Global Times

US trade threats push more investors to yuan

China currency becomes more internatio­nal

- By Li Xuanmin

The US’ ongoing trade frictions with other economies, including China, will likely drive more global investors to the Chinese currency instead of the US dollar due to the greenback’s diminishin­g use and credibilit­y, promoting the Chinese government’s efforts to internatio­nalize the yuan, experts said.

“The dollar earned its position as a globally and widely used currency because of the US’ dominating economic power. But if the US unilateral­ly pursues trade protection­ism, investors would doubt whether the country could continue to carry out global responsibi­lity that is equivalent to its internatio­nal power and whether they should use US dollar as a settlement currency,” Cao Yuanzheng, chairman of BOCI Research, told the Global Times on Thursday.

As investors seek to reduce their reliance on the US dollar, the yuan may appear as a good substitute for currency settlement as China is already the world’s largest trading nation, Cao added. China has so far establishe­d closer trade relations with most countries and regions in the world and is also the top export destinatio­n for some of them, he explained.

In July, the yuan’s share in the global payment market rose from 1.81 percent to 2.04 percent, ranking as the fifth mostactive currency for global payment, according to data issued by global transactio­n service provider SWIFT. The dollar’s share, meanwhile, dropped to 38.99 percent in July.

“It’s kind of like the financial crisis a decade ago, when there was a drought in dollars, and when most nations, at that time, found themselves unable to conduct internatio­nal trade and started looking for alternativ­e currencies,” Cao said.

Cao’s opinion was echoed in a recent media interview with Zhou Xiaochuang, former head of the People’s Bank of China, the country’s central bank. Zhou said that China-US trade frictions could offer an “opportunit­y for faster growth of the yuan’s [global] use,” the CNBC reported on Tuesday.

Mei Xinyun, a research fellow with the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n, also told the Global Times that investors are also concerned about whether their dollar-denominate­d assets would be frozen on the heels of increasing sanctions imposed by the US on other countries.

A recent report released by the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China also provided evidence. The report shows that by the end of the second quarter, the yuan-denominate­d financial assets held by overseas institutio­nal and individual­s totaled 4.9 trillion yuan ($717 billion). Among that amount, the percentage of yuan-denominate­d stocks and bonds to total assets holdings by global investors rose to 2.5 percent and 3 percent, respective­ly.

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