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Here's why China devalued its currency

New yuan rate 'fixes distortions'
China Daily, August 12, 2015

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The People's Bank of China cut the reference rate against the US dollar to 6.2298 yuan per dollar, down from 6.1162 yuan a day earlier, the lowest level in more than two years.[Photo / China Daily]


China's central bank devaluated the yuan against the US dollar by 1.86 percent on Tuesday, the largest single-day drop since exchange rate reforms began in January 1994.

The devaluation hit global equities and US oil prices, as investors worried that Beijing's move signaled concerns over growth in the world’s second-largest economy.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 1.2 percent to 17,402.84, erasing most of the previous session's gains. The S&P 500 fell 1 percent to 2,084.07. The pan-European Stoxx Europe 600 index closed 1.6 percent lower.

Oil fell as much as 4 percent on Tuesday after No 2 consumer China devalued its currency, raising questions about its demand for crude, while a new projection showed non-OPEC producers were more resilient than expected to keeping output high amid low prices.

US crude for September delivery CLU5 slipped by $1.95, or 4.3 percent, to $43.01 a barrel by 1530 GMT, after a session low at $42.98. The front-month continuation contract for US crude CLc1 had previously struck a 2015 low of $42.03.

The People's Bank of China cut the reference rate against the US dollar to 6.2298 yuan per dollar, down from 6.1162 yuan a day earlier, the lowest level in more than two years.

In a move seen as a step toward liberalizing the yuan, the People's Bank of China said that it will base the yuan-US dollar exchange rate more on the previous day's closing rate at the interbank foreign exchange market.

The move would correct price distortions from the bank's previous interventions, experts said.

However, the bank stressed that Tuesday's depreciation was a "one-off" move to fix the discrepancy between the reference rate and the market's spot rate. The spot rate has been consistently higher by about 1.5 percent since June.

The currency can fluctuate by as much as 2 percent a day.

The bank's move seemed to catch the global market off guard, with the yuan declining by 2.3 percent in offshore trading in Hong Kong on Tuesday.

Global commodity prices retreated, and yields on 10-year US and German notes dropped more than two basis points.

Ma Jun, chief economist at the central bank's research bureau, told China Daily that the central parity adjustment "does not mean a depreciating trend for the yuan".

"The economic fundamentals can support a stable yuan exchange rate, since China's 7 percent GDP growth is higher than most countries' and is especially higher than the other emerging economies with greater exchange rate fluctuations," Ma said.

A persistent export surplus, large foreign exchange reserves, low inflation, a moderate fiscal deficit and government debt will ensure a stable currency, he added.

Yu Yongding, a former monetary policy adviser for the central bank, said the new method of setting the reference rate signals that "the yuan's era of appreciation has ended", and its exchange rate will be stable or even weaker in the near future, he said.

Markets have exerted persistent downward pressure on the yuan against the backdrop of weak Chinese growth, an expected rate increase by the US Federal Reserve and depreciation of major emerging markets' currencies against the US dollar.

But Yu said the move was a result of the market and shouldn't be seen merely as an attempt to boost the country's flagging exports, which were down by 8.3 percent year-on-year in July.

The bank also promised on Tuesday to enrich foreign exchange products and promote the convergence between onshore and offshore exchange rates.

Zhu Haibin, chief China economist with JP Morgan Chase & Co, said the policy is conducive to the yuan's inclusion in the International Monetary Fund's Special Drawing Rights, as its review last week suggested that the central parity rate should be responsive to changes in market conditions.
 
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THeir currency have been devalued to a 4 year low indicating the how sharp this devaluation has been.

China's economy will go down in a flash.

China's slowing down is different from other similar slowdowns actually. China is investing trillions of dollars and on top of that we are seeing a crashing of it's growth rate. I am curious how the economy would have behaved if there would have been no govt push.



Hmm, so it is your currency crashing against the dollar to a 4 year low and you are dreaming of ending dollar dominance ? :lol:

Einstein was right afterall ...

quote-only-two-things-are-infinite-the-universe-and-human-stupidity-and-i-m-not-sure-about-the-former-albert-einstein-56412.jpg

US can devalue its currency to counter the Yuan which could push the Yuan even lower.
 
