this post was submitted on 08 Jan 2026
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Just to correct a misconception here: there is no such thing as China dumping US assets. This has been the biggest Republican scaremongering about China and we don’t want to perpetuate it.
In order to sell an asset, you gotta have someone to buy it in the first place. The US dollar operates under a free floating exchange rate mechanism so if you try to dump a large amount of US dollars, and nobody wants to buy them at a rate that’s profitable for you, you lose.
In the past, this worked during the fixed exchange rate era because the central bank promised to convert the currency into gold or whatever metal/currency they are pegged to, and if you dump a huge amount of the currency at the same time, you’re betting that the central bank won’t have enough reserves of the gold/metal/foreign currency to defend their exchange rate. This was how Soros screwed with the Bank of England and the Thai central bank in the 1990s.
You literally cannot dump US assets today because it is not pegged to anything, so the Fed doesn’t have to defend the dollar exchange rate. Your best bet is finding a buyer stupid enough to buy from you at a rate that’s profitable for you, but the market players aren’t stupid (especially not the people/institutions/countries who can move trillions).