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  No cut in dollar reserve holding: Central bank     Updated: 2006-03-06 15:38  
The country will not reduce its holdings of U.S. dollar-denominated assets in 
its foreign exchange reserves, central bank chief Zhou Xiaochuan said yesterday. 
 However, Zhou, governor of the People's Bank of China, did not say whether 
the proportion of U.S. dollars in the reserves would rise or fall. 
 
 
 
 
   China's central 
 bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan speaks in this undated file photo. Zhou 
 said that China will not reduce its holdings of U.S. 
 dollar-denominated assets in its foreign exchange reserves March 5, 2006. 
 [Xinhua]
  |   Zhou said there had been market speculation that China might reduce its U.S. 
dollar holdings. 
“The foreign exchange reserves are still growing. Some people are concerned 
that the amount of U.S. dollar assets in the reserves will fall. But that's not 
the case,” Zhou said. 
 China had US$818.9 billion in reserves at the end of 2005. It does not 
disclose the composition of the stockpile. 
 Zhou said China would adjust the mix of its reserves in light of global 
market conditions. In doing so, China's criteria would be safety, liquidity and 
profitability, in that order. He did not elaborate. 
 The Securities Times quoted an influential economics professor as saying 
Friday that China has three times more foreign exchange reserves than it needs 
and should cut them accordingly. 
 “China's foreign exchange reserves hit US$818.9 billion at the end of last 
year, but they should not exceed US$250 billion,” Beijing University professor 
Xiao Zhuoji told the paper in an interview. 
 The government should also ease its control on foreign exchange and make 
better use of the reserves, which are predominantly invested in short-term U.S. 
treasury bills with low returns, Xiao added. 
 “That's like allowing foreign countries to use our money cheaply,” he said. 
 In similar remarks published by domestic media last month, Xiao proposed 
reducing the dollar share of the reserves to curb risks posed by the instability 
of the U.S. currency. 
 (Source: Shenzhen Daily/Agencies)
  
  
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