China seeks to soothe markets as trade angst rattles stocks, yuan

Published Tue, Jul 3, 2018 · 09:50 PM

Shanghai

CHINA'S central bank moved to calm jittery financial markets on Tuesday after the yuan dropped through the psychologically significant 6.7 to the US dollar mark, hitting its lowest in almost a year as anxieties over US trade frictions deepened.

Stocks also sank in morning trade as Beijing and Washington hurtled toward an end-of-week tariff deadline that has kept investors in China nervous, although they recouped their losses and flipped into positive territory in the afternoon.

Chinese currency and equity markets have been on edge ahead of July 6, when US tariffs on US$34 billion worth of Chinese goods kick in. Beijing has said it would retaliate with tariffs on US products.

In a statement posted on the website of the People's Bank of China (PBOC), governor Yi Gang said the central bank was closely watching fluctuations in the foreign exchange market and would seek to keep the yuan at a stable and reasonable level.

Cross-border capital flows were under control, Mr Yi added.

State-controlled media had earlier called the fall in stocks an "irrational overreaction" and urged investors not to panic over the growing trade frictions.

After the morning drop, market participants suspected the central bank of intervening in the currency market to support the yuan.

The yuan fell to 6.7204 per US dollar, its weakest since Aug 7, 2017 and the first time it dropped below 6.7 since Aug 9, 2017, before crossing back and forth over the line. At 0542 GMT it was trading at 6.7010. The currency has lost more than 4 per cent of its value against the US dollar since mid-June.

"It's a crucial day for the yuan today given it weakened past 6.7 per dollar," said Ken Cheung, senior Asian FX strategist at Mizuho Bank in Hong Kong. "Let's see what level the yuan closes today, and see whether the central bank would take out some measures to stabilise the exchange rate."

Four traders told Reuters that major state-owned banks were seen swapping yuan for US dollars in the forwards market and immediately selling some of them into spot market, which helped support the Chinese currency. Traders and economists say major state-owned banks sometimes act on behalf of the central bank in the foreign exchange interbank market.

The central bank was not immediately available to respond to Reuters' request for comment on the yuan's moves.

"It feels like the state-owned banks are stocking up on bullets to prevent the yuan from falling too much," said one trader at a Chinese bank in Shanghai.

The central bank earlier set the midpoint at 6.6497 yuan per US dollar, its weakest fixing in about 10 months.

Speaking at an event to mark the one-year anniversary of a scheme that links Hong Kong and mainland bond markets, PBOC deputy governor and head of the foreign exchange regulator Pan Gongsheng said China was confident it could keep the yuan basically stable and at a "reasonable" level.

Another foreign exchange trader at a Chinese bank in Shanghai said those comments went some way toward calming a jittery market.

The outlook for Sino-US trade relations was further clouded on Tuesday by Washington's moves to block China Mobile from offering services in the US and news that growth in China's exports to the United States has slowed significantly this year.

Analysts at Commerzbank said in a note on Tuesday that while concerns about the trade conflict were creating a drag on the yuan, they did not expect the government to use the exchange rate as a weapon in the trade dispute.

"The uncertainty related to the trade conflict, the weak growth outlook and the easing bias in Chinese monetary policy suggest a weaker renminbi in the coming quarters," they wrote.

"Intensifying trade frictions between China and the United States are a test that the Chinese economy inevitably had to experience during its rise," the Economic Daily said. "We have long anticipated and prepared for this...The impact on the Chinese economy is within a controllable range." REUTERS

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