The Korea Times

Yuan’s rise halted as China eases capital controls

- SHANGHAI (AFP)

— China’s yuan lost ground Tuesday for the first time in two weeks after the central bank relaxed capital controls, sparking speculatio­n the government wants to halt the currency’s recent strengthen­ing.

The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) set the yuan’s daily reference rate lower on Tuesday — the first time it had done so in 11 trading sessions — at 6.5277 to the dollar, down 0.43 percent from Monday. China allows the yuan to rise or fall two percent on either side of the fixed daily rate to control volatility.

The move came after a financial newspaper controlled by the central bank said Monday the PBOC would no longer require banks to set aside a 20 percent deposit on forward sales of foreign exchange, a rule imposed in 2015.

It said foreign institutio­ns which trade the yuan offshore also no longer need to keep reserves in onshore banks.

The latest moves halted the yuan’s recent march to a 16-month high. It triggered speculatio­n that the central bank may be worried the yuan had risen too much and that an official campaign to stem capital outflows has peaked.

“This is a clear positive step of stepping back on capital controls,” Eddie Cheung, a strategist at Standard Chartered in Hong Kong, told Bloomberg News.

“It can be argued that the recent yuan appreciati­on was too fast. The yuan may be a bit more range bound in the near term than one-way as markets digest the impact of the move.”

The head of the PBOC’s Research Bureau, Sun Guofeng, was quoted by Chinese financial media on Monday as saying a stabilizin­g China economy and other positive signs made it necessary to readjust rules.

The measures were first imposed in 2015 after the central bank moved the yuan almost five percent lower in a week in August that year.

The yuan, also known as the renminbi, has been under pressure since late 2015 due to uncertaint­y about the health of the world’s second-largest economy, massive capital outflows seeking better returns abroad and a sharp rise in the dollar.

 ?? Reuters-Yonhap ?? China’s yuan and U.S. dollar notes are seen in this picture illustrati­on.
Reuters-Yonhap China’s yuan and U.S. dollar notes are seen in this picture illustrati­on.

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