(Reuters) – U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent in an interview with Yahoo Finance on Tuesday dismissed concerns over China weaponizing its Treasuries despite bond market volatility and added there was no risk of China potentially using its robust Treasury pile to inflict economic pain on the United States.
“If Treasuries hit a certain level or if the Federal Reserve believed that a foreign — I won’t call them an adversary — but a foreign rival were weaponizing the U.S. government bond market or attempting to destabilize it for political gain, I am sure that we would do something in conjunction with each other, but we just haven’t seen that,” Bessent said. “We have a big tool kit.”
China is the second-biggest foreign holder of U.S. government debt after Japan, holding almost $761 billion of bonds in January.
“If they (China) sell Treasuries, then they would have to buy RMBs, and it would strengthen their currency. And they’ve been doing just the opposite,” Bessent said, adding that it is not in China’s best economic interests to sell.
U.S. President Donald Trump has slapped tariffs of 145% on Chinese goods this year as part of broader reciprocal duties on all U.S. trading partners. That prompted ridicule and criticism from Beijing, which retaliated by jacking up levies on U.S. goods to 125%.
Beijing has called Trump’s tariffs strategy “a joke,” which irritated Bessent.
“These are not a joke. I mean these are big numbers,” Bessent has previously said in a Bloomberg Television interview.
Any U.S.-China negotiations would have to come from “the top,” involving Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping, Bessent added.
(Reporting by Mrinmay Dey in Bengaluru; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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