Currency
As the World changes, 2 Canadian Cities, Vancouver or Toronto, are in the running to become the coveted major trading hub for settlement of the Renminbi (Yuan) in North America as the Chinese Yuan moves to become a convertible currency by 2015. With Vancouver already a major trading hub for China in so many commodities, not the least of which is Oil & Gas, it stands a very good chance as outlined below – Money Talks Editor
China‘s political and economic presence surges daily. Lockstep with that surge is the growing significance of its currency.
Along with China’s emergence as the world’s second-largest economy, its yuan recently displaced the euro and became the second-most used currency for international trade.
Chinese leaders are intent on internationalizing their currency by growing its acceptance, perhaps even challenging the U.S. dollar as the new reserve currency, a trend I’ve highlighted here before.
To reach that goal, new yuan trading centers are being established.
But the location of the next major trading hub is almost certainly not where you’d expect.
And the implications will redefine the power centers of global commerce…
North America’s Newest Currency
China’s central bank has pledged the yuan would become “basically convertible” by 2015. So as the currency “frees up,” potential settlement centers are eyeing profits from converting currencies into and out of the yuan.
In an effort to gain first-mover advantage, major cities are rushing to become the next trading hub.
Right now, no city in the Americas has yet to emerge as an important settlement center.
But two major Canadian cities are jockeying for just such a coveted position.
According to a recent article in The Globe and Mail, “Leaders in banking, government and economic development in Toronto and Vancouver are pushing to make their cities hubs for settlement of the Renminbi [or RMB, also known as the yuan] in hopes of establishing a centre for trade in the currency.”
High-level talks between the financial services industry and the department of finance have been ongoing for months, but efforts have recently been stepped up.
Neil Tait, who was a banking executive in China and is currently vice-chair of the Canada China Business Council, believes there will be a huge “first mover advantage” as there is still no such center in the Americas.
Why would Toronto’s Bay Street win out over say, New York’s Wall Street?
A lot of reasons. Some obvious, some perhaps more subtle.
New York and Toronto may share the same time zone, but the United States is clearly a much bigger trading partner for China.
Still, Canada’s relationship with China is a less complex one, in both politics and business.
Thanks to its natural resources, Canada’s a coveted supplier of many of the raw materials and energy that China needs… badly.
Last year China National Offshore Oil Corp. (CNOOC) acquired Nexen Inc. of Calgary. It was the largest purchase ever in a market economy. And since then, no other country has received more Chinese investment than Canada.
By contrast, CNOOC’s 2005 bid for U.S.-based UNOCAL failed, while striking a nerve over the politically sensitive energy sector. China’s done oil and gas deals with the U.S. since then, but none has come close to the size of the Nexen deal. In the past six years, China spent about $30 billion on Canadian oil and natural gas assets alone.
At 900 million barrels of oil annually, Canada is by far the largest oil exporter to the United States. But success with the fracking boom has the United States becoming increasingly oil and gas self-sufficient.
Though I expect the Keystone XL pipeline will eventually be approved, it’s still not a slam dunk. And energy is a big part of Canada’s economy. So Canadian leaders have been giving serious consideration to other potential customers.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper has stated that it’s a priority for Canada to grow its exports of energy towards Asia, all the while reducing its reliance on the United States as a market.
But it’s not just about Keystone.
British Columbia’s provincial government has set its sights on building a world-class LNG (liquefied natural gas) export industry. According to Premier Christy Clark, that industry would boost her province’s economy and create as many as 100,000 jobs over a 30-year span.
Clearly, the stakes are high, as there’s a lot to be gained.
Companies across the Americas, from Chile to Alaska, would use the new trading hub to convert their currency directly into RMB (and vice versa), saving them the additional costs of exchanging into the USD first – a necessary evil as most commodities are priced and sold in U.S. dollars… for now.
Despite the benefits, establishing a yuan trading center is a complex undertaking.
Direct government involvement will be required to help institute a direct currency swap line between the Canadian and Chinese central banks. Such lines are crucial, as they not only provide sufficient liquidity for trade, but also for emergency situations like the 2008 financial crisis.
But none of this is new to either side. Canada has currency swap lines in place with the United States, Europe, Britain, and Japan.
Hong Kong, Taipei, and Singapore already benefit from yuan swap lines. And this past June, London acquired theirs. Then in October, the European Central Bank did as well. At this juncture, setting one up in the Americas just seems like a natural progression.
Two Canadian Rivals Are Vying for the Yuan
If the next yuan trading hub lands in Canada, it’s more than likely to end up in either Vancouver or Toronto… or maybe even both.
First, Toronto. It’s the undisputed financial nerve center of Canada. And according to Moody’s Investors Service, Canada has the safest banks in the world.
The Toronto Financial Services Alliances (a grouping of Canada’s largest banks, insurers, and pension funds) have already had high-level meetings with government representatives and the Bank of Canada, hoping to gain favor for Toronto as the next yuan hub.
Canada is home to 1.5 million inhabitants of Chinese ancestry, representing 4% of the population. Of those, 40% live in Toronto. Many skilled workers, able to speak Mandarin, are a boon to the city.
By contrast, nearly 17% of Greater Vancouver’s 2.5 million residents are ethnic Chinese. Vancouver’s other advantages come from its location on the Pacific Coast and its proximity to Asia. What’s more, it’s home to large volumes of trade finance and a special program exempting foreign exchange trading from provincial taxes.
This past November, the government of British Columbia even took an innovative step, launching the first ever AAA-rated, foreign government-issued, RMB-denominated bond, worth almost $425 million.
But it’s entirely possible that both Vancouver and Toronto become hubs to trade the renminbi, with even better service, thanks in part to covering two distinct time zones.
Stay Here for the Earliest Action Plan
I’ve already told you that China plans to one day, at least partially, back the yuan with gold. But that could still be several years in the future.
Before then, this Asian behemoth wants to boost its currency’s acceptance globally by “floating the yuan,” and moving it towards full convertibility.
Since most commodities are priced in U.S. dollars, those purchases require the buyer to first convert funds into greenbacks, and sellers to accept them. All this creates artificial demand for the U.S. dollar.
But this too is changing.
The Chinese already have at least 25 swap agreements in place, totaling more than $1 trillion, a fact I’ve highlighted here before.
As investors, it’s important to spot trends before they emerge. Canada’s odds of landing the next yuan trading hub are high, and it’s not by accident.
Canadian energy and raw materials producers have ardent buyers for their goods in the East. The Chinese are chief among them. The world will continue to renew and build out its infrastructure and continuously modernize. That’s not about to change.
Having a settlement hub in Canada will facilitate trade and lower costs for buyers and sellers. And providing the necessary raw materials will benefit resource companies and their shareholders.
Today I wanted to let you in on this emerging story: The Yuan is coming to Canada.
Although it’s too early in the race to call the winning city, you’re already ahead of the game on this global shift.
And rest assured, Money Morning readers will be the first to know how to adjust their portfolios and harvest the profits when it happens.
Executive Editor Bill Patalon has recently put together a report that will provide you with the 7 best investments to own this year… you’ll likely be shocked when you find out what these companies are. But we are only offering this report for the next 15 days. After that, it will be taken offline. If you’d like a copy, click here.

