Showing posts with label China. Show all posts
Showing posts with label China. Show all posts

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Retaliation in reserve as China faces yuan tensions

BEIJING - Expect harsh words but no concrete retaliation from Beijing if the US labels China a currency manipulator in a report due later on Friday.

China is focused on trying to defuse tensions with the US by yielding some ground in a mini-burst of yuan appreciation and hopes that these efforts will still pay off, even if Washington brands it a manipulator.

But should the US ratchet up the pressure yet further by passing into law a bill that could penalize China, Beijing will not be so docile, Chinese analysts say.

"China is telling the US that it is willing to help to resolve the problems. Things have not gotten out of hand yet and both sides still have some room to maneuver," said Zhao Xijun, an economist at Renmin University in Beijing.

President Barack Obama's administration faces a deadline on Friday to decide whether to formally label China as a currency manipulator.

A desire to look tough on "unfair" trade practices ahead of US congressional elections on Nov. 2, in which Obama's fellow Democrats are battling to retain control of Congress, could tempt the administration to cite China for the first time in 16 years.

The Chinese commerce ministry made its feelings clear on Friday, warning the US not to make a scapegoat of the yuan. Rhetoric aside, though, Beijing knows that the currency manipulator designation carries no specific consequences, apart from forcing Obama to seek consultations with China.

Preparing for the worst

A different calculus would apply if the Senate approved a bill already passed by the House of Representatives that would allow the US to slap duties on countries with undervalued currencies.

"It will be a very serious issue if the US legislation is approved by the Senate and signed by the president," said Li Wei, a researcher under the commerce ministry.

For starters, China would challenge the US law at the World Trade Organization -- a case that some trade experts think China would be able to win.

Analysts say Beijing is also bracing for the law by considering possible retaliation, from imposing curbs on US businesses in China to the so-called nuclear option of dumping its holdings of US Treasuries.

But Beijing is not going to jump the gun. It is first taking what it sees as pre-emptive steps to keep US anger from boiling over -- and to keep the legislation from becoming law.

"If China doesn't let the yuan appreciate a little bit, foreign criticism will be stronger. China wants to avoid a trade war with the US," said Guo Tianyong, an economist at the Central University of Finance Economics in Beijing.

To that end, Beijing has allowed the yuan to gain 2.6 percent since it scrapped a 23-month dollar-peg on June 19, quickening the appreciation in recent weeks as pressure mounted.

On their own terms

Ever sensitive to appearing weak domestically, Chinese leaders have insisted that the yuan's rise is not a response to US pressure but part of a broader reform agenda to spur domestic consumption.

They have also said that currency reforms will be done on China's own gradual terms.

Central bank chief Zhou Xiaochuan told International Monetary Fund meetings in Washington that demands on China to let the yuan rise rapidly are akin to seeking a magic cure to a problem that requires a slow-working, herbal remedy.

Foreign ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu tried to inject some levity into the dispute on Thursday: "If appreciation of a currency could solve all of the world's economic problems, then what use would economists be?"

But it will be no laughing matter if the US follows up the currency manipulator report with real punitive measures.

Although retaliation by China would likely hurt its own interests, rising nationalistic sentiment on the currency issue might force the government to take a tough stance, analysts say.

"China wants to use diplomacy before a confrontation. It will have no choice but to engage in a trade war if all courteous means fail," Guo, of the Central University of Finance Economics, said.

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Retaliation in reserve as China faces yuan tensions

BEIJING - Expect harsh words but no concrete retaliation from Beijing if the US labels China a currency manipulator in a report due later on Friday.

China is focused on trying to defuse tensions with the US by yielding some ground in a mini-burst of yuan appreciation and hopes that these efforts will still pay off, even if Washington brands it a manipulator.

But should the US ratchet up the pressure yet further by passing into law a bill that could penalize China, Beijing will not be so docile, Chinese analysts say.

"China is telling the US that it is willing to help to resolve the problems. Things have not gotten out of hand yet and both sides still have some room to maneuver," said Zhao Xijun, an economist at Renmin University in Beijing.

President Barack Obama's administration faces a deadline on Friday to decide whether to formally label China as a currency manipulator.

A desire to look tough on "unfair" trade practices ahead of US congressional elections on Nov. 2, in which Obama's fellow Democrats are battling to retain control of Congress, could tempt the administration to cite China for the first time in 16 years.

The Chinese commerce ministry made its feelings clear on Friday, warning the US not to make a scapegoat of the yuan. Rhetoric aside, though, Beijing knows that the currency manipulator designation carries no specific consequences, apart from forcing Obama to seek consultations with China.

Preparing for the worst

A different calculus would apply if the Senate approved a bill already passed by the House of Representatives that would allow the US to slap duties on countries with undervalued currencies.

"It will be a very serious issue if the US legislation is approved by the Senate and signed by the president," said Li Wei, a researcher under the commerce ministry.

For starters, China would challenge the US law at the World Trade Organization -- a case that some trade experts think China would be able to win.

Analysts say Beijing is also bracing for the law by considering possible retaliation, from imposing curbs on US businesses in China to the so-called nuclear option of dumping its holdings of US Treasuries.

But Beijing is not going to jump the gun. It is first taking what it sees as pre-emptive steps to keep US anger from boiling over -- and to keep the legislation from becoming law.

"If China doesn't let the yuan appreciate a little bit, foreign criticism will be stronger. China wants to avoid a trade war with the US," said Guo Tianyong, an economist at the Central University of Finance Economics in Beijing.

To that end, Beijing has allowed the yuan to gain 2.6 percent since it scrapped a 23-month dollar-peg on June 19, quickening the appreciation in recent weeks as pressure mounted.

On their own terms

Ever sensitive to appearing weak domestically, Chinese leaders have insisted that the yuan's rise is not a response to US pressure but part of a broader reform agenda to spur domestic consumption.

They have also said that currency reforms will be done on China's own gradual terms.

Central bank chief Zhou Xiaochuan told International Monetary Fund meetings in Washington that demands on China to let the yuan rise rapidly are akin to seeking a magic cure to a problem that requires a slow-working, herbal remedy.

