Arab Times

Yuan bears throw in towel, say it isn’t worth fighting China’s PBOC

Series of measures make it more difficult to bet against yuan

-

SINGAPORE, June 20, (RTRS): A slew of Western investors and traders who placed bets in the past two years that China’s yuan currency would drop because of a weaker Chinese economy, the threat of a debt crisis, and capital outflows, abandoned those positions in recent months.

They have decided that — at least in the short term — they may well be on a loser if they try to fight the People’s Bank of China, the nation’s central bank, which has been taking a series of measures that appear aimed at keeping the currency stable.

This is particular­ly the case ahead of an autumn congress of the ruling Communist Party of China, that is expected to allow Chinese leader Xi Jinping to consolidat­e his power. Also, the Chinese economy has been more robust than expected, the nation’s authoritie­s have taken stiff measures to reduce capital outflows, and the US dollar has been retreating from gains it made last year.

Major global fund managers — such as Goldman Sachs Asset Management, Old Mutual Global Investors, Standard Life Investment­s and Aviva Investors — have taken off short yuan positions even as many of them see some weakness further down the road.

The PBOC has made some moves to defend the yuan, which is also known as the renminbi. It has pushed up the cost of short-selling the currency and even changing the way it sets a daily mid-point used as a benchmark.

“They are not happy with a really weaker renminbi,” said Mark Nash, the London-based head of global bonds at Old Mutual Global Investors. “People obviously don’t want to fight the central bank.”

Nash, whose firm manages $44.7 billion globally, said he had been short the yuan at the turn of 2017 but took that position off early in the year.

But he said he believes the strength in the yuan is reflective more of “an exercise in financial regulation” rather than an improvemen­t in China’s economic outlook and hopes to go short

again soon.

Standard Life Investment­s’ Hong Kong-based emerging markets fixed income fund manager, Mark Baker, said he gave up his short yuan position in the first quarter of 2017, after seeing the success China was having with capital controls and some improvemen­t in economic data. “There is a desire to rein in expectatio­ns that the currency is merely a one-way bet,” he said.

The PBOC did not respond to a Reuters request for comments for this article.

The yuan has risen 2 percent against the dollar so far this year. In the latest policy tweak, the PBOC has included a “counter-cyclical factor” in its method for fixing the daily mid-point around which the currency is allowed to trade.

The adjustment to the fixing method in May was the second this year and came after a string of capital control moves, all aimed at stopping domestic Chinese investors from moving cash abroad.

That has put a floor under a currency which fell 6.5 percent in 2016 and 4.5 percent in 2015. Concern about the decline led the central bank to spend a billion dollars over 2-1/2-years to defend the yuan.

 ??  ?? Tokyo Gov Yuriko Koike speaks during a press conference at Tokyo Metropolit­an City Hall in Tokyo on June 20. Koike said the giant Tsukiji fish market, popular with tourists, will stay, although it will get modernized and developed within five years. (AP)
Tokyo Gov Yuriko Koike speaks during a press conference at Tokyo Metropolit­an City Hall in Tokyo on June 20. Koike said the giant Tsukiji fish market, popular with tourists, will stay, although it will get modernized and developed within five years. (AP)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait