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Ukraine crisis: yuan’s emergence as a safe haven a win for China’s economy

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Ukraine crisis: yuan’s emergence as a safe haven a win for China’s economy​

  • The Chinese economy is the world’s manufacturer but it needs to import a vast amount of energy, raw material and food
  • With commodity prices spiking due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and growing risks of imported inflation, the yuan’s resilience is a positive sign

Neal Kimberley
Neal Kimberley
Published: 10:15pm, 1 Mar, 2022
The Chinese currency has emerged as a safe haven currency as markets react to the Ukraine crisis. Photo: Bloomberg

The Chinese currency has emerged as a safe haven currency as markets react to the Ukraine crisis. Photo: Bloomberg

The resilience of the Chinese yuan last week was noteworthy as the foreign exchanges reacted to unfolding events in Ukraine. While sensitive to the tragedy and human cost of war, forex markets necessarily reacted by adopting a risk-averse approach, seeking out currencies that are held to have safe-haven characteristics.

The renminbi would now appear to be one of a select group of safe haven currencies, and in present circumstances that is no bad thing for China.

News of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine initially triggered equity market sell-offs around the world, while in the currency markets, investors sought to secure currencies traditionally regarded as safe havens in times of major uncertainty, such as the Japanese yen, the Swiss franc and, of course, the US dollar.

This time, the yuan was also sought after. Indeed, it “has been trading like a safe-haven currency during the Ukraine crisis”, Khoon Goh, head of Asia research at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group in Singapore told Reuters, adding, “Prospects for further easing [in China] should see growth recover, hence keeping Chinese equities resilient even as US equities have sold off.”

Investors will surely have taken into account that Beijing has been extolling the virtues of yuan stability.

At the same time, with nominal yields on Chinese government bonds above the consumer price index in China, investors will have computed that their safe haven yuan was also offering a real renminbi-denominated return on government bond investments, an attractive proposition given that other traditional safe haven currencies such as the greenback and the yen don’t currently offer an equivalent inflation-adjusted positive return.

But if the foreign exchanges sought out some currencies, others were shunned.

Russia’s rouble tumbled in value as investors rationally exited Russian exposures, correctly anticipating broad international condemnation of Moscow’s actions and the imposition of meaningful financial and economic sanctions.

The presumption has to be that the Kremlin would have factored the negative impact of its invasion of Ukraine on the Russian currency into its wider calculations. But unless the rouble’s slide is fully reversed, the depreciation effect can only add to inflationary pressures in Russia at a time when the Russian central bank is already faced with an inflation rate near 9 per cent.

If the rouble plummeted in value, the euro edged weaker. The European Union’s proximity to the conflict zone, and its dependency on energy imported from Russia, surely lessened the allure of the euro as the crisis in Ukraine erupted.

Looking further ahead, the currency markets may yet conclude that prospects of future economic growth in Europe may now be crimped if EU policymakers ultimately conclude that the bloc’s continued dependency on Russian energy imports is untenable.

Energy prices spiked with Russia’s move into Ukraine, but it is important to remember that those same prices had already been elevated for months, as gas and oil production has struggled to keep pace with resurgent post-pandemic global demand.

Similar price spikes were also evident in the wider commodities space, from grains to metals, but, in each case, prices were already high before the latest moves.

It’s impossible to ignore the fact that both Russia and Ukraine are key suppliers of a large number of commodities that the world economy requires, and that the eruption of armed conflict following Russia’s advance into Ukrainian territory will impact commodity prices. Russia and Ukraine are important suppliers of grains, such as corn and wheat. Russia is a major producer of oil and gas. Russia also supplies a substantial percentage of the aluminium, cobalt, copper, nickel, palladium and platinum essential for the world economy, as well as gold.

1646153776494.png


And that brings us back to China. The Chinese economy is the world’s manufacturer but that economic heft depends on a vast amount of imported energy, raw material and indeed food.

