05-10-2015, 12:07 AM
Chinese push to have yuan included in SDR currency basket
Scott Murdoch
[Image: scott_murdoch.png]
China Correspondent
Beijing
[Image: 789653-5c6da6b4-6a75-11e5-9bb9-94d25a90b8df.jpg]
Beijing’s move would increase liquidity in the yuan. Source: AFP
[b]The Chinese yuan could become the next global reserve currency, after the People’s Bank of China intervened in the offshore trading markets in a move interpreted by analysts as designed to win favour with the International Monetary Fund.[/b]
The IMF is due next month to publish the results of its five-year review of the Special Drawing Rights currency basket, currently consisting of the US dollar, the British pound, the euro and the Japanese yen. China has been campaigning to have the yuan included for the first time as part of its push to make its currency international.
The PBOC last week plunged into the offshore Chinese yuan (CNH) market to reduce the spread it was trading at compared with the onshore Chinese yuan (CNY) which blew out to more than 1000 points after the PBOC ordered a string of depreciations in August.
Commonwealth Bank foreign exchange analyst Andy Ji said the PBOC decision to intervene in the CNH was surprising and investors were now watching the PBOC’s moves closer than ever.
“The PBOC is believed to have expanded its intervention to offshore,” Mr Ji said in a research note. “The spread between onshore and offshore widened immediately after the devaluation move but has all since disappeared. It appears the central bank remains determined to maintain a total realignment of fixing (in) on and offshore markets. Market participants are increasingly concerned with the sustainability of such aggressive interventions, in particular in the offshore renminbi (yuan) markets.”
China allows the yuan to move within a 1 per cent trading bracket each day and the devaluation in August caught financial markets by surprise.
The CBA’s head of RMB solutions, Sangeeta Venkatesan, said it was becoming more likely the yuan could be included in the SDR basket after the string of PBOC and Chinese government decisions over the past few months.
Analysts believe the CNH intervention last week was timed to coincide with Chinese President Xi Jinping’s US visit and meetings with President Barack Obama. The US has persistently criticised China for keeping the yuan low to give the nation’s exports an advantage over the rest of the world. The Chinese government has also promised to make the yuan more convertible as part of its campaign to the IMF.
“If you had asked me eight months ago whether the yuan would be an SDR currency I would have said that it would be surprising,” Ms Venkatesen said . “But the Chinese central bank has been taking the right moves and opening up its capital account. Now it would not come as a surprise.”
Ms Venkatesen said the SDR inclusion would increase the liquidity and trading volumes in both onshore and offshore yuan markets and use of the Chinese currency would likely become more common.
The agreement signed in 2013 to make the yuan and the Australian dollar fully convertible and the establishment of Sydney as a yuan trading hub has not prompted a long-term increase in trade deals between the two countries to be settled in yuan.
“If you look at it from a commercial point of view, Australia’s largest trade partner is China but most companies are still using US dollars,” Ms Venkatesen said.
“It (SDR) could increase the corporate appetite to use yuan. We could also start to see Chinese companies asking for trade deals to be settled in yuan rather than US dollars so it would be good for Australian companies to be ready for that.”
The PBOC flagged on the weekend it would push ahead with plans to curb speculative traders, hoping this will maintain stability in the currency. Deputy governor Yi Gang wrote in China Finance magazine the bank and government authorities still wished to work towards making the yuan fully convertible under the nation’s capital account, as it was under the current account.
Additional reporting: Agencies
- THE AUSTRALIAN
- OCTOBER 05, 2015 12:00AM
Scott Murdoch
[Image: scott_murdoch.png]
China Correspondent
Beijing
[Image: 789653-5c6da6b4-6a75-11e5-9bb9-94d25a90b8df.jpg]
Beijing’s move would increase liquidity in the yuan. Source: AFP
[b]The Chinese yuan could become the next global reserve currency, after the People’s Bank of China intervened in the offshore trading markets in a move interpreted by analysts as designed to win favour with the International Monetary Fund.[/b]
The IMF is due next month to publish the results of its five-year review of the Special Drawing Rights currency basket, currently consisting of the US dollar, the British pound, the euro and the Japanese yen. China has been campaigning to have the yuan included for the first time as part of its push to make its currency international.
The PBOC last week plunged into the offshore Chinese yuan (CNH) market to reduce the spread it was trading at compared with the onshore Chinese yuan (CNY) which blew out to more than 1000 points after the PBOC ordered a string of depreciations in August.
Commonwealth Bank foreign exchange analyst Andy Ji said the PBOC decision to intervene in the CNH was surprising and investors were now watching the PBOC’s moves closer than ever.
“The PBOC is believed to have expanded its intervention to offshore,” Mr Ji said in a research note. “The spread between onshore and offshore widened immediately after the devaluation move but has all since disappeared. It appears the central bank remains determined to maintain a total realignment of fixing (in) on and offshore markets. Market participants are increasingly concerned with the sustainability of such aggressive interventions, in particular in the offshore renminbi (yuan) markets.”
China allows the yuan to move within a 1 per cent trading bracket each day and the devaluation in August caught financial markets by surprise.
The CBA’s head of RMB solutions, Sangeeta Venkatesan, said it was becoming more likely the yuan could be included in the SDR basket after the string of PBOC and Chinese government decisions over the past few months.
Analysts believe the CNH intervention last week was timed to coincide with Chinese President Xi Jinping’s US visit and meetings with President Barack Obama. The US has persistently criticised China for keeping the yuan low to give the nation’s exports an advantage over the rest of the world. The Chinese government has also promised to make the yuan more convertible as part of its campaign to the IMF.
“If you had asked me eight months ago whether the yuan would be an SDR currency I would have said that it would be surprising,” Ms Venkatesen said . “But the Chinese central bank has been taking the right moves and opening up its capital account. Now it would not come as a surprise.”
Ms Venkatesen said the SDR inclusion would increase the liquidity and trading volumes in both onshore and offshore yuan markets and use of the Chinese currency would likely become more common.
The agreement signed in 2013 to make the yuan and the Australian dollar fully convertible and the establishment of Sydney as a yuan trading hub has not prompted a long-term increase in trade deals between the two countries to be settled in yuan.
“If you look at it from a commercial point of view, Australia’s largest trade partner is China but most companies are still using US dollars,” Ms Venkatesen said.
“It (SDR) could increase the corporate appetite to use yuan. We could also start to see Chinese companies asking for trade deals to be settled in yuan rather than US dollars so it would be good for Australian companies to be ready for that.”
The PBOC flagged on the weekend it would push ahead with plans to curb speculative traders, hoping this will maintain stability in the currency. Deputy governor Yi Gang wrote in China Finance magazine the bank and government authorities still wished to work towards making the yuan fully convertible under the nation’s capital account, as it was under the current account.
Additional reporting: Agencies