Foreign ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu tried to inject some levity into the dispute on Thursday: "If appreciation of a currency could solve all of the world's economic problems, then what use would economists be?"

But it will be no laughing matter if the US follows up the currency manipulator report with real punitive measures.

Although retaliation by China would likely hurt its own interests, rising nationalistic sentiment on the currency issue might force the government to take a tough stance, analysts say.

"China wants to use diplomacy before a confrontation. It will have no choice but to engage in a trade war if all courteous means fail," Guo, of the Central University of Finance Economics, said.

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Saturday, January 29, 2011

Over 100 Vietnamese firms to attend China-ASEAN Expo

More than 100 Vietnamese businesses will take part in the seventh
China-ASEAN Expo (CAEXPO 2010) scheduled for Oct. 20-24 at the Centre
for Conference and Exhibition in Guangxi province, China.


About
170 Vietnamese booths at the expo will display agricultural, forestry
and fishery products on, processed food, wooden furniture and
handicrafts, and introduce projects calling for investment, trade and
tourist services, according to the Trade Promotion Department under the
Ministry of Industry and Trade.


Apart from promoting the
Vietnam trademark and exports, the expo will offer opportunities for
Vietnamese businesses to access and attract distribution and investment
channels, and promote advantages from integrating into the ASEAN-China
Free Trade Area.


According to the Ministry, two-way trade between
Vietnam and China rose from 20-25 percent in recent years. China
is first among exporters to Vietnam and ranks third among Vietnam
’s importers.


In the first six months of this year, two-way trade
between the two countries reached 11.9 billion USD, of which Vietnam
’s exports rose 45 percent to 2.8 billion USD over the same period last
year.


The two-way trade is expected to reach 25 billion USD for the whole year./.

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Saturday, January 22, 2011

Japan stands firm on FX, China lets yuan rise

TOKYO - Japan said it will continue to intervene to curb a strong yen if necessary, just hours before G7 and IMF officials meet to discuss escalating tension over currency policies, and Thailand is also poised to act.

China, which has rebuffed calls from the West to let its currency rise faster, allowed the yuan to firm on Friday to its highest against the dollar since a revaluation in July 2005.

Traders said Beijing may be making some concessions ahead of International Monetary Fund and World Bank meetings this weekend. But they said any further rise would be limited so as not to harm its exports.

With positions entrenched, expectations for any meaningful agreement in Washington are low although fears of a global currency war have jumped to the top of the agenda.

"We are approaching a G7 meeting, but regardless of this, Japan will take firm measures, including intervention, when needed," Japanese Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda told reporters when asked about the yen's rise to another 15-year high on Thursday. "This is Japan's basic stance."

Japan, worried a strong yen would hit its vital export sector, intervened in the market for the first time in six years last month, drawing criticism from its peers.

Prime Minister Naoto Kan sounded a little more conciliatory, saying Tokyo wanted to cooperate with its Group of Seven peers on currencies, but in the same breath reiterated the message that the authorities would take "decisive steps" if needed.

G7 leaders hold a closed-doors dinner on Friday.

Emerging anger

Global policymakers have been clashing over the dollar's broad-based decline, with emerging economies stepping up efforts to cap their currencies, actions which developed nations argue could derail economic recovery.

Thailand's finance minister will propose measures to handle the baht's strength at a cabinet meeting next week, Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva said on Friday.

The baht, which has risen about 11 percent against the dollar this year, the second-best performer in Asia after the yen, slipped after the comments.

Russian Deputy Finance Minister Dmitry Pankin said Brazil, China, India and Russia -- the so-called BRICs -- see the current moves in emerging markets currencies as a deeper problem that cannot be solved through a free float.

"Free float is not an exit prescription, it's not a prescription for all illnesses," he told reporters after a meeting of deputy finance ministers in Washington on Thursday.

Chinese premier Wen Jiabao, in Europe this week, politely rejected calls to let the yuan appreciate faster and Brazil on Monday doubled a tax on foreign investors buying local bonds, trying to curb a currency rally.

Yi Gang, a deputy governor of the People's Bank of China (PBOC), was quoted as saying on Friday that while China would continue to reform its exchange rate regime a sharp rise in the yuan would harm its economy.

Entrenched positions

Despite low expectations for the weekend talks in Washington, moves are afoot to create a more effective forum to tackle currency issues.

France will start talks on overhauling the global monetary system during its forthcoming G20 presidency to improve policy coordination and stem capital flows distorting exchange rates, Economy Minister Christine Lagarde said.

"If you look ... at the latest moves that are taking place, whether from Brazil or from Japan for instance, let alone from China, you really wonder what kind of coordination there is," she said.

German newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reported that IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn plans to present the lender's members with a "systemic stability initiative" which will bring together the world's leading economic powers in a regular forum aimed at resolving currency issues.

Participants would include the United States, large European countries, Japan, China and other emerging market countries that are important for the global financial system, the newspaper said without citing sources.

Officials from developing markets say ultra-low interest rates in rich countries are fueling massive fund flows into their markets, pushing up their currencies and inflating prices of stocks, property and other assets.

Japan cut interest rates to zero this week and the US Federal Reserve is also expected to ease policy further.

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Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Furniture exports to China rise sharply

HCMC - Vietnam’s high quality furniture shipments to China have increased rapidly since early this year, said a source from the Handicraft and Wood Industry Association of HCMC (HAWA).  

“China is exporting mass-produced furniture made of artificial materials but importing quality furniture from Vietnam, especially products made of precious timber such as redwood,” said Dang Quoc Hung, vice chairman of HAWA.

According to the  Vietnam Industry and Information Center under the Ministry of Industry and Trade, in the first eight months of this year, Vietnam’s wooden product exports to China grew 130% year-on-year to US$230 million.  

Thus China is becoming a big importer of Vietnam’s furniture, after the U.S., the EU and Japan which respectively imported US$889 million, US$387 million and US$271 million in January-August, Hung told reporters at the ongoing International Furniture and Handicraft Fair and Exhibition in HCMC, or Expo 2010.

Hung explained that while China is known as the world’s factory, it is also a huge market with increasing demand due to rising incomes and an emerging middle class.  

