China’s crackdown on capital flows sees $148-billion underground bust
CHINA’S CAMPAIGN to crack down on illegal capital outflows saw its currency regulator bust underground banking operations that involved more than 1 trillion yuan ($148 billion), according to a newspaper published by the country’s central bank.
The State Administration of Foreign Exchange ( SAFE) also seized $ 8.43 billion in foreign exchange ( FX) funds as part of the nationwide checks on illegal outflows, the Financial News reported Thursday, citing Zhang Shenghui, an official at the regulator. SAFE didn’t immediately respond to questions submitted by fax by Bloomberg.
The news underscores both the desire of Chinese to diversify money out of their country, and the determination of authorities to restrict outflows that put pressure on the nation’s currency and trigger even greater capital flight. The yuan has depreciated 7.8% against the US dollar since the People’s Bank of China’s (PBoC) mini-devaluation in August last year. It has fallen 1% this month alone.
“As regulators tighten the formal channels, underground activities seem to be heating up,” said Raymond Yeung, chief greater China economist at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. in Hong Kong.
China has repeatedly shown it’s prepared to play hardball when it comes to heading off any disorderly declines in the yuan, including through ramping up offshore yuan borrowing costs in Hong Kong. Chinese investors determined to squirrel money out have turned to life-insurance policies in Hong Kong, camouflaged tourist spending abroad and faked trade invoices among their creative methods. Declining yuan deposits in offshore banks also point to the demand to get money into other currencies.
A flurry of investment banks recently have warned that capital outflows could be larger than anticipated amid ongoing demand for foreign currency. Deutsche Bank AG expects outflows will intensify in the next few months as economic growth slows and the yuan weakens.
OUTFLOWS UNDERESTIMATED
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. analysts have estimated that outflows may be larger than they look because an increasing amount of capital is exiting the country in yuan rather than in dollars.
While China’s currency reserves have stabilized, and lenders’ net foreign- exchange purchases for clients have fallen close to a one-year low, official data show that $ 27.7 billion in yuan payments left China in August.
That’s compared with a monthly average of $4.4 billion in the five years through 2014. Such large cross-border moves can’t be explained by market-driven factors and need to be taken into account when measuring currency outflows, according to MK Tang, Hong Kong-based senior China economist at Goldman Sachs. Bloomberg