China’s yuan hits new high

Central bank sets stronger currency rate ahead of G20 economic summit in Canada.

china currency
Some analysts say the yuan is undervalued against the dollar by up to 40 per cent [EPA]

On Friday the yuan weakened slightly in early trading to 6.7900 on China’s main foreign exchange market.

‘Basically stable’

In a vaguely-worded statement, the central bank said the yuan would remain “basically stable”.

“This is not a big move, but it is significant. President Hu can point to it as evidence that China is serious about making its currency more flexible when he meets other G20 leaders in Toronto”

Brian Jackson, senior analyst, Royal Bank of Canada

China has tweaked the rate up and down this week ahead of the G20 summit and has a history of letting the yuan strengthen slightly before sensitive events, seen as an attempt to defuse criticism that it keeps the currency too low, giving Chinese exports an unfair advantage

Friday’s move is widely seen as a bid to head off rancour at the upcoming G20 meeting in Canada following intense pressure on Beijing to embrace currency reform as part of efforts to enhance a global economic recovery.

Some experts say the yuan is undervalued against the dollar by up to 40 per cent.

Barack Obama, the US president, said on Thursday it was too early to determine the impact of China’s limited currency reform although he viewed the move as “positive”.

Speaking ahead of his meeting on Saturday with Hu Jintao, the Chinese president, on the sidelines of the G20 summit, Obama maintained that the “undervalued” yuan provided China “with an unfair trade advantage”.

For the past two years China had effectively pegged the yuan at about 6.8 to the dollar to prop up exporters during the global financial crisis.

Criticism

The value of the yuan has long been a source of tension between China and its major trading partners, particularly the US and EU.

Critics say the policy gives Chinese producers an unfair advantage and prices competitors out of the market.

US legislators, unmoved by Beijing’s action, have threatened to press ahead with legislation they said will treat “currency manipulation” as an illegal subsidy and enable US authorities to impose tariffs on Chinese goods.

China however repeated a warning on Thursday against “protectionist” retaliation over its currency policy, saying an appreciation in the yuan would not solve the Chinese trade surplus with the United States.

Brian Jackson, a senior analyst at Royal Bank of Canada in Hong Kong, said the yuan’s limited moves this week might be enough to deflect criticism at the G20.

“This is not a big move, but it is significant,” he told AFP.

“President Hu can point to it as evidence that China is serious about making its currency more flexible when he meets other G20 leaders in Toronto.”

Source: News Agencies