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Chinese yuan weakens to record low

F-22Raptor

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(Bloomberg) -- The offshore yuan weakened past the key 7.3 per dollar level following the party congress and the threat of further outflows due to hawkish Federal Reserve bets.

The Chinese currency sank to 7.3098 per dollar, an all-time low since the unit started trading in 2010. That’s after the currency traded in Shanghai weakened to a fresh 14-year low amid the absence of a shift in Covid policies at the party summit even as the measures have weighed down on the economy.

The yuan is also under pressure to fall as aggressive Fed hike bets threaten to widen the US-China yield gap and drive outflows. Moreover, the People’s Bank of China ended its streak of steady yuan fixings on Monday, which was seen as a sign its toning down support for the currency after the Communist Party congress ended on Sunday.

Around 90% of the 30 yuan traders who responded to a Bloomberg survey last week had forecast the PBOC to ease its tight-ranged fixing after the party congress. Half of the survey respondents also said they expected the yuan to be pushed to 7.4 or even 7.5 per dollar within the year, and only 10% saw it staying at around 7.25.

The offshore yuan was emerging Asia’s worst performing currency on Monday while the onshore unit fell to a fresh 14-year low against the dollar.

 
(Bloomberg) -- The offshore yuan weakened past the key 7.3 per dollar level following the party congress and the threat of further outflows due to hawkish Federal Reserve bets.

The Chinese currency sank to 7.3098 per dollar, an all-time low since the unit started trading in 2010. That’s after the currency traded in Shanghai weakened to a fresh 14-year low amid the absence of a shift in Covid policies at the party summit even as the measures have weighed down on the economy.

The yuan is also under pressure to fall as aggressive Fed hike bets threaten to widen the US-China yield gap and drive outflows. Moreover, the People’s Bank of China ended its streak of steady yuan fixings on Monday, which was seen as a sign its toning down support for the currency after the Communist Party congress ended on Sunday.

Around 90% of the 30 yuan traders who responded to a Bloomberg survey last week had forecast the PBOC to ease its tight-ranged fixing after the party congress. Half of the survey respondents also said they expected the yuan to be pushed to 7.4 or even 7.5 per dollar within the year, and only 10% saw it staying at around 7.25.

The offshore yuan was emerging Asia’s worst performing currency on Monday while the onshore unit fell to a fresh 14-year low against the dollar.



Great news!

More outsourcing of firms and jobs from the US to China.

More export of Chinese goods and services to the US.
 

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