Highlights
- China has sold over $600 billion in U.S. Treasuries since its 2013 peak of $1.32 trillion, dropping to $688.7 billion by October 2025—one of the largest sovereign portfolio shifts in modern history.
- The sell-down reflects financial decoupling driven by sanction risk, debt sustainability concerns, and diversification, not proven evidence of imminent military conflict as online speculation suggests.
- China is reallocating toward physical assets like gold, oil, copper, and grain for supply-chain resilience.
- The U.S. Treasury market grows increasingly dependent on fewer, politically sensitive allied holders.
Recent online chatter claims China’s rapid sell-down of U.S. Treasuries proves imminent conflict and a coordinated effort by U.S. allies to absorb the fallout. The core trend is real—but the interpretation overshoots the evidence.
Rare Earth Exchanges™ reviewed the data (opens in a new tab) from the U.S. Treasury.
The facts first.
China’s official U.S. Treasury holdings fell to approximately $688.7 billion in October 2025, down from roughly $1.1–$1.2 trillion in 2020 and far below the ~$1.32 trillion peak in 2013. That implies China has sold approximately $400–$500 billion over the past five years, and more than $600 billion from peak, one of the largest sovereign portfolio reallocations in modern financial history. This marks a decisive unwind of the “Chimerica” recycling loop in which Chinese trade surpluses helped fund persistent U.S. deficits.
Motives: decoupling, not proven war.
Much of the commentary frames this as war preparation, often citing the 2022 freezing of Russian reserves as a catalyst. Sanction risk is a credible factor, but not the only one. Other drivers plausibly include concern over U.S. debt sustainability, inflation, and duration risk following rate hikes, renminbi management, and diversification away from assets subject to U.S. jurisdiction. Rising trade and technology tensions likely reinforce this logic. None of these factors, individually or collectively, proves a near-term conflict timeline.
Who’s buying? The “bag-holder alliance” claim needs caution.
Japan remains the largest foreign holder of U.S. Treasuries. Reported U.K. holdings surged to roughly $878 billion, while Belgium’s line item has risen into the mid-$400 billion range in recent TIC data. That looks dramatic—but both are major custody hubs (Belgium via Euroclear). TIC country labels often reflect where securities are held, not the ultimate beneficial owner. Coordinated G7 buying is possible, but not demonstrated. The more defensible conclusion is that ownership is shifting toward allied jurisdictions and custodial centers—raising potential fragility if those holders later reverse course.
From paper to things.
China is clearly reallocating toward gold, oil storage, industrial metals (notably copper), and grain. This supports a resilience or autarky narrative—sanction-proofing and supply-chain security—whether or not conflict materializes.
Bottom line: China’s Treasury exit is real and consequential. What remains uncertain is intent. What is clear is a trend toward structural financial decoupling—and a U.S. Treasury market increasingly reliant on fewer, more politically sensitive holders.
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