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Hong Kong Has All But Abandoned the Dollar Peg

Hong Kong Has All But Abandoned the Dollar Peg

Bloomberg2 days ago

Interest rates in Hong Kong have been eerily low, raising the question of whether the city's dollar peg is now in name only.
Hong Kong surrendered its monetary autonomy decades ago, thanks to a unique mechanism that restricts its currency fluctuation to a narrow band of 7.75 and 7.85 per dollar. That means the city's borrowing costs move in lockstep with those in the US, which are dictated by the Federal Reserve's rate policies.

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During his first term in office, Trump lifted a ban on American companies doing business with Chinese telecom giant ZTE at Xi's request to get a trade deal. But six years on, easing export controls on China will be a tough sell in Washington, where blocking Beijing's access to advanced American technologies has become a rare bipartisan issue. 'Just having Lutnick there (in the trade talks) doesn't mean that the US is going to make concessions on semiconductors,' Sun said. She predicts more flare-ups of tensions down the road. 'This 'three steps forward two steps back' is going to be the norm from now on. We're not going to see a deal agreed without any drawbacks, and we're going to see this repeating itself,' she added. While the call signaled temporary relief, it also exposed stark differences in how the US and China approach their trade disputes: Trump tends to treat trade as a primary and standalone issue, whereas Beijing often views it in the context of broader bilateral relations. Trump said in his Truth Social post that the hour-and-a-half conversation phone call was 'focused almost entirely on TRADE,' while the Chinese readout singled out Xi's stern warning on Taiwan – the reddest of lines for Beijing – and the issue of Chinese student visas. The Chinese leader urged the US to 'handle the Taiwan question with prudence' so that ''Taiwan independence' separatists' will not be able to 'drag China and America into the dangerous terrain of confrontation and even conflict.' The contrast strikes at the core of the gulf between China and the US, Wong said. 'Whilst Trump views the competition through primarily trade surplus/deficit terms, Xi views territorial integrity as … more important than the country's economic interests,' he said. From Beijing's perspective, there are plenty of worrying signs. Last weekend, US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth warned Asian allies that China posed an 'imminent' threat to Taiwan, a self-governing democracy Beijing views as its own and has vowed to take control of, by force if necessary. Days before, Reuters had reported, citing US official sources, that Washington plans to ramp up weapon sales to Taipei to a level exceeding Trump's first term as part of an effort to deter China's intensifying military pressure. Another issue of concern for Beijing is the fate of Chinese students in the US. Last week, Secretary of State Macro Rubio, a known China-hawk, announced a plan to 'aggressively revoke' visas for Chinese students, a move that has caused widespread anxiety and anger in China. 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