“If China keeps growing well, it will be the potential market for Vietnam’s wooden product makers. Vietnamese businesses should explore the tastes of Chinese consumers,” the vice chairman said, adding the rising yuan is expected to benefit Vietnamese exporters.  

According to Hung, the volume of furniture orders this year is increasing a little bit over last year, with the total export value expected to beat US$3 billion. However, the handicrafts industry is facing a gloomy picture due to fierce competition from China’s cheap mass-produced items.  

Preliminary statistics from the Vietnam Industry and Information Center shows a 38.4% year-on-year increase in Vietnam’s wooden product exports in January-September to US$2.45 billion. Exports to major markets namely the U.S., the EU and Japan have risen by 34.2%, 13.8% and 20.8% respectively.

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Thursday, January 13, 2011

AIA warns failed Pru deal could impact business

HONG KONG - AIA Group Ltd, which aims to raise about US$15 billion through a Hong Kong listing, flagged a series of business risks including the collapsed bid from Prudential Plc as it launched the share offering on Tuesday.

AIA, the Asian life insurance business of American International Group Inc, also said in the preliminary prospectus filed to the Hong Kong Stock exchange that it would not pay a dividend before 2011.

AIG is planning to sell 48.6 percent stake in AIA to raise up to $14.86 billion, a document obtained by Reuters showed late on Monday. The net proceeds will be used to repay financial aid AIG received from the US government.

AIG revived AIA's IPO after Prudential cut its takeover offer for AIA to $30.4 billion from $35.5 billion. In contrast, the IPO would value AIA at as much as $30.5 billion, sources told Reuters on Monday.

"The terminated Prudential transaction also adversely impacted and may continue to adversely impact agency recruitment and new business production by our agents," AIA said in its prospectus. "We cannot assure you that our business and prospects will not be materially and adversely affected by the terminated Prudential transaction."

AIA, an Asia-focused insurer, is selling 5.86 billion secondary shares at an indicative price range of HK$18.38 to HK$19.68 per share.

Priced to perfection?

At the offering price range, AIA is valued at 1.2 to 1.3 times 2010 basis embedded value estimated by bookrunners, according to a term sheet obtained by Reuters on Tuesday.

By comparison, China Life Insurance Co Ltd, China's No.1 life insurer, traded at 2.4 times forecast 2010 embedded value, while No.2 life insurer Ping An Insurance Co of China Ltd traded at 2.6 times forecast 2010 embedded value, according to a BofA Merrill Lynch research report.

"Most retail investors are short-term oriented and they prefer to invest in small to mid-cap IPOs," said William Lo, an analyst at Ample Finance. "AIA is not a pure Chinese insurer, and China accounts for only a small proportion of its business, so investors are not treating AIA as a high growth stock."

Others Asian insurers, including Japan's Dai-ichi Life Insurance Co Ltd and Korea's Samsung Life Insurance Co Ltd trade at 0.37 times and 1.11 times 2010 forecast 2010 embedded value, respectively.

Embedded value is a measure commonly used to gauge the value of insurance companies and includes the present value of future profit from long-term insurance contracts.

Growth

AIA was already operating in mature markets in Asia with high market shares, so room for growth was less than that of peers, Bank of America Merrill Lynch said in a research report.

Also, AIA is a little slow in tapping alternative distribution channels and is unable to team up with key banks in most key markets, which may affect long-term growth prospects. China expansion would remain one of the biggest challenges for AIA as the branch approval procedure is slow there.

Although AIA is the only foreign life insurer to operate a 100 percent-owned unit in China, its market share there fell from 1.51 percent in 2004 to about 0.69 percent in the first eight months of 2010, according to China Insurance Regulatory Commission data.

AIA operates in China's Guangdong and Jiangsu provinces and the cities of Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen.

In a separate statement, AIA said it had formed a new board of directors ahead of the IPO.

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Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Asian stocks advance as China data boosts hopes

SINGAPORE - Asian stocks rose on Friday as stronger-than expected economic indicators from China and the United States boosted confidence in the global economic recovery.

European shares also rose, after slipping in the previous four sessions amid debt concerns in the euro zone. The FTSEurofirst 300 rose 0.2 percent, Britain's FTSE 100 gained 0.6 percent, Germany's DAX rose 0.4 percent and France's CAC 40 was up 0.3 percent.

Chinese manufacturing gathered momentum last month, handily beating market forecasts and providing further evidence that the economy is pulling smoothly out of a second-quarter slowdown.

The MSCI index of Asia Pacific stocks outside Japan was up 0.34 percent compared with a rise of 0.24 before the release of China's Purchasing Managers Index. The index gained more than 17 percent in the last quarter.

"This looks like the real deal. It's not just inventory correction. We think that end demand is picking up in China and the economy has stabilized after the summer lull," said Frederick Neuman, co-head Asian economics, HSBC in Hong Kong.

Japan's Nikkei average closed up 0.37 percent on Friday, helped by short-covering after sharp falls the previous day and after US economic data provided a degree of optimism.

The index gained 6.2 percent in September, it is more than 2 percent off the peak hit after Japanese authorities conducted currency market intervention on September 15 to weaken the yen.

"Japanese stocks are recouping some ground as investors appear to be correcting extreme pessimism triggered yesterday by the yen's advance and worries about European finance problems," said Koichi Nosaka, a market analyst at Securities Japan Inc.

Data watch

US data on Thursday showed new jobless benefits fell last week and regional manufacturing grew faster than expected.

Later on Friday, the Institute for Supply Management is scheduled to release US manufacturing data.

US Treasury prices slipped as investors turned to stocks and the dollar held steady after dropping to an eight-month low against a basket of currencies the previous day.

The euro paused below a five-month high on the dollar hit the previous day, helped by data showing euro zone banks are relying less on funds from the European Central Bank.

The dollar dipped 0.1 percent to 83.47 yen, but stayed above the previous day's low at 83.16 yen and last month's 15-year trough below 83.00 that had prompted Japanese authorities to intervene for the first time in six years.

The Australian dollar jumped on optimism that the strong data from China augured well for the country's resource exports.

Oil rose above $80 on Friday, staying at a seven-week high, as the renewed momentum in China's manufacturing sector pointed to stronger demand. Copper also advanced on hopes of greater Chinese demand.

