Bangkok Post

China’s forex reserves edge up in June

- YAWEN CHEN KEVINYAO

China’s foreign exchange reserves edged up in June for a fifth consecutiv­e month, in line with market expectatio­ns, as capital outflows eased in the face of tighter regulation­s and the dollar’s rally paused.

Reserves rose $3.2 billion during June to $3.057 trillion, in line with economists’ forecast in a Reuters poll.

The reserves rose by $24 billion in May to $3.054 trillion.

It was the first time that reserves had climbed for five months in a row since June 2014, and marked its highest level in eight months.

“China’s foreign exchange reserves suggest that outflow pressures may have eased last month,” wrote Julian Evans-Pritchard, China economist at Capital Economics, adding that June could mark the first month since October 2015 in which the People’s Bank of China was a net buyer of foreign exchange.

He estimated that China’s capital outflows dropped to roughly $10 billion in June from $29 billion in May.

The country’s foreign exchange regulator said that the slight increase in reserves in June was driven by stronger non-dollar currencies against the greenback.

“China’s foreign reserves will remain stable as cross-border capital flows become more balanced,’’ the State Administra­tion of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) said in a statement following the data release.

China burned through nearly $320 billion of reserves last year but the yuan still fell about 6.5% against the dollar, its biggest annual drop since 1994.

Faced with an entrenched bearish yuan view, Beijing moved swiftly over the past few months to flush out speculator­s, quash expectatio­ns of a further steep depreciati­on and safeguard its reserves.

That strategy to head off risks to the economy from capital outflows seems to have worked so far, with the yuan up about 2% against the dollar this year.

In May, net foreign exchange sales by the PBoC fell to the lowest in nearly two years as the yuan stabilised.

China also recorded a surplus in its capital and financial account in the first quarter, data from the foreign exchange regulator showed, indicating net capital inflows as policymake­rs tightened supervisio­n of outflows.

However, French investment bank Natixis said in a report that its capital flow tracker for China showed outflows for the second quarter would rise to $144.1 billion, reversing the trend in the first quarter.

The tighter grip on capital flows has also become a setback for China as it has been aspiring to turn the yuan into a global currency.

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