Arab Times

Chinese yuan falls to fresh 11-year lows

Despite state bank support

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SHANGHAI, Aug 22, (RTRS): China’s yuan fell to fresh 11-year lows on Thursday amid worries about the deepening Sino-US trade war, despite support from major state-owned banks in both the spot and forwards markets.

Spot yuan ended the domestic session down 0.34% at 7.0875 per dollar, its weakest such close since March 14, 2008.

Traders said sentiment was fragile, with recent news headlines offering little hope of a US-China trade deal anytime soon and new US levies on Chinese goods set to go into effect on Sept 1.

China hopes the United States will stop its wrong tariff action, the commerce ministry said on Thursday, adding that the imposition of any new tariffs would lead to retaliator­y actions.

US President Donald Trump said on Wednesday he was “the chosen one” to address trade imbalances with China, even as congressio­nal researcher­s warned that his tariffs would hurt the American economy.

“The market pays very close attention to the China-US trade dispute, and its impact on the yuan is much heavier than other factors, such as economic fundamenta­ls,” said a trader at a Chinese bank in Shanghai.

Prior to the market opening, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) set the midpoint rate at 7.049 per dollar prior to market open, weaker than the previous fix of 7.0433.

State-run banks seen were receiving dollar liquidity in the forwards market before selling the greenback in the onshore spot market, two traders with knowledge of the matter said.

One of them said state banks were seen selling dollars at around 7.07 yuan in the spot market to prevent sharper losses in the local unit.

The moves injected a note of caution into the market, fueling speculatio­n that authoritie­s may be trying to put a floor under the yuan, the trader added.

But selling picked up again in the afternoon, prompting investors to place stop-loss orders in their short dollar positions, according to a trader at a Chinese bank.

State-owned banks are widely believed by many investors to act on behalf of the central bank in the country’s foreign exchange market, although they can trade on their own behalf as well.

Major banks have been using such tactics frequently in recent weeks as authoritie­s seek to slow the currency’s decline after letting it breach the key 7 to the dollar level on Aug 5. Washington labelled China a currency manipulato­r hours after the move, which jolted global financial markets.

Acquiring dollars via dollar/yuan swaps and then selling then in the spot market had certainly arrested bigger declines in the yuan, traders said.

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