Compared with the global market turmoil China’s currency devaluation in 2015 triggered, the more gentle but steady depreciation since is spurring less concern.
Five years ago to the day, the central bank unexpectedly cut its daily reference rate by 1.9%, triggering the yuan’s biggest one-day drop since China ended a dual currency system in 1994. The shock move, and ensuing weakness, spurred outflows of more than $500 billion over the next two years, prompting authorities to impose a series of restrictions to stem the exodus of funds.
Compared with the pre-devaluation level, the yuan is down more than 10% against both the dollar and a basket of trading partner currencies. Against the euro, the Chinese currency is near a six-year low. Activity in the foreign-exchange market is calm: a gauge measuring expected swings in the yuan and an indicator for bearish options never reached the levels seen in the aftermath of Beijing’s shock move, although capital controls remain strict.
China welcomes a weaker currency, which makes the country’s goods more appealing globally. Yet avoiding sharp depreciation has meant a trade off between stability and encouraging the yuan to play a more significant role. The currency remains little used outside of China for the size of the economy. Its share in global payments and central bank reserves remains low at about 2%, only a fraction of the dollar’s share of more than 40% on both accounts.
Keeping depreciation slow may also help avoid the ire of U.S. President Donald Trump, who vowed to brand China a currency manipulator when he first campaigned for president. For now, it seems Chinese policy makers are happy to watch the yuan track the dollar weaker against peers. Despite escalating tensions between Washington and Beijing, the yuan is trading around the same level it was against the greenback six months ago.
“China’s management of the sentiment in the foreign-exchange market has been successful – the overall stability in the yuan has helped bolster investor confidence and drive inflows,” said Carie Li, an economist at OCBC Wing Hang Bank. “In the future, Beijing will need to make the spot rate more market-driven, facilitate overseas funds’ investments in onshore assets, and create more derivatives for traders to hedge yuan risks.”
The People’s Bank of China can still dictate where it wants the yuan to trade with its daily fix. Based on quotes submitted by 14 banks every morning, the rate restricts the onshore yuan’s moves by 2% on either side. For traders, the fixing signals the government’s stance on the currency. Other measures to manage the currency’s moves include rhetoric from officials, capital controls on companies and individuals and issuance of offshore yuan bills.
Such controls are a double-edged sword. While they help Beijing prevent messy depreciation, they also undermine the government’s plan to make the yuan a truly globalized currency. Despite China’s efforts to get the International Monetary Fund to name the yuan an official reserve currency in 2016, its share in central bank reserves is small. Analysts such as Dariusz Kowalczyk, senior emerging-markets strategist at Credit Agricole CIB, say the PBOC should allow the currency greater flexibility. MDT/Bloomberg
Five years after devaluation, China has the yuan it wanted
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