China reserves edge below US$3t as yuan pressure increases

Published Tue, Feb 7, 2017 · 02:03 PM

[BEIJING] China's foreign-currency reserves edged just below $3 trillion in January, falling to the lowest since early 2011 after the yuan capped its steepest annual decline in two decades.

Reserves fell US$12.3 billion to US$2.998 trillion, the People's Bank of China said Tuesday. That compares with the US$3.004 trillion estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists The central bank's intervention in foreign-exchange markets drove the drop, as did seasonal factors such as high demand for other currencies during the week-long Lunar New Year holiday, the State Administration of Foreign Exchange said in a statement.

Further erosion of the world's largest stockpile may prompt policy makers again to tighten measures for controlling outflows and on companies transferring money to other countries. Authorities recently rolled out stricter requirements for citizens converting yuan into foreign currencies as the annual $50,000 foreign exchange quota for individuals reset Jan. 1.

"With reserves dropping below the psychologically important threshold of US$3 trillion, this will further ramp up pressure on Chinese policy makers to prevent the further draining of reserves," said Rajiv Biswas, Asia-Pacific chief economist at IHS Global Insight in Singapore. "The Chinese government and the PBOC are now facing a tremendous battle to stem further significant capital outflows while also trying to maintain confidence in the yuan.""A combination of yuan strength, stricter capital controls and substantial valuation effects failed to arrest the slide," Tom Orlik, chief Asia economist at Bloomberg Intelligence in Beijing, wrote in a report. "A seventh straight month of falling reserves, and a drop below the US$3 trillion threshold, means no respite for China's policy makers in their battle against capital outflows.""The PBOC isn't defending the $3 trillion threshold at all costs, as some thought," said Harrison Hu, chief greater China economist at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc in Singapore. "Reserves have showed signs of stabilization, and the momentum will continue.""The breach of US$3 trillion isn't significant in the big picture," said Jason Daw, head of emerging-market currency strategy in Singapore at Societe Generale SA. "It was only slightly lower than consensus and inevitable given the trend over the past couple of years."

Holdings of the International Monetary Fund reserve currency known as Special Drawing Rights decreased to 2.21 trillion from 2.24 trillion in December. The onshore yuan recovered in January, rising 1 per cent amid a broad dollar decline. January decline added to the $320 billion decrease in the holdings last year.

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