China Daily (Hong Kong)

Major capital flight in Q4 called unlikely

- By WANG YANFEI wangyanfei@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s cross-border capital flows are expected to stabilize in the fourth quarter, and major capital flight is unlikely, because the country’s economic fundamenta­ls are strong, the nation’s foreign exchange regulator said on Friday.

Chinese banks saw a net foreign exchange of $28.4 billion in September, up by $18.9 billion from August, according to the State Administra­tion of Foreign Exchange. Net forex sales stood at $243.4 billion in the first three quarters.

Wang Chunying, spokeswoma­n for the administra­tion, said seasonal factors play major roles.

“Residents have higher demand for foreign currency for travel during the summer vacation and National Day holiday,” she said.

Net sales specifical­ly for travel increased by $13.2 billion in the third quarter over the second quarter, she said, which is “relatively the same level of increase of the last few years”. The level of cross-border flows is “understand­able and bearable”, she added.

Although some external factors — mainly the rising expectatio­n of an interest rate hike by the United States Federal Reserve by year’s end — would have a short-term impact, an increase would not lead to a major fluctuatio­n in cross-border capital flows, Wang said.

Xu Gao, chief economist at China Everbright Securities Co, held similar views, saying current capital outflow pressure is manageable and actually lower than in December. He played down the possibilit­y of massive capital outflows triggered by worries about the nation’s eco- nomic resilience and exchange rate of the yuan.

“Economic fundamenta­ls remain strong,” he said after official data released on Wednesday showed overall economic growth at 6.7 percent, with some signs of an uptick appearing in industrial sectors.

Xu said the recent depreciati­on of the yuan is natural in light of the recent strengthen­ing of the US dollar, noting that the dollar index, which is the trade-weighted value of the dollar against a basket of major currencies, rose by 2.99 percent since the beginning of the month.

The People’s Bank of China set the central parity rate at 6.7558 on Friday, hitting a sixyear low.

Zhao Xueqing, an economist with the Institute of Internatio­nal Finance, said although the yuan is unlikely to strengthen in the near future, considerin­g the headwinds and financial risks, the extent of yuan depreciati­on is manageable.

“Fluctuatio­ns in the yuan are quite natural, as the nation is on track with its market-oriented reforms,” she said. the

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