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seems that there is nobody here really interested in financial market, at least nobody actively doing trading.

I give you some data on the countries' currency rates vs US dollar this year( 2015 Q1 and Q2), which may help you guys understand what's going on out there. Don't just believe what you want to believe, you need to know what is real, what is not.

This is in Chinese however, I just made some rough translation

NOTE:

VS LP = Versus Last Period,
VS SPLY = Versus Same Period Last Year

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lol.most people don't know what and why China lower the currency. Like any of us, your guess is as good as mine.

2% Devaluation is not much, however, the importance of this devaluation is not about actual number (ie the devalue %) but rather the message it sent to trader and investor.

Basically, it mean that Chinese Currency lost it appeal to the market, that's the only strong reason why one devaluate their own currency. When the interest on using Yuan lower, the only way to attract investment is to deflate your own currency but the question is, why would China need to do that if they have an absolutely healthy economic forecast like they want to say or they want to portrait. The only answer is that the glooming forecast is actually fake...

That did lead to an ultimate question, how low can Yuan go? There is a point it will actually hurt local business and local economy if the yuan deflate, however, on the other hand, the overestimation of Chinese market and over stretched export driven economy have to rely on a deflation to readjust back down to normal level. And that is the million dollar question itself.

You're right 2% isn't going to trigger an impact on Chinese Export to get investors to start buying. In fact, 2% is too small to change the investors mind. CPP needs to devalue again but this time do it at 40% then we are talking. The 2% will not help Chinese gain its export back to where it was before. Cheap effort for nothing.
 
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US can devalue its currency to counter the Yuan which could push the Yuan even lower.

They do. From time to time.





You're right 2% isn't going to trigger an impact on Chinese Export to get investors to start buying. In fact, 2% is too small to change the investors mind. CPP needs to devalue again but this time do it at 40% then we are talking. The 2% will not help Chinese gain its export back to where it was before. Cheap effort for nothing.

We should have listened to Vietnam over the past thirty years.
 
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You see how Chinese Yuan is changing this year from my figure, it increases 0.62% over USD for the same period of last year, but you know how crazy the USD has been recently. The Yuan Index increased 13.19% for only one year, only next to USD's 19.91%. Now you know why RMB is devalued, right? It can not just follow the crazy USD any more, it really hurts!
 
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LoL ... FANTASY ! 3 years not longer, just watch who will become the economy colony of U.S ... lol.

Before u happy for the TPP, just think twice what's kind of 'Made in Vietnam' vs 'Made in U.S' selling in Vietnam market ... if ur Vietnamese companies beat by U.S companies and bankrupt in local market, ur domestic economy over then that's i called 'Economy colony of U.S'. Even though there will be many Vietnam-U.S joint companies setup in Vietnam, still slavers to work for American parent firms ... did u ever watch the Mexico economy ? That's ur future after TPP.

"Vietnam, still slavers to work for American parent firms"

Like it was in China? with Apple did to Chinese workers? They even got suicide nets.
 
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Except China doesn't rely on exports to fund government spending.

So, you are saying the government does not build road, school, hospital, docks, and military equipment on their GDP, and answer me this, what is the BIGGEST PIE ON Chinese GDP?

laugh out loud. The stock market is still up over 50% on the year. There is no "traditional wisdom" tying currency valuation to stocks.

What on earth were you learning in school?

Duh, it was overvalued a long time ago, just because it was UP (Not this point anyway) does not mean they are not overvalued. The fact is CHINESE GOVERNMENT deflate the currency show you the Yuan is overvalued. And from how much the stock market crashed you can deduced the true value of stock, hence deduced the true value of currency

Well, I learn a lot in school, thanks for asking.
 
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It was the US that started it(competitive devaluation of currency)all back in 2008 when the last financial crisis was at its nadir.

