BusinessMirror

China’s overvalued yuan seen adding momentum to global reflation trade

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CHina’s yuan is overvalued, and that could end up stoking global inflation. the yuan ranks as the most overvalued among 32 major currencies in real effective exchange rate terms, an analysis of Jpmorgan Chase & Co. indexes show. As Chinese exports are ubiquitous across a range of goods, the strength could translate into quicker inflation globally, adding to investor expectatio­ns for tighter central bank policies.

the potential impact from the Chinese currency’s inflation-adjusted strength is a reflection of the nation’s quicker economic recovery from the pandemic, and its importance as the factory of the world. since July, the yuan has advanced more than 5 percent against a basket of major trading partners, which includes the euro and the yen.

“China could start to lead global inflation higher,”said Kota Hirayama, senior emerging-market economist at SMBC nikko securities inc. in tokyo. “reflation is likely to accelerate” with increasing upward pressures on bond yields, he said.

the yuan’s real effective exchange rate is about 2.8 standard deviations higher than its fiveyear average, according to an analysis based on Jpmorgan’s indexes. the differenti­al is the widest among 32 major currencies measured.

even though the Chinese currency has also suffered from recent dollar strength, it has held up better than almost every other Asian peer—a sign of how investors view the economies of China and the Us as the twin engines of global growth. And while concerns about the pace of a Us recovery is transmitte­d globally through treasury yields, China’s impact would come from its exports of goods from electronic­s, appliances and clothing to medical and chemical products.

there are already signs that price pressures are building in China, with its producer-price index rising at the fastest pace since 2018 last month. the Us—the Asian nation’s biggest export market—recorded the biggest advance in the cost of living in almost three years.

the flip side of a stronger currency is reduced export competitiv­eness and slower inflation as import become cheaper. economists expect gains in China’s shipments to slow through the quarters this year as the effect of a lower base wears off although price pressures are likely to quicken.

to be sure, modeling by the institute of internatio­nal Finance indicates the yuan is undervalue­d by 12.8 percent, according to its latest assessment published in March. the report also shows that the dollar has become increasing­ly overvalued.

Jpmorgan’s index of the yuan’s real effective exchange has climbed almost 8 percent from a June low to hover near an all-time high.the elevated rate is due to the stronger nominal yuan and a faster pace of increase in China’s cost of living compared with other countries, according to dariusz Kowalczyk, chief China economist at Credit Agricole CIB.

“the elevated reer is a challenge for some exporters, but for most it is acceptable given China’s relatively fast productivi­ty gains,”said Kowalczyk. “Productivi­ty gains have by far exceeded real appreciati­on over the long run, and also in recent years, hence exports are so strong, and should remain so.”

the onshore yuan gained as much as 0.3 percent to 6.4918 per dollar on tuesday, the strongest since March 18.

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