China tightens capital controls after devalution: FT

Published Thu, Sep 10, 2015 · 05:29 AM

[SHANGHAI] China is tightening capital controls following a devaluation of its yuan currency, the Financial Times reported, as worries about fund outflows rise.

The State Administration of Foreign Exchange had ordered financial institutions to increase checks and boost controls on foreign exchange transactions, especially over-invoicing of exports which is used to hide capital outflows, the newspaper on Wednesday quoted unnamed sources and an internal memo as saying.

Last month, China moved the yuan almost five percent lower in a week, saying it was part of broader economic reforms aimed at shifting towards a more flexible exchange rate.

The suddenness and scale of the devaluation in the normally stable unit sparked worries the world's second-largest economy was performing worse than revealed.

China's foreign exchange reserves fell by a record US$93.9 billion last month to reach US$3.56 trillion at the end of August, as Beijing sold dollars to support the yuan following jitters over the surprise devaluation.

The central bank, the People's Bank of China (PBOC), on Tuesday said it will require banks to pay a 20 per cent deposit on forward sales of foreign exchange, in a move aimed at speculators. A forward sale is a commitment to sell at a predetermined price and date.

But in a statement the PBOC denied the move amounted to a capital control as it did not restrict transaction volumes and did not require approval for individual transactions.

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang on Thursday said on China will keep the currency stable and vowed to push forward making the yuan freely convertible. He also promised to allow foreign central banks to directly trade in the country's currency market.

"We will continue to keep the (yuan) exchange rate basically stable at a reasonable and equilibrium level," he said in a speech at the World Economic Forum in the Chinese city of Dalian.

Addressing business executives attending the forum on Wednesday, Li denied China had sought a competitive devaluation to boost exports as economic growth slows.

"China will not want to see any currency wars," he said.

The yuan closed 0.16 per cent lower against the dollar at 6.3778 on Wednesday.

On Thursday, the central bank set its daily rate for the yuan 0.22 per cent lower from the previous day's fix at 6.3772 to the dollar.

AFP

BT is now on Telegram!

For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to  t.me/BizTimes

International

SUPPORT SOUTH-EAST ASIA'S LEADING FINANCIAL DAILY

Get the latest coverage and full access to all BT premium content.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Browse corporate subscription here