China stood its ground for 8 long years and let the Yuan appreciate against all the major currencies.(go and check out the charts from 2008)。

This time China will not standby watching others(read: Japan, India, Vietnam etc) to gain competitive advantage through devauling their currency against the dollar。:D

The Japanese yen, for example, is trading at some 60% of its former value vs the dollar.

The Indian Rupee。。。

And the Vietnamese Dong。。。(back in 2008, 1USD bought 16000 Dongs,today 1USD is worth 22200 Dongs):rofl:
 
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Fixing rate closer to closing price
By Feng Jianmin | August 12, 2015, Wednesday |

020150812005952.jpg

A man reads a newspaper next to a currency exchange booth in Hong Kong yesterday after China’s central bank shocked the market with a near 2 percent reference rate change as part of a market-oriented reform. The Chinese currency closed at 6.3260 per US dollar on the domestic spot market yesterday, its lowest level since September 2012. — AFP


CHINA’S yuan weakened against the US dollar yesterday by the largest daily decline in two decades after the central bank shocked the market with a near 2 percent reference rate change as part of a market-oriented reform.

The yuan closed at 6.3260 per US dollar on the domestic spot market, the lowest since September 2012. The closing price weakened 1.87 percent from Monday, marking the largest daily depreciation since China officially kick-started a functional foreign exchange market in 1994.

The devaluation was made possible after the People’s Bank of China lowered the daily fixing rate to 6.2298 from the previous day’s 6.1162. The yuan is only allowed to be traded between 2 percent on each side of the reference rate.

Yesterday’s sharply lower rate was described by the central bank as a “one-off” adjustment, which bridged the previously accumulated differences between the central parity rate and the market rate, Xinhua news agency said.

The central bank said it would closely monitor market movements in the future to stabilize market expectations and make sure the new exchange rate formation system works effectively.

It vowed more efforts to promote foreign exchange reform — make it more “market-oriented,” open up the foreign exchange market further with inclusion of qualified foreign entities and gradually unite the onshore-offshore yuan exchange rate.

China’s foreign exchange reform officially started in July 2005 when the central bank decided to unpeg the yuan against the US dollar and allowed it to fluctuate against a basket of currencies.

The yuan was allowed to rise or fall by 0.3 percent from the central parity rate each trading day in China’s spot foreign exchange market.

The central bank also introduced a new reference rate mechanism that will align the daily fixing rate more closely to the closing price of the yuan on the spot market.

The official rate will also take into consideration the foreign exchange supply and the exchange rate trends on the international market for a basket of currencies, the bank said.

The yuan’s move further pushed up the US dollar yesterday, leading to weakening of Asian stock markets and commodity prices.

“There are three possible reasons behind the policy actions,” said Zhu Haibin, JP Morgan China chief economist.

“The strong yuan appreciation in real effective exchange rate term has put a lot of pressure on China’s exports; a trend of weakening currency against the dollar has taken shape in the region; and China needs to react to criticism of the International Monetary Fund on its foreign exchange policies,” Zhu said.

Last week, the IMF said that China’s daily fixing rate was not an appropriate reference exchange rate in that the discrepancy between daily fixing and daily spots was too wide to reflect actual trade.

Analysts believe the central bank’s policy will allow market forces more sway in exchange rate determination and help China to send the yuan into the IMF’s currency basket.

“Today’s move is likely intended to improve the ‘market-driven’ quality of the bank’s daily fix, so that it can qualify to be used by the IMF as a special drawing rights reference rate,” said Wang Tao, chief China economist at UBS.

Joining the SDR could boost international recognition and use of the Chinese currency, eventually lifting China’s financial power.

Zhu said the next few weeks will be crucial to find out whether China will truly let go of the daily fixing or maintain some form of intervention.

The UBS yesterday revised its forecast of yuan exchange rate to 6.50 per dollar by the end of this year from a previous estimate of 6.30.

Analysts dismissed the idea that the central bank’s move is China adopting a devaluation strategy to counter a slump in exports, Xinhua said.

Official data on Saturday showed that exports fell to 7.75 trillion yuan (US$1.24 trillion) in the first seven months of this year, down 0.9 percent from a year ago. In July, exports declined by 8.9 percent.