But gold, widely seen as a safe haven, also ticked up, hovering within sight of a lifetime high, although traders said the improving data from China and the US could curb gains.

Traders said spot gold, which stood at $1,310.40 an ounce after hitting a record around $1,315 the previous day, remained volatile as investors watched for signs of a firmer US recovery.

"I guess speculation will still be rife as to the state of the US economy. The need or not for a QE2 from the Fed," said Darren Heathcote, head of trading at Investec Australia in Sydney.

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Sunday, December 26, 2010

China warns US bill on yuan could hurt trade ties

BEIJING - China on Thursday rejected US legislation seeking to punish Beijing for allegedly manipulating its currency, warning that pressure on the yuan issue could "severely damage" trade ties.

Beijing also said the bill -- overwhelmingly approved by the US House of Representatives on Wednesday -- violates World Trade Organization rules, and insisted it has not deliberately undervalued its currency.

Angry US lawmakers, who accuse Beijing of keeping the value of the yuan artificially low to give its exporters an unfair competitive edge, blamed the weak yuan for the loss of US jobs, just weeks ahead of key midterm elections.

"We firmly oppose the US Congress approving these bills," Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu told reporters.

"Exercising protectionism against China under the excuse of the renminbi exchange rate will only severely damage China-US trade and economic ties and have a negative impact on the two countries' economies and the world economy."

The legislation was passed even as the United States announced a resumption of military ties with China after a 10-month break, saying the two powers both wanted to avoid miscalculations in an increasingly tense region.

In Beijing, commerce ministry spokesman Yao Jian said the US bill was "inconsistent with relevant rules of the World Trade Organization to conduct an anti-subsidy investigation based on exchange rate reasons".

"China has never undervalued its currency in order to gain a competitive advantage. The US cannot use its trade deficit with China as an excuse to adopt trade protectionist measures," Yao said, state media reported.

The House bill calls on the US government to consider Beijing's currency policy as an improper trade subsidy, and expands the powers of the Commerce Department by allowing it to slap retaliatory tariffs on Chinese goods.

The chamber passed the bill by a 348-79 margin, one of its strongest showings against China in years, fuelled by voter anger at the struggling economy and joblessness near 10 percent ahead of November 2 elections.

Some critics say the yuan could be undervalued by as much as 40 percent.

"The US-China relationship is an important one in every way -- culturally, politically, diplomatically, economically, commercially -- but we need to have them play by the rules," said Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

The US Senate has signaled it will take up a companion bill after the elections, but the legislation's fate is unclear and President Barack Obama has not formally taken a position on whether he supports it.

Ahead of the vote, Obama said at a campaign-style event in Iowa that the yuan was "undervalued" and was "a contributing factor" to the yawning US trade deficit with China -- the world's second biggest economy.

"People generally think that they are managing their currency in ways that make our goods more expensive to sell and their goods cheaper to sell here," he said.

China pledged in June to loosen its grip on the yuan, which had been effectively pegged at about 6.8 to the dollar since mid-2008. Since then, the currency has gained less than two percent against the greenback.

The central bank on Thursday set the central parity rate -- the middle of the allowed trading band for the currency -- at 6.7011 to the dollar. The yuan can move up or down 0.5 percent from that rate during the trading day.

That was weaker than the 6.6936 rate set Wednesday, which was the strongest against the greenback since June's pledge.

Last week, before meeting Obama, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao rejected a drastic appreciation of the yuan, warning that it would cause Chinese companies to go bankrupt and workers to lose their jobs.

Ahead of the House vote, China's central bank issued a statement pledging to increase the flexibility of the yuan and "gradually improve the exchange rate setting mechanism" -- near-identical to the wording it used in June.

A group representing US businesses in China criticized the bill, saying it puts thousands of American jobs in export-related industries at risk and would not spur growth in the world's biggest economy.

"Blaming China won't help the US economy but this legislation may cost American jobs," John Watkins, chairman of the American Chamber of Commerce in China, said in a statement.

"We call on the US Senate to thoroughly review the proposed legislation and we hope it does not move forward in the legislative process."

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Sunday, December 19, 2010

IMF boss sees low risk of 'currency war'

WASHINGTON – The risk of a global currency war is "low" but cannot be ruled out, IMF managing director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said on Tuesday, following a spate of currency interventions.

Amid mounting anger that economic powers are pouring money into currency markets to make exports cheaper at the expense of rivals, Strauss-Kahn insisted the potential impact of an all-out currency war should give countries pause.

"I don't feel today that there is a big risk of a currency war. But that's part of the downside risk," Strauss-Kahn told reporters in Washington.

"I think the probability is rather low, because everybody can understand that too big conflicts... will have a negative impact. Nevertheless it may happen."

His comments come a day after Brazilian finance minister Guido Mantega vented his anger at the impact the rising Brazilian real has had on the country's vital export sector.

"We're in the midst of an international currency war," Mantega said in Sao Paulo hinting that intervention could come soon. "This threatens us because it takes away our competitiveness."

In recent weeks nearly a dozen governments from Colombia to Singapore have admitted to buying up local currency in the hope of driving down the price of the currency to make exports cheaper.

The dollar has fallen by about 25 percent so far this year against the Brazilian real.

"The talk of currency war is a bit exaggerated, I would say, but there is definitely a growing risk of a lower-level confrontation between countries trying to protect their exports in an unstable global economy," said analyst David Gilmore of Foreign Exchange Analytics.

But the latest rumblings come against a background of heightened tensions between the United States and China over the value of the yuan and as country's scramble to regain their competitive edge after the global economic slowdown.

The United States has complained for years that China has held down artificially the value of its currency, preventing it from rising to reflect the strength of China's foreign exchange earnings from exporting, notably to the US market.

US lawmakers were expected to vote on Wednesday to introduce sanctions against China if the undervalued yuan is not allowed to rise against the dollar.

The legislation enjoys strong support from Democrats and Republicans some five weeks before November elections shaped by deep US voter anger at the sour economy and historically high unemployment hovering near 10 percent.

The currency issue now looks set to feature prominently when finance ministers and central bankers gather in Washington next week for the IMF's annual meetings and at upcoming group of 20 summits in South Korea.

