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China’s yuan slumped to a one-year low as the central bank showed little sign of intervening to slow the currency’s descent and bets for monetary policy easing mounted.
The yuan dropped as much as 0.85 percent to 6.8032 per dollar in offshore trading, the lowest level since July 2017. The People’s Bank of China weakened its fixing beyond 6.7 on Thursday for the first time since the currency began tumbling in June. Signs of further monetary easing are also adding strains, with China Business News reporting policy makers have made efforts to encourage bank loans and investment in lower-rated corporate debt.
The yuan has fallen more than 4 percent in the past month, the worst performance among 31 major currencies, as the world’s second-largest economy falters and a trade spat with the U.S. escalates. China will tolerate higher volatility in the yuan and a moderate weakening of the currency as long as there’s no major threat to financial stability, according to Pacific Investment Management Co.
The fixing “signals the PBOC is not defending any line in the sand for the exchange rate and is comfortable with gradual yuan depreciation,” said Tommy Xie, an economist at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. in Singapore. The signs of easing are “certainly not supportive to the yuan, and the currency may see another wave of selling pressures ahead.”
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...ncy-reference-rate-weaker-than-6-7-per-dollar
The yuan dropped as much as 0.85 percent to 6.8032 per dollar in offshore trading, the lowest level since July 2017. The People’s Bank of China weakened its fixing beyond 6.7 on Thursday for the first time since the currency began tumbling in June. Signs of further monetary easing are also adding strains, with China Business News reporting policy makers have made efforts to encourage bank loans and investment in lower-rated corporate debt.
The yuan has fallen more than 4 percent in the past month, the worst performance among 31 major currencies, as the world’s second-largest economy falters and a trade spat with the U.S. escalates. China will tolerate higher volatility in the yuan and a moderate weakening of the currency as long as there’s no major threat to financial stability, according to Pacific Investment Management Co.
The fixing “signals the PBOC is not defending any line in the sand for the exchange rate and is comfortable with gradual yuan depreciation,” said Tommy Xie, an economist at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. in Singapore. The signs of easing are “certainly not supportive to the yuan, and the currency may see another wave of selling pressures ahead.”
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...ncy-reference-rate-weaker-than-6-7-per-dollar