“Exports have indeed been soft this year, but this is largely a reflection of sluggish external demand,” the HSBC said in a research note. “In an environment of a soft global recovery, the benefits of beggar-thy-neighbor competitive devaluation are neither clear nor easy to reap.”

The HSBC believes Chinese policy-makers have sufficient policy ammunition to boost domestic demand to offset external headwinds.

“Both monetary and fiscal policies are becoming more accommodative and better coordinated, as evidenced by the reports that policy banks will issue more than 1 trillion yuan of financial bonds to support infrastructure investment,” it said.

The HSBC forecast an additional 25 basis points interest rate cut and 200 bps reserve ratio cut in the second half.

***

It was the US that started it(competitive devaluation of currency)all back in 2008 when the last financial crisis was at its nadir.

China stood its ground for 8 long years and let the Yuan appreciate against all the major currencies.(go and check out the charts from 2008)。

This time China will not standby watching others(read: Japan, India, Vietnam etc) to gain competitive advantage through devauling their currency against the dollar。:D

The Japanese yen, for example, is trading at some 60% of its former value vs the dollar.

The Indian Rupee。。。

And the Vietnamese Dong。。。(back in 2008, 1USD bought 16000 Dongs,today 1USD is worth 22200 Dongs):rofl:

Now they will see what cut-throat competition looks like.
 
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Yeah,Yeah,And how do you know What is yuan's ture value?I still remember US government keep saying that Chinese yuan is undervalued because we have the biggest trade surplus in this world.The truth is no one knows it cuz there isn't one.In fact trade surplus is the best indicator to weight is a currency overvalued or undervalued,Imagine China and Japan selling all their US dollar reserves.The US dollar would become as valuable as toilet paper.

lol, ok, just because you say so, then IT MUST BE TRUE

Especially I like when you say China and Japan selling US dollar reserve......Well, It cannot be done, it is not bond, you can trade on the value, but you can't sell them, you know why? Cause you will get pay with USD by trying to sell USD.........as USD is the world reserve currency........I laugh so hard on this....
 
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first, in the last 12 months, the US dollar valuation raised about 10%, most currencies in the world have then been devalued against dollar, during the same time, CNY has not changed a little, meaning that CNY has raised much against most other currencies, especially EURO. one should know EURO has devalued against dollar 22% in the last year. devaluation of CNY brings the ture value of CNY against other currencies. that is a news better for the EU.

second, in the next decade, China will invest infrastructure projects in OBOR in a such scale that never happened before, consider that most materials and services for the projects will be exported out of China, devaluation brings competitive power for these Chinese companies, and too brings benefits for those who accept Chinese investments.

third, devaluation is a news worse for the International commodities which still has no sign to rebound, oil prices, gold prices continues to drop, in short term, decrease of China importing commodites leads to lower prices, but is in long term good for China.
 
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Looks like u misunderstand the meaning of '出口转内销', LOL ... the West still can't understand it. :rofl: Those exported goods sold in local 1.3billion market, price less than export price but still can earn money ... maybe more.

Selling in China market with Yuan still has the benefit, just lower than USD. The importance is with 1.3billion local market support, those Chinese companies not easily to bankrupt, that's the KEY here.

I understand what does it mean export good for domestic market. As I said, you have ALOT of export good to sell, and all for cheap price, you will SATRUATE the domestic market.

Do you understand what is saturation? By fluxing in a lot of good to local market and flood the market, domestic market can only accept a certain amount of domestic product, and domestic trade does not change the cash flow model, only instead of you route through money, you route thru your own goods. It does not help the Currency any bits. You simply expand the problem, until domestic market also saturated.
 
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Fixing rate closer to closing price
By Feng Jianmin | August 12, 2015, Wednesday |

020150812005952.jpg

A man reads a newspaper next to a currency exchange booth in Hong Kong yesterday after China’s central bank shocked the market with a near 2 percent reference rate change as part of a market-oriented reform. The Chinese currency closed at 6.3260 per US dollar on the domestic spot market yesterday, its lowest level since September 2012. — AFP


CHINA’S yuan weakened against the US dollar yesterday by the largest daily decline in two decades after the central bank shocked the market with a near 2 percent reference rate change as part of a market-oriented reform.