With commodities generally priced in US dollars, spiking greenback-denominated commodity prices will translate into elevated risks of imported inflation, but those risks become even more pronounced if the move higher in raw material prices is accompanied by local currency weakness.

Consequently, a stable to stronger renminbi mitigates some, if not all, of that risk of importing inflation.

Last week’s flight-to-safety approach, adopted by the currency markets, included the renminbi. That shows the confidence of the foreign exchanges in the yuan as a store of value and it also erodes the risk that China imports inflation via elevated commodity prices.


Neal Kimberley is a commentator on macroeconomics and financial markets

Heaven is truly smiling on the Middle Kingdom. :angel::angel::angel:


 
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Ukraine crisis: yuan’s emergence as a safe haven a win for China’s economy​

  • The Chinese economy is the world’s manufacturer but it needs to import a vast amount of energy, raw material and food
  • With commodity prices spiking due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and growing risks of imported inflation, the yuan’s resilience is a positive sign

Neal Kimberley
Neal Kimberley
Published: 10:15pm, 1 Mar, 2022
The Chinese currency has emerged as a safe haven currency as markets react to the Ukraine crisis. Photo: Bloomberg

The Chinese currency has emerged as a safe haven currency as markets react to the Ukraine crisis. Photo: Bloomberg

The resilience of the Chinese yuan last week was noteworthy as the foreign exchanges reacted to unfolding events in Ukraine. While sensitive to the tragedy and human cost of war, forex markets necessarily reacted by adopting a risk-averse approach, seeking out currencies that are held to have safe-haven characteristics.

The renminbi would now appear to be one of a select group of safe haven currencies, and in present circumstances that is no bad thing for China.

News of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine initially triggered equity market sell-offs around the world, while in the currency markets, investors sought to secure currencies traditionally regarded as safe havens in times of major uncertainty, such as the Japanese yen, the Swiss franc and, of course, the US dollar.

This time, the yuan was also sought after. Indeed, it “has been trading like a safe-haven currency during the Ukraine crisis”, Khoon Goh, head of Asia research at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group in Singapore told Reuters, adding, “Prospects for further easing [in China] should see growth recover, hence keeping Chinese equities resilient even as US equities have sold off.”

Investors will surely have taken into account that Beijing has been extolling the virtues of yuan stability.

At the same time, with nominal yields on Chinese government bonds above the consumer price index in China, investors will have computed that their safe haven yuan was also offering a real renminbi-denominated return on government bond investments, an attractive proposition given that other traditional safe haven currencies such as the greenback and the yen don’t currently offer an equivalent inflation-adjusted positive return.

But if the foreign exchanges sought out some currencies, others were shunned.

Russia’s rouble tumbled in value as investors rationally exited Russian exposures, correctly anticipating broad international condemnation of Moscow’s actions and the imposition of meaningful financial and economic sanctions.

The presumption has to be that the Kremlin would have factored the negative impact of its invasion of Ukraine on the Russian currency into its wider calculations. But unless the rouble’s slide is fully reversed, the depreciation effect can only add to inflationary pressures in Russia at a time when the Russian central bank is already faced with an inflation rate near 9 per cent.

If the rouble plummeted in value, the euro edged weaker. The European Union’s proximity to the conflict zone, and its dependency on energy imported from Russia, surely lessened the allure of the euro as the crisis in Ukraine erupted.

Looking further ahead, the currency markets may yet conclude that prospects of future economic growth in Europe may now be crimped if EU policymakers ultimately conclude that the bloc’s continued dependency on Russian energy imports is untenable.

Energy prices spiked with Russia’s move into Ukraine, but it is important to remember that those same prices had already been elevated for months, as gas and oil production has struggled to keep pace with resurgent post-pandemic global demand.

Similar price spikes were also evident in the wider commodities space, from grains to metals, but, in each case, prices were already high before the latest moves.

