Chattanooga Times Free Press

China’s yuan joins world’s most traded currencies

- By Kelvin Chan

HONG KONG — China’s yuan has joined the ranks of the most traded currencies for the first time, underlinin­g the growing might of the country’s economy, the world’s second-largest.

The yuan became one of the top 10 traded currencies in 2013, rising to No. 9 on the list due to a “significan­t expansion” in offshore trading, the Bank for Internatio­nal Settlement­s said in a report Thursday. It’s a sharp jump from the bank’s last survey in 2010, when the yuan, also known as the renminbi, was No. 17 on the list.

Turnover in trades involving yuan surged to $120 billion a day on average in April 2013, three and half times more than the $ 34 billion in 2010. Still, that figure is dwarfed by the dollar, which accounted for about $4.7 trillion daily.

The Bank for Internatio­nal Settlement­s, which is an internatio­nal organizati­on of central banks, said the yuan along with the Mexican peso, which rose to No. 8, “saw the most significan­t rise in market share among major emerging market currencies.”

China’s leaders want the yuan to become an internatio­nal currency and have been promoting its use as an alternativ­e to the dollar.

The yuan is not yet fully convertibl­e but Beijing has been gradually loosening controls. It has started allowing companies to settle internatio­nal transactio­ns in yuan, signed currency swap deals with Pakistan, Thailand South Korea and others and has worked with financial centers such as London and Hong Kong to develop internatio­nal hubs for offshore trading of the currency.

Earlier this year, Australia and China agreed that their currencies could be directly exchangeab­le, making the Australian dollar the third major currency to have direct convertibi­lity, after the U.S. dollar and Japanese yen. The deal eliminates the need to exchange Australian dollars for U.S. dollars in order to buy yuan and vice versa.

In other findings, Singapore overtook Japan to become the biggest foreign currency trading center in Asia and the third largest in the world, behind Britain and the United States.

The report also found that the euro’s internatio­nal role has shrunk since the onset of the sovereign debt crisis in the 17-nation eurozone, with its market share falling.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Visitors look at the art work by American artist Tony Oursler titled "100 Yuan (People's Republic of China)" which features a projection of a Chinese renminbi note with a talking Mao Zedong at a gallery in Beijing.
The Associated Press Visitors look at the art work by American artist Tony Oursler titled "100 Yuan (People's Republic of China)" which features a projection of a Chinese renminbi note with a talking Mao Zedong at a gallery in Beijing.

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