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Yuan on Track for Worst Monthly Performance in More Than a Year

F-22Raptor

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HONG KONG—The Chinese yuan is on track for its worst monthly performance in more than a year in November, as the surging U.S. dollar continues to force the currency to weaken.

China’s central bank on Monday set the yuan lower against the U.S. dollar for a 12th consecutive day in its daily fix, at 6.8985 against the dollar, a fresh eight-year low for the currency.

The yuan has weakened 1.7% against the dollar so far this month, with gains accelerating since the election of Donald Trump as U.S. president on Nov. 8. His planned economic stimulus has increased expectations that the U.S. Federal Reserve will have to act more aggressively to contain inflation, prompting strength in the dollar against most major global currencies.

It is the worst one-month performance for the yuan since August 2015, when a surprise move to a market-determined exchange rate prompted a sharp devaluation of the yuan and losses for equities world-wide, as investors grappled with the new regime. The yuan weakened 2.6% against the U.S. dollar that month.

Onshore, where the Chinese currency is allowed to trade within 2% of the so-called daily fix, the yuan weakened 0.1% to 6.8945 against the U.S. dollar in trading Monday.

In Hong Kong, where the currency trades freely around the clock, the offshore yuan was last flat against the U.S. dollar at 6.9118.

Funds have fled emerging markets and headed to the U.S. and Japan since the U.S. election, said Alexander Lee, Hong Kong and China strategist at DBS Vickers in Hong Kong. That drove the dollar higher and put pressure on the yuan as a result.

“It’s mainly driven by the stronger dollar,” he said. “We’re approaching the levels around 7 where the market will likely think the decline is over.”

DBS Vickers expects the yuan to fall to 7.08 against the dollar by the third quarter of next year.

The yuan was broadly stable against the Thomson Reuters/HKEX renminbi currency index, which tracks its strength against a basket of 14 currencies, designed to broadly reflect the gauge that the PBOC targets. The index was last flat at 95.38, retracing some gains seen Friday.

http://www.wsj.com/articles/yuan-on...ly-performance-in-more-than-a-year-1479702535
 
People thought that is bad? LOL.. Trump will not be happy about poor performance yuan. Chinese export is going to gain another advantage! :enjoy:

Next year Trump is going to devalue US dollar to make US export competitive.
 
Thank God it finally comes. I expected it to drop further. China needs a currency to better suit its economy, instead of pleasing Americans.
 
As China can get a good return on the USD, it should get rid of the useless T-Bills asap.

Exchange them for real and tangible assets before Wall Street devalue it. This won't last forever. Play their game to your advantage.
 
China's little 1.2 trillion investment is growing in value. there is no better news than that. :p:
 
look how "bad" Euro to $ show in the past month:
QQ截图20161122100301.jpg

so Euro is worse than Yuan?
no, we just don't want USD going home, if they want to go back home, please pay more Yuan to buy $ back.
 
In other news, Chinese export receives boost.
 
Don't know macro-economics, :(

Who can easily tell us it will benefits or damage the common people's daily life?
 
Basically makes China's M&A drive sweeter. While the US economy is in stagnation period and US assets are up for grabs, strong USD only makes the utilization of China's USD reserve a bit more tempting.

It is not that China is a debtor nation. Those countries which entertain huge debts in USD would now be concerned.
 
in fact, during this time, all main holders are selling :

View attachment 354247 View attachment 354248

Wow, China is already at 2011 (9/11) levels. Most likely will go down further from here especially if under Trump US assets become more available for China investment.

China companies already employ directly over 90.000 US people. This is good for them in the short and medium term.
 
Basically makes China's M&A drive sweeter. While the US economy is in stagnation period and US assets are up for grabs, strong USD only makes the utilization of China's USD reserve a bit more tempting.

It is not that China is a debtor nation. Those countries which entertain huge debts in USD would now be concerned.

Correct me if I am wrong, only PBOC holds USD for Chinese economy. Unless a Chinese company has a massive USD offshore account, it needs to buy USD from PBOC if you want to shop overseas companies.:-)
 
Correct me if I am wrong, only PBOC holds USD for Chinese economy. Unless a Chinese company has a massive USD offshore account, it needs to buy USD from PBOC if you want to shop overseas companies.:-)

You are correct. But now you have to pay more money to buy the same USD. Gradually, we'd better use RMB directly in overseas market.
 

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