: a promise to buy these countries’ embattled bonds.

The pledges from Beijing have taken pressure off European debt markets. Spain on Wednesday signed more than a dozen accords with China, two days after Vice Premier Li Keqiang wrote in the daily El Pais that his country will keep on buying Spain’s public debt as a show of support. That follows similar deals and promises from China for Greece and Portugal.



Read more: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2011/01/0 ... z1CKlLcF7K


Jan 28 (Reuters) - China will continue to support Europe in responding to its sovereign debt crisis through real actions, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao told German Chancellor Angela Merkel in a phone conversation on Friday, Xinhua news agency reported.




China the future world power supports Europe .[/url]
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Postby vaughanwilliams » Fri Jan 28, 2011 3:24 pm

They want you to keep buying their goods plus they end up owning your arses.
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Postby Mikiko » Fri Jan 28, 2011 3:45 pm

It is a strategic move by China who wants to break the world monopoly of power I think. Its not only about goods but about investment in European Countries.

China seeks more cooperation in investment, climate change, high-tech industries, and intellectual property rights along with stable trade with the European Union, the Ministry of Commerce said yesterday.



China’s combined investment in European Union countries amounted to US$4 billion so far. In the first half of this year, investment almost doubled to US$388 million from the same period last year.




China wants to learn from European expertise in fighting climate change as it is developing its economy in a greener way, Sun said.



http://www.investingcontrarian.com/index.php/china-investing/china-eu-aim-for-further-cooperation/
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Postby B25 » Fri Jan 28, 2011 4:27 pm

Was just wondering about this, as I don't fully understand this Government Bond Business. if Chine pours billions into these countries and the safety of these countries are threatened by outside forces, does that mean Chine could or would step in to protect her interests????

Just wondered.
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Postby Mikiko » Fri Jan 28, 2011 6:18 pm

I am not expert either but the way I see it is If China pours money into these trouble countries then these countries can raise the liquidity cash needed to repay their public debts . I understand the government bonds is similar to the bank bonds ( gramateio ) which you offer your money to the bank with the aim to get them back at a later date with Interest so its seen as an investemnt by you with minimum risk.

I dont think this is an issue of China intervening to save its investment in case of whatever external factor arise in future but with showing trust to these countries which in turn has a positive effects to local markets { currency and other foreign investments etc).
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Postby B25 » Fri Jan 28, 2011 6:47 pm

Mikiko wrote:I am not expert either but the way I see it is If China pours money into these trouble countries then these countries can raise the liquidity cash needed to repay their public debts . I understand the government bonds is similar to the bank bonds ( gramateio ) which you offer your money to the bank with the aim to get them back at a later date with Interest so its seen as an investemnt by you with minimum risk.

I dont think this is an issue of China intervening to save its investment in case of whatever external factor arise in future but with showing trust to these countries which in turn has a positive effects to local markets { currency and other foreign investments etc).


Cheers and this can only be a positive move for the countries concerned.
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Postby CBBB » Fri Jan 28, 2011 6:52 pm

China has so much of everyone's money that they don't know what to do with it!
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Postby vaughanwilliams » Sat Jan 29, 2011 9:49 am

They are lending people their own money, so they can re-spend it with them, over and over again.
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Postby Mikiko » Sat Jan 29, 2011 2:20 pm

China’s New Best Partner

Even as Washington and Beijing slug it out over trade deficits and exchange rates, Europe has quietly overtaken America as China’s No. 1 trade partner. Not only did Chinese trade with the EU soar to $306 billion through July of this year—compared with $243 billion of trade with the U.S.—China has also become far more dependent on Europe for importing the technology and infrastructure that underpin its breakneck development. European companies such as Volkswagen, which will sell some 2 million cars in China this year, have scored some of the greatest successes in serving China’s domestic market. China, in turn, has been busy buying up European companies and seaports. Now, according to a new report by the Council on Foreign Relations, it has even begun to shift part of its estimated $2.7 trillion foreign-currency reserves out of dollars and into euros.

But the Europeans aren’t half as worried as Americans about ending up in China’s economic death grip. Europe’s overall trade has remained roughly balanced, so its deficit with China (1.1 percent of the EU’s 2009 GDP versus 1.6 percent of America’s) is less of a worry. And with so many European jobs dependent on international trade (exports make up 55 percent of the average EU country’s GDP compared with just 11 percent for the U.S.), popular trade fears tend to be lower than in the U.S.

What’s more, EU exports to China are soaring at an annual rate of 49 percent as China sucks in European infrastructure, machinery, and high-end consumer goods. European companies have managed well against the Chinese competition by shifting into higher-end goods instead of shutting their factory doors: take the textile industry, where Italian firms have successfully specialized in luxury products while Germany’s have moved into the fast-growing sector of high-tech nano-fabrics. The same holds for other industries, from chemicals to construction equipment. It’s true Europe’s exporters are getting help from a weaker euro, down by 10 percent against the yuan this year. But many companies did well even when the euro was soaring, because they compete on more than just price. That suggests that while the controversial yuan-dollar peg might play a role, it’s by no means the only factor.


Can Europe translate its economic leverage into political influence? Don’t bet on it. Europe has 27 national capitals without a single foreign policy, and all have been happy to leave it to the U.S. to deal with China’s strategic ambitions. America’s own poor track record in influencing China, even when Beijing was utterly dependent on U.S. consumption for its growth, shows the limits of translating economic ties into political influence


http://www.newsweek.com/2010/09/18/europe-becomes-china-s-biggest-trade-partner.html
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