BEIJING, Oct. 12 (Xinhua) -- China's foreign exchange
reserve had reached 1.43 trillion U.S. dollars by the end of September, up 45.1
percent year-on-year, the People's Bank of China announced on Friday.
A total of 367.3 billion U.S. dollars were added to
the country's foreign exchange reserve in the first nine months of 2007, said
the central bank.
In September alone, the forex reserve rose by 25
billion dollars.
China's soaring trade surplus is still the major
contributing factor to the forex reserve boom.
Data newly released by the General Administration of
Customs shows that China's trade surplus for the first nine months of the year
has reached 185.7 billion dollars, exceeding the total trade surplus of 177.47
billion dollars for 2006.
The huge forex reserve is considered the main reason
for excess liquidity in China, as the central bank has to spend quantities of
basic money to purchase foreign exchange, thus aggravating the problem of
surplus fluidity.
By the end of September, the M2 -- a broad measure of
money supply, which indicates the monetary demand of the whole of country and
possible inflation -- grew by 18.45 percent from a year ago to 39.31 trillion
yuan.
The growth rate is 1.39 percentage points higher than
the end of June and still higher than the target growth of 16 percent set by the
central bank at the beginning of this year.
A total amount of 195.8 billion yuan was poured into
the market during the first nine months, 30.2 billion yuan more than the same
period of last year.
On the other hand, continuous growth of the forex
reserve has in fact increased the pressure on appreciation of the Chinese
currency, which in turn has exerted greater pressure on value preservation of
China's forex reserve.
The central parity rate of the RMB was 7.5114 to the
U.S. dollar on Friday.
In a move to make better use of the country's huge
forex reserve, China announced the establishment of the China Investment
Corporate Ltd. (CIC), the country's state forex investment company at the end of
September.
The state-owned investment company will invest in
overseas financial markets.
The registered capital of 200 billion dollars of the
CIC all comes from the forex reserve of the country, which will be obtained by
issuing a total of 1.55 trillion yuan special treasury bonds by the Ministry of
Finance (MOF).
So far, the ministry has issued more than 700 billion
yuan (93.3 billion dollars) of special treasury bonds, with 600 billion yuan to
the central bank and 100 billion yuan targeting the general public. It will
issue another 100 billion yuan of treasury bonds by the end of this
year.