From: Landon Thomas To: "Epstein, Jeffrey" <I Subject: Fwd: Central Banks' Losses from EURUSD this Year: USD300 Billion and Counting Date: Thu, 06 May 2010 14:16:54 +0000 Attachments: Reserve_Losses.pdf Inline-Images: mime_part_ljpeg time to double down? Forwarded message From: Stephen L Jen Date: Thu, May 6, 2010 at 2:59 PM Subject: Central Banks' Losses from EURUSD this Year: USD300 Billion and Counting To: Stephen L Jen Central Banks' Losses from EURUSD this Year: USD300 Billion and Counting Stephen L Jen May 6, 2010 Bottom line: Central banks have sustained USD300 billion in valuation losses (YTD) from the depreciating euro. The level of angst at these central banks may be elevated now and the risks are rising that some of these central banks de-rate the euro. Total foreign currency reserves held by all central bank have reached USD9.0 trillion, with the top-8 reserve holders managing some US$5.3 trillion. Of this latter amount, US$1.55 trillion (or 30% of the total) is held in euros. Corresponding to the 10% depreciation in EURUSD year-to- date, the top-8 reserve holders may have suffered close to USD200 billion in valuation losses, and for all central banks the total valuation loss has been around USD300 billion. We guesstimate that China (SAFE) may have suffered a US$80 billion in EUR valuation losses, US$14 billion for Russia, and US$7 billion for Korea. These figures do not include actual and potential further losses on their underlying holdings of European bonds. If EURUSD trades down to 1.2150, all of the monetary gains from the dollar-to-euro diversification in the past decade will be lost (1) Central banks' reserve managers are presumably reconsidering their dollar-diversification strategy, now that the euro is also found to be less than a perfect 'anti-dollar'. (2) The risks of further declines in the euro and a possible debt rescheduling in Europe are likely to be sources of additional worries for central banks wit