China Gives Most Forceful Signal Since 2022 to Slow Yuan Gains

China Gives Most Forceful Signal Since 2022 to Slow Yuan Gains

China Gives Most Forceful Signal Since 2022 to Slow Yuan Gains

Chinese one-hundred yuan banknotes.
Chinese one-hundred yuan banknotes.

China set its daily reference rate for the yuan at a level that was significantly weaker than estimates, suggesting the central bank is aiming to limit gains in the managed currency.

The People’s Bank of China set the so-called fixing at 7.0733 per dollar, 164 pips weaker than a survey of traders and analysts. The gap between the fixing, which limits the onshore yuan’s moves by 2% on either side, and the forecast was the largest since February 2022.

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“The PBOC has been prioritizing currency stability, so it is not surprising that given the relatively faster appreciation in the recent week they are now pushing back against the pace of further appreciation,” said Lynn Song, chief economist for ING. “We do not expect the 7 level to be tested for the rest of this year, but it likely will be breached at some point next year.”

The yuan has been inching toward the key psychological level of 7, reflecting optimism over improved US-China relations. Momentum has grown following an unexpected call between US President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping, and a potential Trump visit to China next year.

Beyond the PBOC’s managed approach, the yuan is headed for its best year since 2020 in both onshore and offshore markets as easing trade tensions helped drive inflows into Chinese stocks. Dollar weakness spurred by US fiscal concerns has also favored the yuan.

The move “suggests the authorities are seeking to manage the pace of yuan appreciation, but importantly they are not trying to halt it,” said Khoon Goh, head of Asia research at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group in Singapore. “Most likely the authorities want a smoother path of appreciation for the currency, especially with expected foreign-exchange volatility ahead.”

The yuan edged 0.1% lower in both onshore and overseas trading Thursday morning.

Yuan Grinds Toward 7 Per Dollar as PBOC Works to Manage Gains

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