China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Experts see signs of stable yuan ahead

Foreign exchange reserves decline; bank not worried

- ByWANG YANFEI wangyanfei@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s foreign exchange reserves fell in August due to short-term depreciati­on, but there are signs of stabilizat­ion for the coming months, economists said.

The country’s foreign exchange reserves fell by $15.89 billion to $3.185 trillion in August, official data released last week showed. It was the second consecutiv­e monthly decline, hitting their lowest point since December 2011.

Yi Gang, vice-governor of the People’s Bank of China, the central bank, said that China has an adequate cushion for maintainin­g financial stability, and its currency will continue to be stable in the long term. China has the largest foreign exchange reserves in the world, Yi said.

WangYouxin, aneconomis­t at the Institute of Internatio­nal Finance, a think tank under the Bank of China, said the monthly fluctuatio­n of foreign exchange reserves has a lot to do with the movement of theUS dollar.

Since July, the market had expected the US Federal Reserve to raise interest rates. Those expectatio­ns intensifie­d in August after a central bankers’ meeting in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, as analysts widely expected the hike to come in September.

“The change inmoodled to the depreciati­on of the yuan by 0.15 percent and 0.45 percent in July and August, respective­ly, with more capital flowing out of the country,” he said.

“Existing market expectatio­ns for an interest rate hike by theUS Fed in December— although it is not imminent — would support the dollar and point to continued pressure on the Chinese currency and its foreign exchange reserves.”

For China, however, the pressure would not be heavy, according to Xu Yang, an economist at Shanghai-based Guojin Securities Co.

Xu said worries about large capital outflows have been lessening as foreign exchange reserves have shrunk in recent months.

China’s capital outflow was $156.1 billion in the first quarter, and it was reduced to $49.1 billion in the second quarter, indicating an improving

“The central bank has been less willing to intervene in exchange rates through capital controls,” Xu said, adding that there would not be sustained pressure from capital outflows.

TomOrlik, chief Asia economist at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce, expected the yuan to stabilize soon. He based that on what he said were recent signs of the country’s resilient growth, a reduced likelihood for a US Federal Reserve rate hike at its September meeting and the yuan’s formal inclusion in the Special Drawing Rights basket next month.

“The Chinese currency’s inclusion in the SDR basket will take effect in October, when it will become a reserve asset. That will increase capital inflows and somewhat balance the fluctuatio­n of cross-border capital flows,” said LiangHong, chief economist at China Internatio­nal Capital Corp. capital flow balance.

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