China Now Works To Keep The Yuan From Appreciating Too Much

Beijingwalker

Elite Member
Joined
Nov 4, 2011
Messages
76,520
Reaction score
104,129
Country of Origin
Country of Residence

China Now Works To Keep The Yuan From Appreciating Too Much​

August 23 2024

China’s central bank, the People's Bank of China (PBOC), has shifted focus to prevent the yuan from strengthening too quickly amid its longest winning streak in over three years.

What does this mean?

The yuan (CNY) has gained 1.3% against the US dollar (USD) this August and is set for a fifth consecutive weekly rise. This appreciation is fueled by expectations of Federal Reserve rate cuts and a rally in the Japanese yen (JPY). Yet, China's economy remains weakened, with persistent capital outflows. To protect exporters and stabilize markets, the PBOC is easing restrictions on gold imports, loosening banks' yuan trading positions, and conducting market surveys. Analysts at BofA Securities now forecast the yuan to end 2024 at 7.38 per dollar, slightly adjusting their earlier prediction.

Why should I care?

For markets:
Stability over spikes.

The PBOC’s interventions aim to buffer the yuan against extreme volatility that could destabilize financial markets. Exporters and foreign companies have been swapping yuan for dollars, driven by better returns on foreign currencies, creating over $500 billion in foreign currency holdings since 2022. By relaxing certain trading rules and increasing gold import quotas for some banks, the central bank hopes to control the yuan's rapid appreciation, ensuring a balanced market environment.

The bigger picture: Navigating global shifts.

China’s strategic moves reflect broader macroeconomic maneuvers to stay competitive globally. The yuan’s sharp rise, partly due to Fed rate cut expectations, adds pressure on China to maintain export competitiveness. As global markets adjust, China's quick adaptation in FX policies showcases its focus on economic stability amid a landscape of fluctuating currencies and evolving trade dynamics.
 

After battle with yuan bears, China is now keen to avoid sharp currency gains​

By Reuters
August 23, 20243:56 PM GMT+8

Illustration picture of Chinese Yuan banknotes

Chinese Yuan banknotes are seen in this illustration picture taken June 14, 2022. REUTERS/Florence Lo/Illustration/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights

SHANGHAI, Aug 23 (Reuters) - Having spent all year trying to put a floor under the tumbling yuan, China's central bank is suddenly faced with the opposite problem and is turning to subtle ways to stop the currency from appreciating sharply.

The usually restrained yuan has strengthened 1.3% against the dollar in August, recouping nearly all its losses in the first half of the year. On Friday, it looked set for its fifth straight weekly gain, the longest winning streak, opens new tab in more than three years.

While none of the underlying drivers at home, namely a weak economy and capital flight, has changed, the yuan has been helped by growing bets for Federal Reserve interest rate cuts, which are weakening the dollar, and by a rally in the Japanese yen.

Meanwhile, Chinese authorities have worked behind the scenes to ensure the currency doesn't spike abruptly, which could roil fragile domestic financial markets and hurt exporters. They have surveyed the market to gauge the pressure, and quietly relaxed restrictions on imports of gold and trading positions in the yuan for some banks.

"The government is probably less concerned about depreciation but remains wary of FX volatility," said Gary Ng, senior economist for Asia Pacific at Natixis.

"While the pressure on the yuan may ease as the Fed may finally cut interest rates, there may be sudden and significant movements in capital flows."

One big reason for the People's Bank of China (PBOC) to be worried is the build-up of speculative short yuan positions during the currency's steady decline since early 2023, which could be unwound messily if the currency rises fast.

Foreign companies operating in China, domestic exporters and investors have swapped yuan for dollars to earn better returns in what is known in market circles as the yuan carry trade.

Analysts at the Macquarie Group estimate exporters and multinational companies have accumulated foreign currency holdings of more than $500 billion since 2022.

"As the yuan appreciates... concerns about the potential unwinding of yuan carry trade and shocks to financial markets may arise," said Zhu Chaoping, global market strategist at J.P. Morgan Asset Management.

