Business World

PBoC to remove forwards reserve rule

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CHINA’S CENTRAL BANK will effectivel­y remove a reserve requiremen­t for trading foreign currency forwards • a move that may slow the pace of yuan appreciati­on after its biggest two-week surge in at least a decade • according to people familiar with the matter.

Effective Sept. 11, the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) will stop requiring financial institutio­ns to set aside cash when buying dollars for clients through currency forwards, the people said, asking not to be identified because they aren’t authorized to speak on the matter in public. The ratio is currently set at 20%. The PBoC didn’t immediatel­y reply to a fax seeking comment after usual working hours.

Chinese authoritie­s put the rule in place in October 2015 in a move seen as an effort to restrict dollar purchases when the yuan was weakening. A removal would make it easier for traders to buy the US currency, reducing pressure for yuan appreciati­on.

The potential move to do away with the reserve requiremen­t “is a good way to signal discomfort with the pace of appreciati­on and shake out the market,” said Sacha Tihanyi, a strategist at TD Securities.

The time is becoming appropriat­e for China to scrap the requiremen­t, China Merchants Bank Co. analyst Wan Zhao wrote in a note earlier in the week. With the dollar trending lower and the daily fixing regime having incorporat­ed a counter- cyclical factor, greenback sales are driving the yuan stronger and it’s time to treat clients’ dollar buying and selling equally, according to the note.

The rally in the yuan had started to fuel speculatio­n that policy makers were loosening their grip on the currency. The offshore yuan weakened past 6.50 to the dollar Friday amid the report of the planned PBoC rule change. The onshore yuan erased an intraday advance of as much as 0.8% to close 0.06% in the red.

This step “is actually a better way of approachin­g the situation than simply intervenin­g in the foreign- exchange market,” said Robert Minikin, a foreignexc­hange strategist at Standard Chartered Bank.

“This is quite an important signal here, suggesting the authoritie­s feel that the currency may be strong enough to damage exports.” •

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