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China Sets Yuan Fixing Stronger Than Expected, Soothing Nerves

Published 2019-08-07, 09:53 p/m
China Sets Yuan Fixing Stronger Than Expected, Soothing Nerves

(Bloomberg) -- The yuan rose after China’s central bank set its daily fixing stronger than expected.

The People’s Bank of China set its daily reference rate at 7.0039 per dollar, the first time in a decade it was weaker than 7. Analysts and traders had projected a rate of 7.0156, according to the average of 21 forecasts compiled by Bloomberg in a survey. The yuan rose 0.3% to 7.0409 a dollar. Against a basket of peers, it weakened to its lowest level since at least 2015.

The fixing "seems to reinforce PBOC’s message that they desire stability over volatility," said Fiona Lim, a senior foreign-exchange analyst at Malayan Banking Berhad.

China’s daily fixing has become a closely watched event this week after a weak reference rate on Monday helped trigger the biggest loss in the yuan since 2015 and spark concern about a global currency war. While the central bank has since taken steps to limit declines in the yuan, including reassuring foreign companies that the currency won’t weaken significantly, traders remain jumpy about the potential for escalation in the trade war with the U.S.

Donald Trump’s administration this week labeled China a currency manipulator, a formal designation which may prompt counteractive measures, and something rejected by the PBOC. Concern about the impact of the trade war on the global economy is growing, with central banks in New Zealand, India and Thailand all making surprise interest-rate cuts on Wednesday.

China’s fixing is published every trading day at 9:15 a.m., after a group of 14 lenders submit their rates. The yuan is then allowed to move 2% in either direction. The rates are calculated with formulas that take into account factors such as the previous day’s official close at 4:30 p.m, the yuan’s move against a basket of currencies and the moves in other major exchange rates.

The mechanism has been used to manage volatility after China removed the yuan’s peg to the greenback in 2005. Until at least 2015, traders weren’t able to offer prices that diverged from the fix by more than the allowed range. The last time the yuan tested the band was in February 2015, when it closed 1.99% weaker than the reference rate. The trading system was upgraded after the shock devaluation in August that year.

(An earlier version of the story corrected a spelling error in the headline.)

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