"Recent market volatility in Japan might have reminded policymakers about these risks."
China's currency regulator, the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE), and the PBOC did not immediately respond to Reuters requests for comment.

PREVENT A STAMPEDE​

Possibly to get an idea of pent-up yuan buying that could come as the currency appreciates, SAFE surveyed banks about their clients' FX conversion ratio - the proportion of revenues exporters convert into yuan - last week, two people with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters.

"FX settlement is the issue that everyone in the market is mostly concerned about, besides the Fed rate cut," said Liu Yang, general manager of the financial market business department at minerals exporter Zheshang Development Group.

"After all, exports are the only major driver of China's economy among its traditional 'troika' (traditional growth engines), and regulators do not want the yuan to appreciate rapidly and substantially to weaken the competitiveness of export products," he said.
Separately, guidance given to banks last year banning them from keeping short yuan positions at the end of a day's trading has also been relaxed for some banks, two people with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters.

Chinese banks have also been given new gold import quotas by the central bank, Reuters reported. Gold imports are usually curtailed when the yuan faces depreciation pressures.

The measures are subtle, analysts said, and together with the trend in the PBOC's daily benchmark guidance setting for the yuan, simply point to a desire to contain volatility, rather than thwart gains.

Still, market participants are revising their yuan forecasts.

Analysts at BofA Securities expect the yuan will continue to weaken, "given subdued growth and PBOC's easing bias", but see the yuan at 7.38 per dollar by year-end, not 7.45 as they had previously forecast. It is currently around 7.14 per dollar.

 
US failed to reap China, but the cost trying to fleece China is enormous and will come back to haunt US economy for the decades to come.
 

China’s yuan set for longest weekly winning streak since 2021​

By Thomson ReutersAug 23, 2024 | 1:58 AM

SHANGHAI (Reuters) – China’s yuan inched higher against a softer dollar on Friday and looked set for the fifth straight weekly gain, its longest winning streak in more than three years.

The yuan was supported by stronger corporate interest in converting their foreign exchange receipts on the back of recent dollar weakness, but gains were capped by market caution ahead of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s speech in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, later on Friday.

Powell’ remarks are expected to offer more clues on the monetary policy trajectory in the world’s largest economy and affect global financial markets, traders said.

By 0300 GMT, the yuan was trading 0.07% higher at 7.1428 to the dollar. If it retains all the gains into the late night close, it would have strengthened 0.23% against the dollar for the week, booking its longest weekly winning streak since May 2021.

“Yuan depreciation pressure has been alleviated as we have seen a general weakening of the dollar over the last month or two,” said Lynn Song, chief economist for Greater China at ING.

“The main reason for this is on the external side, as market expectations for Fed rate cuts have grown, and if the Fed cuts rates at a relatively fast pace, yield spreads should move to favour continued recovery of the yuan.”

Song expected policymakers to continue to keep currency stability as a high priority moving forward.

China’s central bank has been setting its daily official yuan midpoint fixing at levels firmer than market projections for more than a year, with traders and analysts widely interpreting it as an official attempt to keep the currency stable and supported.

And the discrepancy between the official guidance and market projections have gradually narrowed over the past few weeks.

On Friday, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) set the midpoint rate, around which the yuan is allowed to trade in a 2% band, at 7.1358 per dollar, 122 pips firmer than a Reuters’ estimate.

 
China exports lots of stuff, too fast a Yuan appreciation is not good for China's overall economy.
 
China should let the Yuan float freely so to shut up Americans all the time making a big fuss about Chinese GDP is declining against US GDP. :ROFLMAO:
 
China should let the Yuan float freely so to shut up Americans all the time making a big fuss about Chinese GDP is declining against US GDP. :ROFLMAO:
The west is in a big big dilemma now, if Yuan rises, China's nominal GDP will soon overtake US and it will directly threatens the global dollar domination which the whole western monetary structure is based on.
If Yuan retreats, China will soon wipe out the whatever pathetic remaining western manufacturing industries once and for all.
There is no way out for the west.
 