"I think it is one of the questions which will be very much discussed during the annual meetings and during the two meetings in Korea in October and in November," said Strauss-Kahn.

But according to one former IMF official the Fund is at least partially to blame for the the ratcheting tensions.

"The IMF has abdicated its surveillance responsibilities, it is a free-for-all out there, you can do whatever you want," said Morris Goldstein, former IMF official and member of the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

"If China can be intervening and and manipulating its exchange rate for seven or eight years in a row and the Fund does not say anything, then why shouldn't everyone else do it?"

 

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Thursday, December 16, 2010

Vietnam, China boost ties in technology transfer

Ministries of science and technology of Vietnam and China jointly held a symposium on technology application and transfer on Monday.

As part of activities in celebrations of the Vietnam-China Friendship Year and the 60th anniversary of Vietnam-China diplomatic ties, the seminar aims to further bolster cooperation between the two countries in the field.

The seminar offered the two sides an opportunity to exchange information and experiences in the promotion of technology transfer and transaction. It also helped intermediary organizations seek out cooperative opportunities.

The participants at the event touch upon the role played by intellectual property and its impacts on the process of technology transfer and application. They proposed the setting up of an information network of science and technology between the two countries.

Addressing the seminar, Vietnamese Deputy Minister of Science and Technology Nguyen Quan spoke highly of cooperative ties between the two nations as well as the achievements China has recorded in the field of science and technology after more than 30 years of renovation.

He put stress on the need to regularly organize similar seminars to deepen cooperation between the two sides in the area.

Vietnam and China have so far established information networks of science and technology, between governmental agencies, research institutes, enterprises and intermediary organizations.

A project, which has been carried out since 2002 by the two countries and focuses on the expanding of typical technologies in agriculture, has developed nearly 80 varieties of rice and vegetables for planting on a trial basis at the Hanoi University of Agriculture.

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Sunday, December 12, 2010

China sees Vietnam as gateway to free-trade ASEAN

Chinese officials at a meeting in HCMC on Friday to discuss trade ties - Photo: Thu Nguyet
HCMC – Many Chinese enterprises are keen on Vietnam’s market, considering it as a gateway to enter ASEAN now that a free trade agreement between China and the block is already in place, a Chinese official said in HCMC on Friday

“The free trade area between ASEAN and China has officially been created. Chinese businesses are discovering more and more opportunities to co-operate with Vietnam,” said Deputy Secretary-General of China-ASEAN Business Council Xu Ningning.

“In the first eight months of this year, about 40 conferences have been held in China to help Chinese enterprises go into the ASEAN free trade area… All Chinese enterprises joining the conferences showed keen interest in Vietnam and wanted to invest into the country,” he added.

He explained that as Vietnam and other ASEAN countries had set up a free trade area with almost all goods traded tax-free tax, while Chinese products exported to these markets now did not enjoy such incentives, so “Chinese enterprises consider Vietnam as a gateway to other markets.”

Xu said he is encouraging Chinese enterprises to heighten cooperation with Vietnamese partners via joint ventures, adding Vietnamese businesses should also make the most of the ASEAN-China FTA to boost trade to China.

Xu and leaders of Zhuhai, a city on the southern coast of Guangdong Province, together with 35 enterprises in the city had a meeting with HCMC businesses last Friday to enhance trade ties.

According to Chen Hong Hui, vice mayor of the city, Chinese companies want to boost export of equipment, electric devices, textile and garment and household devices to Vietnam. Meanwhile, they want to buy more farm products and natural minerals from the country.

Data provided by Chinese officials at the meeting show two-way trade between Vietnam and China has increased 6.5 times in the period of 2001-2009. The two-way trade increased 46.3% year-on-year to US$17.8 billion in the January-August period, and is expected to hit US$25 billion this year.

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Monday, December 6, 2010

VN, China talk economic, trade cooperation

A seminar on trade and economic cooperation between Vietnam and China
was held in HCM City on September 24, offering an opportunity for
businesses from HCM City and Guangdong province’s Zhuhai city to boost
bilateral trade and investment cooperation.


The
seminar, co-organised by the Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry
(VCCI), HCM City branch and China-ASEAN Business Council (CABC), drew
the participation of 50 entrepreneurs from Zhuhai city operating in such
areas as electricity, electronics, biology, pharmaceuticals,
garment-making equipment, household utensils, environmental
technology and chemicals.


More than 100 representatives of VCCI member businesses also took part in the event.


According to VCCI Vice President Doan Duy Khuong, Vietnam and
Guangdong have promoted each other’s strengths in economic, trade and
investment cooperation. They are striving to raise their two-way trade
to 5 billion USD in the next three years.


The CABC
Deputy Secretary-General, Xu Ningning, said China has maintained its
position as Vietnam’s largest trade partner for six consecutive years.


Vietnam and China see great potential for economic and trade
cooperation as more and more Chinese businesses are interested in
investing in the Vietnamese market, he said./.

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Tuesday, November 23, 2010

China Strategic ends AIG Taiwan unit buy, shares slump

TAIPEI - Shares in China Strategic Holdings Ltd fell more than 6 percent on Tuesday after the battery maker said it had formally ended a US$2.2 billion bid to buy insurer American International Group Inc's Taiwan unit after regulators rejected the deal.

Hong Kong-listed China Strategic said in a statement late on Monday that it and partner Primus Financial Holdings had agreed with AIG to terminate the deal to buy Nan Shan Life effective Monday.

Last month, Taiwan's regulators blocked the bid for Nan Shan from China Strategic and Hong Kong investment fund Primus, saying the two did not have experience in the insurance industry and lacked the ability to raise capital for future operations.

The buyers had the option of appealing, but China Strategic said earlier this month that AIG was leaning towards a new sale.

AIG's Taipei-based media relations company said on Tuesday that the insurer was "evaluating its options with respect to its ownership of Nan Shan".

Primus Financial declined to comment.

China Strategic shares were 6.5 percent lower at HK$0.29 while the Hang Seng Index was up 0.3 percent.

It was the second failed attempt in Asia by AIG to sell assets to repay billions of US taxpayer dollars used to bail out the company. In May, the $35.5 billion sale of its American International Assurance unit to Britain's Prudential Plc fell through.

