The U.S. dollar will be safe for the next six to 12 months, because global markets are focused on the euro zone's troubles, Chinese central bank adviser Li Daokui said on Wednesday when asked about U.S. President Barack Obama's plan to extend tax cuts for all Americans.But Li, an academic adviser on the People's Bank of China monetary policy committee, said the fiscal health of the United States was in fact worse than Europe's, and that U.S. bond prices and the dollar would fall when the European economic situation stabilizes.He was speaking on the sidelines of a financial forum in Beijing.U.S. government bonds extended sharp losses on Wednesday, pushing the dollar higher against the yen and the euro while sending most other investors fleeing to the sidelines.U.S. Treasurys prices plunged on Tuesday and yields surged after President Obama proposed a deal to extend tax cuts that would support economic growth but raise national debt levels in the longer term.The yield on 10-year Treasurys rose more than 4 basis points from overnight U.S. levels in early Asian trade to around 3.188 percent, its highest since late June."In the short run this is good news, but two or three years down the road foreign buyers of U.S. Treasuries may start to balk," said David Carter, chief investment officer at Lenox Advisers in New York.
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