It’s impossible to ignore the fact that both Russia and Ukraine are key suppliers of a large number of commodities that the world economy requires, and that the eruption of armed conflict following Russia’s advance into Ukrainian territory will impact commodity prices. Russia and Ukraine are important suppliers of grains, such as corn and wheat. Russia is a major producer of oil and gas. Russia also supplies a substantial percentage of the aluminium, cobalt, copper, nickel, palladium and platinum essential for the world economy, as well as gold.

View attachment 819888

And that brings us back to China. The Chinese economy is the world’s manufacturer but that economic heft depends on a vast amount of imported energy, raw material and indeed food.

With commodities generally priced in US dollars, spiking greenback-denominated commodity prices will translate into elevated risks of imported inflation, but those risks become even more pronounced if the move higher in raw material prices is accompanied by local currency weakness.

Consequently, a stable to stronger renminbi mitigates some, if not all, of that risk of importing inflation.

Last week’s flight-to-safety approach, adopted by the currency markets, included the renminbi. That shows the confidence of the foreign exchanges in the yuan as a store of value and it also erodes the risk that China imports inflation via elevated commodity prices.


Neal Kimberley is a commentator on macroeconomics and financial markets

Heaven is truly smiling on the Middle Kingdom. :angel::angel::angel:
Just a temporary gain
Should it come to a nuclear exchange between Nato and Russia I don’t think China mainland will be spared.

Many in the West believe China is behind Russia war campaign.
 
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Just a temporary gain
Should it come to a nuclear exchange between Nato and Russia I don’t think China mainland will be spared.

Many in the West believe China is behind Russia war campaign.
European financial institutions are not fools, you don't know the world better than them.
Even under the temptation of US interest rate hike, they still choose China rather than USA. That can explained many problems.
 
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Many in the West believe China is behind Russia war campaign.
Is it too hard to understand the reason why China stands with Russia? Go check what US and its pawns have done to China in recent years. US sees China as enemy. China would be utterly stupid if it cooperates with US to sanction Russia.
 
.
The crisis in Ukraine has made is very clear that investing in the west is dangerous for anyone non blonde hair blue eyed and from the Anglo salon lineage.
When Chinese companies like Huawei rise to no 1 position they take the company out. They did similar thing to Toshiba a Japanese company. Russian money assets etc belonging to rich individual are in great danger of being confiscated. Bank accounts frozen etc.
The Russian government assets greater than 600 billion have been frozen by Western banks. So why would u keep assets in Western banks. Remember this happened to Iran. Afghanistan just now and many other countries including Pakistan.
Saudi Emirati and other gulf States think their assets are safe in London or in Swiss accounts. Well that's no longer the case as even neutral Switzerland has taken a position against Russia.

Food for thought
 
.
The crisis in Ukraine has made is very clear that investing in the west is dangerous for anyone non blonde hair blue eyed and from the Anglo salon lineage.
When Chinese companies like Huawei rise to no 1 position they take the company out. They did similar thing to Toshiba a Japanese company. Russian money assets etc belonging to rich individual are in great danger of being confiscated. Bank accounts frozen etc.
The Russian government assets greater than 600 billion have been frozen by Western banks. So why would u keep assets in Western banks. Remember this happened to Iran. Afghanistan just now and many other countries including Pakistan.
Saudi Emirati and other gulf States think their assets are safe in London or in Swiss accounts. Well that's no longer the case as even neutral Switzerland has taken a position against Russia.

Food for thought
Well said. So far the best part of the war is it damaged the credibility of the west. All the common things are not really "common" at all. From western currencies to SWIFT. From youtube to facebook.
 
.
Just a temporary gain
Should it come to a nuclear exchange between Nato and Russia I don’t think China mainland will be spared.

Many in the West believe China is behind Russia war campaign.
Some have been indulging in their own hallucinations, thinking that China will be hit hard.
 
.
Is it too hard to understand the reason why China stands with Russia? Go check what US and its pawns have done to China in recent years. US sees China as enemy. China would be utterly stupid if it cooperates with US to sanction Russia.
In the UN general assembly Russia war is supported by Belarus, Syria, North Korea and Eritrea. Why China refused to cheer Putin?