China should let the Yuan float freely so to shut up Americans all the time making a big fuss about Chinese GDP is declining against US GDP. :ROFLMAO:

China has no chance of surpassing US GDP, and outside of the Covid year black swan anomaly, China hasn’t significantly closed the GDP gap in a decade+. US GDP will surpass $40T within a decade and $50T by 2040.
 
China has no chance of surpassing US GDP, and outside of the Covid year black swan anomaly, China hasn’t significantly closed the GDP gap in a decade+. US GDP will surpass $40T within a decade and $50T by 2040.



Are you aware that nominal US dollar based GDP != real gdp?

As an example China produces the Type-55 destroyer for 900 million US dollars, whereas the US spends 2.2 US billion dollars for each Arleigh Burke destroyer.

By 2040 the world will no longer be measuring solely with US dollars anyway as the US dollar will no longer be world's reserve currency.
 
Are you aware that nominal US dollar based GDP != real gdp?

As an example China produces the Type-55 destroyer for 900 million US dollars, whereas the US spends 2.2 US billion dollars for each Arleigh Burke destroyer.

By 2040 the world will no longer be measuring solely with US dollars anyway as the US dollar will no longer be world's reserve currency.

Nominal GDP is all that matters in the real world. PPP only matters when measuring individual standard of living not relative national economies. There’s no such thing as a national cost of living. And you can’t measure military expenditure on a ship by ship basis. You have to conduct a system by system analysis to understand there capability sets and what they bring to the fight. The only way to do that is if you had clearances to analyze each ships systems and the capability they bring to the fight. Otherwise the comparison is meaningless.

All that matters is nominal GDP, and there’s zero chance the dollar won’t be the world reserve currency by 2040.

The US will remain preeminent
 
Nominal GDP is all that matters in the real world. PPP only matters when measuring individual standard of living not relative national economies. There’s no such thing as a national cost of living. And you can’t measure military expenditure on a ship by ship basis. You have to conduct a system by system analysis to understand there capability sets and what they bring to the fight. The only way to do that is if you had clearances to analyze each ships systems and the capability they bring to the fight. Otherwise the comparison is meaningless.

All that matters is nominal GDP, and there’s zero chance the dollar won’t be the world reserve currency by 2040.

The US will remain preeminent


Err, Type-55 may be a more advanced and powerful warship than Arleigh Burke as no-one knows which is more advanced ship. All we know is that it costs 1/3rd the price.

Yes PPP is important for relative national economies when it comes to countries like China that pretty much produce everything.

I think you are being misled by the information you are reading and need to widen your reading net.
 
Err, Type-55 may be a more advanced and powerful warship than Arleigh Burke as no-one knows which is more advanced ship. All we know is that it costs 1/3rd the price.

Yes PPP is important for relative national economies when it comes to countries like China that pretty much produce everything.

I think you are being misled by the information you are reading and need to widen your reading net.

IMG_4266.jpeg


Nope PPP doesn’t matter when measuring relative national economies. It’s why no one cared China surpassed US in PPP a decade ago.

Nominal is real money and real power. There’s no such thing as a national cost of living. If PPP mattered India would have a more powerful economy than Japan, Germany, and the UK combined. PPP on a national scale doesn’t matter.

PPP is only used by the Chinese and their sycophant copers because they realize their attempt to catch up to US GDP is fading. Nominal is all that matters in great power politics.

And Arleigh Burke’s are the most advanced destroyers in human history, especially now with the SPY-6 radars.
 
And you can’t measure military expenditure on a ship by ship basis.
Why you can't? Your generals always do.

China Acquiring New Weapons Five Times Faster Than U.S. Warns Top Official​

“In purchasing power parity, they spend about one dollar to our 20 dollars to get to the same capability.”

微信图片_20240825024539.png
 
Lol, that only happened after Covid.

Nope, US GDP lead will be $10T+ after 2024. A decade ago it was $7-8T. Chinas trend line growth continues to decline. US growth has exceeded expectations.

It took the Covid anomaly to narrow it to $6-7T, but now US growth and productivity has boomed and Chinas growth rates are in decline.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top