“If the teaching of experience bears fruit in us, we soon give up the pursuit of pleasure and happiness, and think much more about making ourselves secure against the attacks of pain and suffering. We see that the best the world has to offer is an existence free from pain-a quiet, tolerable life; and we confine our claims to this, as to something we can more surely hope to achieve. For the safest way of not being very miserable is not to expect to be very happy. Merck, the friend of Goethe’s youth, was conscious of this truth when he wrote: It is the wretched way people have of setting up a claim to happiness –and, that to, in a measure corresponding with their desires–that ruins everything in this world. A man will make progress if he can get rid of this claim, and desire nothing but what he sees before him.”
Arthur Schopenhauer, Counsels and Maxims
I don’t know whether or not there is some grand German strategy predicated on Europe’s single currency regime; but it sure does look as if Germany policy makers are a lot smarter than the rest of the animals on the farm. They understood a single currency would allow for German industrialists to dominate the zone and develop a captive export audience. And the austerity thrust to deflate periphery countries under the guise forcing countries labor rates in line with Germany, these countries will magically be competitive. That is of course a fantasy. The last time I checked, Bangladesh has much lower labor rates than German; yet Germany doesn’t seem to be fretting about Bangladesh machine tool manufacturers stealing their markets.
…read it all at Currency Currents 24 February 2014

The consumer price index in Canada rose a higher-than-expected 1.5 per cent in January. Inflation is now running at its fastest pace in 19 months, but continues to remain below the central bank’s official 2-per-cent target.
The Canadian dollar futures were down this morning but bounced back 0.5 cents on the news to 89.77. The bounce was despite a lower Retail Sales than was expected.
Drew Zimmerman
Investment & Commodities/Futures Advisor
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“When a herd ‘thinks,’ the result is not reason but an emotional interpersonal superorganic dynamic that must be the sourse of waves. A person’s patterned psyhological dynamics asthey relate to the social environment produce an unconsious impulse to herd, which in compination with like minds produces global patterns of interactive dynamics in a shared social setting.”
Robert Prechter, The Wave Principle of Human Social Behavior
Three Reasons I am Still Short the New Zealand Dollar
I recently shared some reasons why I thought the New Zealand dollar represented a good longer term short position. Since then, Kiwi (as the New Zealand dollar is affectionately known) has rallied a bit. My longer term bet here is pretty simple. It’s based on three rationales which are of course are interlinked:
1. China slowing on financial exposure
2. Export dependence & current account
3. NZ real estate
….read the whole Currency Currents 19 February 2014

To Westerners, China has always been a mystery. The huge population of very smart, hard-working people. The succession of unfamiliar, authoritarian governments. The sense that they’re playing the long game while we’re obsessed with quarterly reports – and that they’re laughing at our naiveté and lack of historical sense. We don’t get the Chinese, but we’ve always been impressed with them.
Never was this more true than in the past decade. While the developed world flailed around, trying to figure out how to pay its bills now that new debt no longer automatically translates into new paper wealth, China seemed to be the country that got it right. A dictatorship, sure, but a capitalist dictatorship, ordering its citizens around in the cause of economic development. Their numbers might be unverifiable, but one couldn’t deny the reality of all those skyscrapers and roads and power plants.
But now it turns out that China was behaving just like us, albeit more secretively, borrowing like crazy and investing more-or-less randomly. And, like us, they’re discovering that randomly investing other people’s money carries some risks. Two long articles that cover China’s plight in some detail were recently posted by Mike Shedlock and Automatic Earth.
In the meantime, here’s the short version:
…..continue reading HERE
