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China’s Yuan Climbs Past Key Levels as Trade Tensions Ease

China’s Yuan at Strongest Since July Amid Trade Deal Optimism

(Bloomberg) -- With a trade deal nearly signed and China’s economy on steadier footing, the path for China’s yuan to strengthen is now wide open.

The currency on Tuesday touched its highest since July in the offshore market, after punching through 6.9 per dollar for the first time in more than five months on Monday. The latest leg up came from news of the Trump administration removing China from its designation as a currency manipulator.

China’s currency has now recouped about a third of the losses it sustained against the dollar since mid-June 2018, when U.S.-China trade tensions soared as President Donald Trump pressed ahead with waves of tariff hikes. The exchange rate has also benefited lately from rising confidence that China has arrested an economic slowdown.

Some now predict the currency will touch 6.8 per dollar within three months -- a level not seen since May last year.

“Having a stronger currency is one way to show good will,” said Mitul Kotecha, a senior emerging-markets strategist at Toronto-Dominion Bank in Singapore. “Signs of a gradual, as opposed to rapid, slowdown in China’s economy and limited decline in China rates will provide support to the currency.”

China’s Yuan Climbs Past Key Levels as Trade Tensions Ease

With Chinese Vice Premier Liu He expected to seal the partial Sino-American trade deal in Washington Wednesday, the Trump administration said Monday China had made “enforceable commitments” not to devalue the yuan and had agreed to publish exchange-rate information. The U.S. Treasury still kept China on a monitoring list for foreign-exchange practices.

The yuan has also been advancing more broadly, climbing the past four sessions against a basket of trading partners’ currencies. The strengthening has helped bolster sentiment in stocks, with the CSI 300 Index closing at its highest level in almost two years Monday. Shares of Chinese companies also surged in Hong Kong.

China’s currency weakened past the key 7 per dollar level for the first time in a decade in August, when tensions between the two nations escalated. The yuan’s slide last year reignited one of Trump’s favorite criticisms of China: that Beijing weakens its currency to aid exporters.

Now, investor optimism over the economy and trade has kept the currency on the strong side of 7 for more than two weeks. With technical indicators flashing bullish signals, multiple measures of expected volatility are hovering near their lowest in about five months, signaling a reluctance among traders to hedge against swings. The yuan has gained more than 4% since September’s nadir.

Some yuan watchers are advising caution. Cliff Tan, head of global markets research for East Asia at MUFG Bank Ltd., says expectations of fiscal stimulus may be running too high. Khoon Goh, head of Asia research at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd., says the yuan’s strength is temporary, as it’s partly related to corporate spending and exporter conversion before the Lunar New Year.

Analyst1Q Forecast
Zhao Wan, China Merchants Bank Co.6.8
Tommy Xie, Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp.6.8
Stephen Innes, AxiTrader Ltd.6.83 to 6.85
Mitul Kotecha, Toronto-Dominion Bank6.9
Khoon Goh, Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd.7.07
Cliff Tan, MUFG Bank Ltd.7.07

Analysts started revising their 2020 forecasts for the yuan last month, following news that Beijing and Washington reached an agreement. Evidence that a slowdown in the world’s second-largest economy may not be as bad as feared has also helped, with recent data showing that China’s manufacturing sector continued to expand in December.

Expectations that authorities will add to policies supporting growth -- while staying clear of large-scale monetary stimulus -- are also boosting sentiment for the yuan.

The median forecast of analysts surveyed by Bloomberg is for the yuan to end 2020 at 6.95.

“The yuan’s outperformance since last week has reflected the improving risk sentiment, thanks to signs of the economy bottoming out,” said Tommy Xie, an economist at Oversea-Chinese Banking. “There’s some speculation that China may get a better trade deal than expected.”

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Livia Yap in Shanghai at lyap14@bloomberg.net;Qizi Sun in Beijing at qsun62@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Sofia Horta e Costa at shortaecosta@bloomberg.net, Christopher Anstey

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

With assistance from Bloomberg