AIG plans to list AIA in Hong Kong on Oct. 29 in a $15 billion float, the biggest ever in Hong Kong and also the biggest ever insurance float.

Analysts say AIG is likely to put Nan Shan back on the market, although an IPO is an outside possibility.

Taiwan banks Fubon Financial Holding Co Ltd and Chinatrust Financial Holding Co Ltd have expressed interest in buying Nan Shan, while analysts have said Cathay Financial Holding Co Ltd may also be interested.

A source with direct knowledge of the sale process told Reuters earlier this month that regulators were unlikely to take issue with bids from Fubon or Cathay, either alone or with partners such as private equity companies, but they would be wary of a Chinatrust bid, because the firm, Taiwan's biggest credit card issuer, is heavily leveraged.

All three were losing bidders in the original sale of Nan Shan last October.

Nan Shan is Taiwan's No.3 life insurer by market share. Its policyholders make up almost a sixth of the island's population.

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Wednesday, November 17, 2010

VN pushes for investment cooperation with China

A Vietnamese delegation led by Minister of Planning and Investment Vo
Hong Phuc paid a working visit to China at the invitation of the
Chinese National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) from Sept.
12-18.


The visit aims to discuss the development of
micro-economies, share experiences to surmount the adverse impacts of
the global financial crisis, promote investment and study development
plans in western China . It was also a chance for the two sides to
share information about their missions and support each other in
professional activities.


During its stay in China ,
the delegation held talks with NDRC’s Deputy Head Zhang Xiaoqiang on
Sept. 17 and made fact-finding tours of Gansu province to explore
the locality’s economic situation and visit several companies.


As of July 31 this year, China ranks 15 th out of 91 countries and
regions investing in Vietnam with 743 projects capitalised at 3.17
billion USD.


Also, Vietnam has carried out six
investment projects in China with a total registered capital of 9.7
million USD, mostly in the service area./.

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Sunday, November 14, 2010

China says pressure on yuan will not help

BEIJING - Pressuring China about its yuan exchange rate could backfire, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said on Thursday, maintaining that Washington is wrong to blame the yuan for US economic woes.

"I want to stress that appreciation of the renminbi would not resolve the problem of the deficit between the US and China and will not resolve the US domestic unemployment problem," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu told a regular news conference, using the currency's formal name.

"Trade and economic cooperation between China and the United States is mutually beneficial and a win-win proposition. We have always maintained that problems in trade and economic relations between our two countries should be appropriately resolved through consultation on an equal basis. I believe that pressure not only would fail to solve the problems; on the contrary, it could have the opposite effect."

Jiang's comments were Beijing's first official statement on the yuan after sharpened criticism from US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, who said on Wednesday that the appreciation of the Chinese currency has been too slow and limited.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry does not have a direct hand in setting exchange rate policy, and can only voice broad official positions on the issue.

US lawmakers are considering a tough new trade law aimed at pressing Beijing to raise sharply the value of the yuan, which many of them say is behind the gaping US trade deficit with China, worth $226.9 billion in 2009.

Asked about US Congress bills on the yuan, Jiang said China had been improving the currency's flexibility since June, when Beijing announced it was ending a currency peg. The yuan has risen about 1.4 percent against the dollar since then, most of that coming in the last 10 trading sessions.

"I can tell you that since June China has been advancing reform of the mechanism of renminbi exchange rate formation based on domestic and external economic and financial conditions and China's international balance of payments, and has been enhancing the elasticity of the renminbi," she said.

"The direction of reforming the renminbi exchange rate that we're adhering to will not change," Jiang added.

Geithner said he wanted China to achieve a "significant, sustained appreciation over time" and for the yuan to "fully reflect market forces."

In recent days, the yuan has scored its fastest rise since February 2008 -- a move that some analysts view as a concession to growing US rancor over the issue.

This year, Beijing and Washington have also gone through bouts of tensions over Chinese Internet censorship, US arms sales to Taiwan, Tibet and human rights, and China's disputed maritime territorial claims.

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Monday, November 1, 2010

Sweeping Taiwan, China trade pact takes effect

taiwan-china

TAIPEI - A historic trade pact between Taiwan and China came into effect Sunday, tying the two sides closer together than at any point since their split more than six decades ago.

The landmark Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA), signed in June, is the most sweeping pact ever penned by the two sides, officially still not at peace after the end of a civil war in 1949.

"With ECFA becoming effective, the cross-Strait ties marched into a new era... Taiwan should better utilize the trend," Taiwan's President Ma Ying-jeou told reporters while on a trip to the southern Tainan county.

China's commerce ministry also hailed the hard-won pact.

"We're pleased to see the agreement taking effect... We believe the implementation of the pact will further promote exchanges and cooperation in cross-strait trade and help the economies develop together," spokesman Yao Jian said in a statement on the ministry's website.

For the Beijing-friendly President Ma, who came to power in 2008 on a promise to improve the economy through a rapprochement with the mainland, the signing of the ECFA was a triumph.

Ma's administration has said the pact will create 260,000 jobs in the island's export-dependent economy and boost growth by up to 1.7 percentage points.

Fundamentally, however, the pact will only solidify a move towards closer economic interaction that has taken place despite frequent political tension between the two sides.

China is Taiwan's largest trading partner, its largest investment destination, and now also home to a growing number of Taiwanese.

It is estimated that about one million people from the island live on the mainland, many of them in the Shanghai area.

They, and thousands of short-term travelers, now have access to 370 direct flights a week, a sharp contrast with the situation a few years ago when all travel routes passed through Hong Kong.

Chiang Pin-kung, Taiwan's top China negotiator who signed the ECFA for the island, is expected to travel to Shanghai and meet with his Chinese counterpart Chen Yunlin this week, Chiang's spokesman said.

In what was painted as a boost for Ma's pro-Beijing agenda, the ECFA was passed last month by island lawmakers without a single dissenting vote.

But the formal recording of unanimous approval masked a refusal by members of the anti-China opposition, centered around the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), to take part in the vote.

The DPP wants formal independence from China and has a significant following on the island.

