Everyone talks about China’s property crash, about youth unemployment, about falling exports, but nobody’s paying attention to the most dangerous signal of all. China is quietly running out of US dollars. Its foreign reserves, the lifeline that props up the entire system, are disappearing. And once they run out of dollars, the collapse will hit hard and fast. I still remember back in 2014 sitting in finance meetings where everyone admired China’s massive three trillion foreign reserves.
They said no matter what happens, China can always defend its currency, always stay stable. Well, not anymore. The world is about to learn that those reserves were never as safe or as large as people believed. On paper, China reports $3.2 trillion dollar in forex reserves. Sounds impressive, right? But here’s the truth no one talks about. Huge chunks of that money are already locked up. $1 trillion US dollars backing Chinese companies foreign debts. Hundreds of billions are tied up in the ridiculous belt and road loans, many of which will never be paid back and just be bad loan forever and more billions sit in illquid or questionable assets.
My estimate is that maybe only 1.5 trillion is actually usable. And here’s the kicker. China’s annual import bill is already bigger than that. Meaning if things go wrong, that money can vanish shockingly fast. Now, why are these reserves shrinking? Let me walk you through the three big reasons. First, propping up the collapsing yin. The Chinese yin is under massive pressure. Exports are falling as a result of the trade war. Foreign investment cannot leave fast enough.
Domestic confidence is collapsing. Without constant central bank intervention, the yuan would crash, triggering panic and capital flight. But even with tight capital controls, wealthy Chinese are finding ways to smuggle money out through underground banks, crypto, and creative accounting. The Chinese central bank must burn through reserves to stop the bleeding.
And let’s not forget China’s export machine is also sputtering as Trump tariffs started to take effect. Uh, the US is decoupling, Europe is slowing, but China still must import energy, food, and high-tech components to survive. So, with exports falling, Beijing is now burning reserves to pay these bills. Put simply, China is fighting a losing battle, burning dollars to delay the inevitable. And here’s the nightmare scenario, okay? As usable reserves fall, China faces a dollar shortage and that triggers a reshift cycle.
The Chinese UN weakens, panic builds, capital flight accelerates and then the government tightens control and reserves drain even faster and the yan collapses further. And remember, China depends on imports, especially energy. A falling yan makes these imports unaffordable, feeding inflation and further economic pain. I have seen this movie before. I lived through the Asian financial crisis. When the reserves go, panic comes next. And you may have seen the headlines. Oh, China dumping US treasuries. a suns uh this is like a power move and uh an attack on the US dollar. I’m telling you it’s not. It’s desperation. Okay, China needs dollars now.
The only liquid assets it can sell fast are US treasuries. But here’s the problem. The more they sell, the more they devalue their own remaining reserves. Okay. It’s like trying to drain water from a sinking ship while making the holes bigger. Uh this is not strength. It’s a regime running out of options. Now why does this mean that China’s financial crisis has begun? Because China’s entire economic model is broken. Uh real estate is in freef fall. that is unsustainable on all levels.
Demographics are collapsing. Exports are weakening. The UN is under constant pressure. So foreign reserves were the firewall, you know, the the buffer to buy time. Now that firewall is crumbling and once reserves fall below a critical level, confidence will vanish. The yuan will devalue hard and panic, financial panic will spread inside China and then the regime will face a choice. Devalue UN massively or impose brutal capital controls.
Either choice triggers deeper financial crisis. I believe historians will look back on this moment when China’s foreign reserves quietly disappeared as the true start of China’s financial collapse. Not a dramatic one-day crash, but a slow, relentless erosion of the systems foundation. The world is watching the wrong headlines. Uh this is the signal you need to watch and and study. If you found this video valuable, share it. Uh help more people understand what’s really going on beneath the surface of China’s economy. And if you want more no spin analysis, uh hit that subscribe button. Uh I’ve got much more coming and I’ll see you in next video.
