Bangkok Post

Buba to add yuan to its reserves

Role of Chinese currency growing

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BEIJING: Germany’s central bank has said it will include China’s yuan in its reserves, giving another boost to Beijing’s drive to internatio­nalise the currency and helping send the unit to two year highs.

The Bundesbank said its board had decided in July to invest in the renminbi, as it is also known, to take account of its growing importance globally, though it did not say when it would begin to include it or how much it would purchase.

“The decision to accept the renminbi is part of a long-term diversific­ation strategy and reflects the growing role of the Chinese currency in the world financial system,” Bundesbank board member Joachim Wuermeling told AFP on Monday.

“The German central bank regularly reviews the compositio­n of its currency reserves by weighing risks and benefits,” he said. “In addition to dollars and yen, (the bank) has invested in Australian dollars since 2013 and seeks to invest in other currencies.”

The move comes after the European Central Bank in June converted 500 million euros’ worth of its dollar reserves into yuan.

China was Germany’s top trade partner in 2016, ranking first in the European country’s imports and fourth as an export destinatio­n.

The Bundesbank’s currency reserves totalled some €170 billion ($210 billion) in November.

The Bank of France also said on Monday that it already held some currency reserves in yuan, hours after the German central bank said it was looking to move some of its reserves into the Chinese currency.

“Currency reserves remain in their vast majority invested in US dollar, with a diversific­ation towards a limited number of internatio­nal currencies such as the Chinese renminbi,” the bank said.

The Bank of France said it would not reveal a breakdown of its reserves, and did not say when it first included the yuan.

The yuan has gained increasing global clout in recent years and in September 2016 it joined the dollar, pound, yen and euro in the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s elite “special drawing rights” reserve currency basket.

It strengthen­ed to 6.4138 against the dollar on Monday, its highest level since December 2015, according to China’s Foreign Exchange Trade System, but weakened slightly to 6.4319 yesterday.

The unit has rallied from lows close to 7.0 against the greenback seen at the turn of the year, with the dollar also coming under pressure from most other currencies.

The Peoples Bank of China only allows the tightly controlled yuan to rise or fall 2% on either side of a daily reference rate to prevent volatility but it takes into account market pressures when making its decision.

But the latest rise could lead officials to intervene, analysts say, to prevent the currency becoming too expensive.

Ding Shuang, chief economist for Greater China and North Asia at Standard Chartered Plc in Hong Kong, said: “Policy reactions may include outright interventi­ons right before close, or a relaxation of outflow control measures to release the yuan appreciati­on pressure.

“The government will likely gradually expand the range each year, paving the way for a lightly managed float in two to three years.”

The yuan’s weakness against the dollar has been a sensitive issue with the US, with President Donald Trump in the past hitting out at what he calls unfair trade practices by China aimed at giving their exporters an advantage over US firms.

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