China, however, says Taiwan has been part of its territory since ancient times and insists on eventual reunification, even if it means war.

"ECFA will contribute to a further widening of the wealth gap," DPP spokesman Tsai Chi-chang told AFP, adding that the people of Taiwan rather than the government should have had the chance to accept or reject the agreement.

Taiwanese media said recently that closer economic ties with China had contributed to a record income gap between rich and poor on the island.

The most prosperous 20 percent in Taiwan reported average disposable incomes of 1.79 million Taiwan dollars (US$56,000) last year, or 6.34 times more than the income of the poorest 20 percent, according to government figures.

Some economists say that the deal with China makes it possible for Taiwanese businesses to move their production to the mainland, cutting costs and increasing profits.

However, by doing so they also reduce job opportunities in Taiwan, hitting the incomes of the island's blue-collar population, economists have warned.

Despite the concerns, the trade pact looks set to push interaction between the two sides to a new level.

The deal will confer preferential tariffs, and in some cases zero tariffs, on 539 Taiwanese products from petrochemicals and auto parts to machinery -- representing 16 percent of the island's total export value to China.

At the same time, only about 267 Chinese items, or 10.5 percent of China's export value to Taiwan, will be placed on the "early harvest" list to enjoy zero or falling tariffs.

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Monday, October 25, 2010

China cassava traders seek partners

san

More than 30 Chinese cassava importers and suppliers of cassava processing technology have met local businesses in Ho Chi Minh City to exchange information and seek business partners.

The meeting was arranged by the Trade Promotion Agency under the Ministry of Industry and Trade, the China Trade Office in Vietnam , the China Cassava Starch Industry Association and the Vietnam-China Trade Promotion Centre.

Cassava, an edible root, has become an increasingly profitable export for Vietnam due to growing demand in foreign markets, said Le Xuan Duong of the Trade Promotion Agency.

Mainland China is the biggest importer of Vietnamese cassava, accounting for 90 percent of the industry's export volume, followed by the Republic of Korea and Taiwan , Duong said.

With the huge demand for cassava used to produce food, animal feed and ethanol-blended petrol, China every year needs to import more than six million tonnes of cassava to meet its production needs, he said.

Vietnam has more than 500,000ha under cassava cultivation and an output of more than nine million tonnes of fresh cassava a year.

Of this, it annually exports more than four million tons after meeting domestic demand.

Vietnam 's cassava exports are mostly starch powder and dried chips, Duong said.

Last year, the country earned US$800 million from cassava exports, double that of pepper shipment revenues.

However, Vietnam was only able to export 1.14 million tons of cassava worth $307 million in the first six months of this year, down 52.4 percent in volume and 12.8 percent in value compared to the same period last year.

Duong attributed this decline mainly to local traders setting prices too high, pushing importers to buy from other countries.

Wen Yu Ping, Chairwoman of the China Cassava Starch Industry Association, said China was a huge market for cassava chips and starch, but most cassava products in Vietnam were produced on a small-scale, making it difficult for Chinese importers to purchase in large volumes. She suggested that the Vietnamese Government regulates standards for cassava export and reduce the number of brokers involved in purchasing the products. These measures will facilitate import, export activities between two sides, she said.

Until recently, people were reluctant to grow cassava because they thought that it caused soil degradation and generated low profit, said Tran Cong Khanh, an expert from the Institute of Agricultural Science for Southern Vietnam .

The situation has changed after the introduction of new cultivation techniques and high-yielding varieties, he added.

Cassava is now an important source of income for small farmers in many provinces, Khanh said.

Cassava area and output have increased strongly in the last decade, from 234,000ha in 2000 to 560,000ha in 2009, with yields increasing from 8.6 tonne per ha in 2000 to 16.8 tonne per ha in 2009.

The crop has helped farmers in many areas escape poverty, Khanh said.

But the rapid development of cassava production has also raised environmental concerns because the soil is exhausted after two or three crops.

The sector therefore needs to adopt appropriate cultivation techniques to maintain output and protect the soil, Khanh cautioned.

 

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Thursday, October 21, 2010

Quality improvement an edge for Vietnam footwear

HCMC – Improving the quality of Vietnamese footwear will give exporters a competitive edge over low-priced Chinese products, an industry expert told reporters on the sidelines of the 29th International Footwear Conference in HCMC on Tuesday.  

“China has big productivity. No other country produces as much footwear as it does within a short period of time,” said Peter T. Mangione, managing director of Global Footwear Partnership LLC.  

He said a Chinese shoes company could produce thousands of pairs of shoes within a day and suggested Vietnam should make high-quality shoes given its lack of facilities able to turn out huge volumes of cheap footwear.

It does not make sense to try to compete with China in the U.S. market, he noted, because China is now and will be the biggest footwear supplier of America whose 87% footwear demand is met by China.

Big footwear brands like Adidas and Nike are moving their production to Indonesia and maintaining their presence in Vietnam but downsizing their activity in China due to labor shortages and rising costs. However, China cannot be replaced as the world’s leading footwear maker.

Mangione said Asia would remain the biggest footwear supplier of the world but could also become a potential market for the product. For example, China is seen as the most attractive market in the region as its consumption is rising dramatically due to fast urbanization.

About foreign investment in Vietnam’s footwear industry, the expert predicted that investment in the sector might rise but not significantly because leading footwear brands Nike and Adidas had invested heavily in China over the years.

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Tuesday, October 19, 2010

China cassava processors seek partners

China cassava processors seek partners

More than 30 Chinese cassava importers and suppliers of cassava
processing technology met local businesses on Sept.7 in HCM City to
exchange information and seek business partners.


The meeting was arranged by the Trade Promotion Agency under the
Ministry of Industry and Trade, the China Trade Office in Vietnam ,
the China Cassava Starch Industry Association and the Vietnam-China
Trade Promotion Centre.


Cassava, an edible root, has
become an increasingly profitable export for Vietnam due to growing
demand in foreign markets, said Le Xuan Duong of the Trade Promotion
Agency.


Mainland China is the biggest importer of
Vietnamese cassava, accounting for 90 percent of the industry's export
volume, followed by the Republic of Korea and Taiwan , Duong
said.


