Oman Daily Observer

China likely to slow yuan’s slide to 7 per dollar

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China is likely to use its vast currency reserves to stop any precipitou­s fall through the psychologi­cally important level of 7 yuan per dollar as it could risk triggering speculatio­n and heavy capital outflows, policy insiders said. On Friday, the yuan hit a fresh 22-month low of 6.9647 against the dollar, and traders expected that the tightly managed, partially convertibl­e currency would soon be testing 7 per dollar, a level unseen since the global financial crisis a decade ago.

The yuan has lost over 6 per cent versus the dollar so far this year, partly reflecting its slowing economy and pressure on exports due to an ongoing tariff war with the United States.

Two sources involved in internal policy discussion­s, but who are not the final decision-makers, said that a defence of the yuan at 7 per dollar would be mounted to show investors that the authoritie­s wouldn’t allow a runaway market.

“If the yuan falls through 7, there could be a rapid depreciati­on of the exchange rate”, said one policy insider. “In order to avoid such a passive situation, the authoritie­s are likely to step in the market to stabilise the yuan.”

The second source was certain the central bank would make a stand, rather than allow any sudden break through a psychologi­cally important level to feed pessimism among investors.

“The central bank will intervene — directly or indirectly. It’s necessary. The central bank has many policy tools. We cannot let the yuan fall past 7, as it would have a psychologi­cal impact on people,” the second source said.

Beijing’s priority now is to ward off a sharper slowdown in the economy, which grew 6.5 per cent in the thirdquart­er, the weakest pace since the global financial crisis, several sources said.

The central bank, which has cut reserve requiremen­ts for lenders four times this year, is expected to ease monetary policy further, while on the fiscal side the government has pledged more tax cuts next year to support growth.

The People’s Bank of China will probably loosen monetary policy further and let the yuan lose more ground to bolster sagging economic growth, but policymake­rs will be on guard against spooking markets as the exchange rate nears 7 per dollar, a third source said.

“We need to loosen monetary policy and should allow the yuan to depreciate to help expand exports, otherwise it will be more difficult,” the source said.

“But they (the authoritie­s) will pay special attention to the psychologi­cal effect of breaking the 7 per dollar level.”

The PBOC did not immediatel­y respond to request for comment, but Vice Governor Pan Gongsheng told a briefing earlier that healthy economic fundamenta­ls and ample foreign currency reserves would help keep the yuan basically stable.

Currency market participan­ts are closely watching to see if China’s foreign currency reserves fall below $3 trillion, having slipped to $3.087 trillion last month.

Reserves fell $52.9 billion in the first nine months of 2018 — with 43 per cent of the drawdown happening in September, but the scale of the decline is dwarfed by a record annual drop of $512.7 billion in 2015, showing the authoritie­s have been far less interventi­onist.

Pan said the central bank would adopt macro-prudential measures to stabilise market expectatio­ns, warning against speculator­s who seek to drive the yuan weaker. Earlier this month, authoritie­s restricted outward investment by its residents earlier this month.

Capital outflows have picked up as the yuan moves closer to the key 7 per dollar level. Net foreign exchanges sales by China’s commercial banks rose to $17.6 billion in September, the highest in 15 months.

So far this year, Chinese policymake­rs have been less interventi­onist on the yuan than they were in 2015, as a weaker currency helps cushion a slowing economy and take some of the sting out of higher US tariffs, although Beijing has rejected talk that it’s deliberate­ly pushing down the yuan to spur exports.

Pan reiterated that the PBOC rejected the use of competitiv­e currency devaluatio­n as an answer to the trade pressures arising from the tariff war.

BEIJING’S PRIORITY NOW IS TO WARD OFF A SHARPER SLOWDOWN IN THE ECONOMY, WHICH GREW 6.5 PER CENT IN THE THIRD-QUARTER, THE WEAKEST PACE SINCE THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS.

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