Are you afraid that bloods of Ukrainian children at your hands?

There is no justification for aggression. It’s utterly shameless to justify assault on other countries by “hey they deserve it because see me as enemy for years”.

Putin justified in his 1h speech why he went to war: the west ignored and forgot his Russia.
 
.
In the UN general assembly Russia war is supported by Belarus, Syria, North Korea and Eritrea. Why China refused to cheer Putin?

Are you afraid that bloods of Ukrainian children at your hands?

There is no justification for aggression. It’s utterly shameless to justify assault on other countries by “hey they deserve it because see me as enemy for years”.

Putin justified in his 1h speech why he went to war: the west ignored and forgot his Russia.
Hey numb nuts, that's called diplomacy, we support Russia from behind, yet maintain a neutral stance outside. We are the key reason why Russia still survives.
 
.
In the UN general assembly Russia war is supported by Belarus, Syria, North Korea and Eritrea. Why China refused to cheer Putin?

Are you afraid that bloods of Ukrainian children at your hands?

There is no justification for aggression. It’s utterly shameless to justify assault on other countries by “hey they deserve it because see me as enemy for years”.

Putin justified in his 1h speech why he went to war: the west ignored and forgot his Russia.
美军来之后.jpg


an american pet dog
 
.
Just a temporary gain
Should it come to a nuclear exchange between Nato and Russia I don’t think China mainland will be spared.

Many in the West believe China is behind Russia war campaign.
"spared"? They can try.
 
.
In the UN general assembly Russia war is supported by Belarus, Syria, North Korea and Eritrea. Why China refused to cheer Putin?

Are you afraid that bloods of Ukrainian children at your hands?

There is no justification for aggression. It’s utterly shameless to justify assault on other countries by “hey they deserve it because see me as enemy for years”.

Putin justified in his 1h speech why he went to war: the west ignored and forgot his Russia.
Had you been so angry when you know USA invades other countries and kill millions? Especially vietnam?
 
.
The crisis in Ukraine has made is very clear that investing in the west is dangerous for anyone non blonde hair blue eyed and from the Anglo salon lineage.
When Chinese companies like Huawei rise to no 1 position they take the company out. They did similar thing to Toshiba a Japanese company. Russian money assets etc belonging to rich individual are in great danger of being confiscated. Bank accounts frozen etc.
The Russian government assets greater than 600 billion have been frozen by Western banks. So why would u keep assets in Western banks. Remember this happened to Iran. Afghanistan just now and many other countries including Pakistan.
Saudi Emirati and other gulf States think their assets are safe in London or in Swiss accounts. Well that's no longer the case as even neutral Switzerland has taken a position against Russia.

Food for thought

Total control, monopoly, hegemony over world's resources. USA's prime interest is to maintain dollar as world's trading currency, so that they can continue to print it., while rest of the world fights to earn it. There is no other country with free will. Even all other white countries are client states. They are mouth pieces of USA.
 
.
Well said. So far the best part of the war is it damaged the credibility of the west. All the common things are not really "common" at all. From western currencies to SWIFT. From youtube to facebook.
China need to globalize bilibili,sina weibo,qq,Baidu,even with foreign based alternative like tiktok is to douyin,and popularize it,make Harmony OS as real androidalternative,do it alone or by local partnership, and also create local medium for news distribution & sharing.That is vital,as west has shut any voice Russia had on msm. The ecosystem is more Important than the hardware aspect which china dominates.

In case of taiwan war,usa will use the opportunity to ban anything from cgtn to tiktok ,Chinese side of story in fb/twitter/youtube and Google will be cut off.China risk losing global tiktok,to their gaming revenue if google cuts them off in case of taiwan war, it seems Chinese gov haven't planned about this aspect at all.China risk being rendered voiceless ,since west control the nodes for information in global internet.
China should export bilibili ,weibo,qq,and more with international makeover and extensive control handed over to local gov ,if asked. The ecosystem is where the revenue is & that is where information warfare will be fought to shape narrative.
 
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