With the huge demand for cassava used to produce
food, animal feed and ethanol-blended petrol, China every year needs
to import more than six million tonnes of cassava to meet its
production needs, he said.


Vietnam has more than
500,000ha under cassava cultivation and an output of more than nine
million tonnes of fresh cassava a year.


Of this, it annually exports more than four million tonnes after meeting domestic demand.


Vietnam 's cassava exports are mostly starch powder and dried chips, Duong said.


Last year, the country earned 800 million USD from cassava exports, double that of pepper shipment revenues.


However, Vietnam was only able to export 1.14 million tonnes of
cassava worth 307 million USD in the first six months of this year, down
52.4 percent in volume and 12.8 percent in value compared to the same
period last year.


Duong attributed this decline mainly to local traders setting prices too high, pushing importers to buy from other countries.


Wen Yu Ping, Chairwoman of the China Cassava Starch Industry
Association, said China was a huge market for cassava chips and
starch, but most cassava products in Vietnam were produced on a
small-scale, making it difficult for Chinese importers to purchase in
large volumes. She suggested that the Vietnamese Government regulates
standards for cassava export and reduce the number of brokers involved
in purchasing the products. These measures will facilitate import,
export activities between two sides, she said.


Until
recently, people were reluctant to grow cassava because they thought
that it caused soil degradation and generated low profit, said Tran Cong
Khanh, an expert from the Institute of Agricultural Science for
Southern Vietnam .


The situation has changed after the introduction of new cultivation techniques and high-yielding varieties, he added.


Cassava is now an important source of income for small farmers in many provinces, Khanh said.


Cassava area and output have increased strongly in the last decade,
from 234,000ha in 2000 to 560,000ha in 2009, with yields increasing from
8.6 tonne per ha in 2000 to 16.8 tonne per ha in 2009.


The crop has helped farmers in many areas escape poverty, Khanh said.


But the rapid development of cassava production has also raised
environmental concerns because the soil is exhausted after two or three
crops.


The sector therefore needs to adopt appropriate
cultivation techniques to maintain output and protect the soil, Khanh
cautioned. /.

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Sunday, October 3, 2010

Japan dilemma as economic dependence on China grows

japan

TOKYO - Japan's growing dependence on China for growth grates with concerns over its expanding military reach, deepening a dilemma over how to engage with its giant neighbor even as the two trade places in economic rankings.

But while the interdependence raises the risks for the world's second- and third-biggest economies if relations sour, it also boosts incentives to keep ties on track.

"It raises the stakes," said Jeffrey Kingston, director of Asian studies at Temple University's Tokyo campus.

"But ... Japan has a clear interest in developing better political and diplomatic relations precisely because of the greater economic interdependence."

News that China had surpassed Japan as the world's second-biggest economy in the second quarter grabbed global headlines in August, underscoring China's rise and deepening pessimism over whether Japan can even keep third place.

Even more telling is Japan's deepening dependence on China's dynamism for growth in a mature economy plagued with an ageing, shrinking population and a shortage of policy solutions.

Japan's exports to China topped those to the US last year, accounting for nearly 20 percent of all its exports.

That figure will probably rise to 35 percent by 2026, when China will likely oust America from the top global spot, said Chi Hung Kwan at Nomura Institute of Capital Markets Research.

Japan's direct investment in China has also soared, exceeding 70 percent of its investment in North America last year, with more and more goods being made for local sale, not export.

"For Japanese companies, China is becoming more and more important, not just as the workshop of the world, but as the market of the world," Kwan said at a luncheon with reporters.

Sino-Japanese relations, long plagued by China's memories of Tokyo's wartime aggression and present rivalry over resources and territory, have warmed since a deep chill in 2001-2006, when then-premier Junichiro Koizumi visited the Yasukuni Shrine, seen by Beijing as a symbol of Japanese militarism.

Last weekend, a delegation of Japanese cabinet ministers met their Chinese counterparts in Beijing for high-level economic talks -- the third such annual dialogue -- and agreed on the need to work together for global growth.

Wary

But even as economic ties deepen, Japan is increasingly wary of China's intentions as it spends more of its wealth on defense and shows growing willingness to project military power.

A survey by the China Daily in August showed that 52.7 percent of Chinese respondents saw Japan as a military threat, while 70.8 percent of Japanese felt the same about China.

"Japan's military budget has been stable for 20 years and China's military budget has grown 20 times in the past 20 years," said Shinichi Kitaoka, University of Tokyo professor who advised the conservative Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) government that was ousted last year by the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ).

"The big gap may create some imbalances and is already creating imbalances in the East China Sea and the Eastern Sea."

While a panel of experts advising the government as it undertakes a major review of defense policies gave a nod to such concerns, the wording was restrained, a reflection of Japan's dilemma as it balances economic interests with security worries.

"Japan's security position requires an extremely delicate policy. On the one hand, it is important to make sure that the cost of unfriendly, non-peaceful behavior is very costly ... and there has to be a very robust defense posture together with the US," said Chikako Kawakatsu Ueki, a Waseda University professor.

"At the same time, if you are talking about China, everyone knows that China's well-being as an economic power is important to Japan, to the US, the region and the globe."

The dilemma is a delicate one for Japan's ruling Democratic Party, which swept to power for the first time a year ago, ousting the LDP after more than 50 years of almost non-stop rule.

The party pledged in its campaign last year to forge a more equal relationship with security ally Washington while improving ties with Asian neighbors including China, sparking concerns in some US circles that it was tilting towards Beijing.

"China is becoming more and more important to Japan year in and year out. Everyone accepts that. The debate is how best to handle this -- engagement or constraint," said Phil Deans, a professor of international affairs at Temple in Tokyo.

"The pressure to pursue both strategies is increasing which is making the contradictions more obvious."

Experts say Japan, distracted by its own economic woes and internecine strife in the ruling party, will likely respond with a mix of reliance on the US military deterrence and beefing up its own forces within the elastic constraints of a pacifist constitution, while pursuing better diplomatic ties with Beijing.

"There are three decisions they can make: contain China, engage China or ... just live in a really uncomfortable situation and hope they don't end with the worst of both worlds," Deans said. "I think maybe they can live in this very difficult place."

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