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Pedestrians walk past the People’s Bank of China in Beijing. The PBoC has reduced the yuan’s fixing, which limits onshore moves to 2% on either side, by 0.1% to 6.4140 a dollar, the weakest since August 2011.
Bloomberg
Hong Kong
China cut the yuan’s reference rate to the weakest since 2011, fuelling speculation that the central bank is trying to release pent-up depreciation pressure before an expected increase in US interest rates.
There are signs that the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) has started guiding the yuan lower before the Federal Reserve acts next week, according to Bloomberg Intelligence economists Tom Orlik and Fielding Chen.
The authorities are conducting a “stress test” in the currency market before the Fed moves, Zhou Hao, a Singapore-based senior economist at Commerzbank, said in an interview.
The PBoC reduced the yuan’s fixing, which limits onshore moves to 2% on either side, by 0.1% to 6.4140 a dollar, the weakest since August 2011. The spot rate dropped 0.17% to close at 6.4280 in Shanghai, taking its decline to 0.5% since the International Monetary Fund decided to admit the currency into the Special Drawing Rights basket.
The yuan closed at a four-year low yesterday.
“We are moving to the next phase after the SDR inclusion as they are gradually stepping back and allowing a gradual depreciation,” said Eddie Cheung, a Hong Kong-based currency strategist at Standard Chartered. “The yuan is becoming more sensitive to the dollar and market forces.”
A Bloomberg gauge of emerging-market currencies dropped to a record low on Tuesday on concern a Fed rate increase will spur capital outflows.
Traders place an 80% probability that the Federal Reserve will raise rates next week for the first time since June 2006, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
A further weakening of the yuan’s reference rate beyond 6.4085 a dollar could quickly lead to herd mentality and catalyse expectations for more depreciation, Jason Daw, Singapore-based head of Asian foreign-exchange strategy at Societe Generale, wrote in a note on Tuesday.
China surprised global markets on August 11 by cutting the yuan’s reference rate by 1.86%, which sent the currency into its steepest tumble in two decades and prompted the central bank to sell dollars to support its exchange rates at home and abroad.
The PBoC also revamped its fixing mechanism, saying it was giving market forces greater sway.
The offshore yuan traded in Hong Kong’s free market slipped 0.04% to 6.4972 a dollar as of 4:43 pm local time, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That takes a three-day loss to 0.8%, the most since August. The currency’s 12- month non-deliverable forwards fell 0.03% to 6.6980.
“We suspect that the PBoC has either refrained or reduced their intervention activities in the currency market,” Roy Teo, a senior foreign-exchange strategist at ABN Amro Bank NV in Singapore, wrote in a note yesterday.
“We do not think that there is a change in the central bank’s exchange rate policy. We expect the divergence between the offshore and onshore yuan to narrow in the coming weeks.”
China’s exports shrank 6.8% in November in dollar terms from a year earlier, the customs administration said on Tuesday.
That compares with the median forecast of a 5% decline in a survey of economists. Imports fell for a record 13th straight month, leaving a trade surplus of $54.1bn.
Foreign-exchange reserves declined $87bn, more than double the estimated $33bn drop, as the PBoC sold dollars to prop up the yuan before the IMF’s November 30 decision.
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