The yuan closed at 6.3260 per US dollar on the domestic spot market, the lowest since September 2012. The closing price weakened 1.87 percent from Monday, marking the largest daily depreciation since China officially kick-started a functional foreign exchange market in 1994.

The devaluation was made possible after the People’s Bank of China lowered the daily fixing rate to 6.2298 from the previous day’s 6.1162. The yuan is only allowed to be traded between 2 percent on each side of the reference rate.

Yesterday’s sharply lower rate was described by the central bank as a “one-off” adjustment, which bridged the previously accumulated differences between the central parity rate and the market rate, Xinhua news agency said.

The central bank said it would closely monitor market movements in the future to stabilize market expectations and make sure the new exchange rate formation system works effectively.

It vowed more efforts to promote foreign exchange reform — make it more “market-oriented,” open up the foreign exchange market further with inclusion of qualified foreign entities and gradually unite the onshore-offshore yuan exchange rate.

China’s foreign exchange reform officially started in July 2005 when the central bank decided to unpeg the yuan against the US dollar and allowed it to fluctuate against a basket of currencies.

The yuan was allowed to rise or fall by 0.3 percent from the central parity rate each trading day in China’s spot foreign exchange market.

The central bank also introduced a new reference rate mechanism that will align the daily fixing rate more closely to the closing price of the yuan on the spot market.

The official rate will also take into consideration the foreign exchange supply and the exchange rate trends on the international market for a basket of currencies, the bank said.

The yuan’s move further pushed up the US dollar yesterday, leading to weakening of Asian stock markets and commodity prices.

“There are three possible reasons behind the policy actions,” said Zhu Haibin, JP Morgan China chief economist.

“The strong yuan appreciation in real effective exchange rate term has put a lot of pressure on China’s exports; a trend of weakening currency against the dollar has taken shape in the region; and China needs to react to criticism of the International Monetary Fund on its foreign exchange policies,” Zhu said.

Last week, the IMF said that China’s daily fixing rate was not an appropriate reference exchange rate in that the discrepancy between daily fixing and daily spots was too wide to reflect actual trade.

Analysts believe the central bank’s policy will allow market forces more sway in exchange rate determination and help China to send the yuan into the IMF’s currency basket.

“Today’s move is likely intended to improve the ‘market-driven’ quality of the bank’s daily fix, so that it can qualify to be used by the IMF as a special drawing rights reference rate,” said Wang Tao, chief China economist at UBS.

Joining the SDR could boost international recognition and use of the Chinese currency, eventually lifting China’s financial power.

Zhu said the next few weeks will be crucial to find out whether China will truly let go of the daily fixing or maintain some form of intervention.

The UBS yesterday revised its forecast of yuan exchange rate to 6.50 per dollar by the end of this year from a previous estimate of 6.30.

Analysts dismissed the idea that the central bank’s move is China adopting a devaluation strategy to counter a slump in exports, Xinhua said.

Official data on Saturday showed that exports fell to 7.75 trillion yuan (US$1.24 trillion) in the first seven months of this year, down 0.9 percent from a year ago. In July, exports declined by 8.9 percent.

“Exports have indeed been soft this year, but this is largely a reflection of sluggish external demand,” the HSBC said in a research note. “In an environment of a soft global recovery, the benefits of beggar-thy-neighbor competitive devaluation are neither clear nor easy to reap.”

The HSBC believes Chinese policy-makers have sufficient policy ammunition to boost domestic demand to offset external headwinds.

“Both monetary and fiscal policies are becoming more accommodative and better coordinated, as evidenced by the reports that policy banks will issue more than 1 trillion yuan of financial bonds to support infrastructure investment,” it said.

The HSBC forecast an additional 25 basis points interest rate cut and 200 bps reserve ratio cut in the second half.

***



Now they will see what cut-throat competition looks like.

What a bunch of crying babies these clowns are。:D

China must use its monetary power to advance its own political、economical and financial interests。
 
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