Global Times

Yuan hits halfyear high

Investors scrutinize proposed change in calculatio­n of central parity rate

- By Xie Jun

The yuan’s central parity rate reached 6.7935 against the US dollar on Monday, up 135 basis points compared with the previous trading day and the highest level in more than half a year, according to data released by the People’s Bank of China ( PBC), the central bank.

The yuan’s central parity rate has now risen for four consecutiv­e days.

As of 4: 55 pm on Monday Beijing time, the offshore yuan was down by 0.07 percent at 6.7790, while the onshore yuan was up 0.1 percent at 6.8018.

Xi Junyang, a finance professor at the Shanghai University of Finance and Economics, told the Global Times on Monday that one reason for the stronger yuan has been the weakening US dollar in recent days. “The weakening US dollar has been exerting upward pressure on the yuan,” he noted.

The US Dollar Index was down 0.11 percent at 96.71 as of 5: 25 pm Beijing time on Monday.

Xi also noted that the yuan had depreciate­d steeply against the US dollar in the past two years. When it fell close to 7 but failed to weaken further, a consensus was reached that the currency had bottomed out. That’s when investors started to buy the yuan, causing the Chinese currency to rebound.

According to Xi, the fact that the government is amending the central parity rate system has also been “magnified” by the market, causing the yuan to edge up. “Nowadays, the currency market is more often considered a financial asset and investors are always sensitive to factors that may affect the yuan,” he noted.

Chinese currency authoritie­s are considerin­g introducin­g contra- cyclical factors into the yuan’s central parity exchange rate mechanism against the dollar so the mechanism better reflects the state of China’s economy, the China Foreign Exchange Trade System said in an online statement posted on June 2. This was read by the market as a government move to help the yuan offset its current depreciati­on pressure.

But Xie Yaxuan, a senior economist with China Merchants Securities, said in a note sent to the Global Times on Monday that the influence of contra- cyclical factors on the yuan’s trend should be subject to further observatio­n.

Xi forecast that the yuan will be “stable” for the rest of this year.

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