BEIJING: China's currency is facing strong downward pressure this year as the
country's once surging growth rates slow amid a stalling global economy and
signs of capital flight after years of inflows.
It is a new development for the
yuan, once on a steady upward trajectory on the back of expectations that
China's impressive economic strength made the currency a one-way bet.
The economy, though, has slowed
for six straight quarters and the 7.6 per cent year-on-year expansion in gross
domestic product for the three months ended June 30 was the worst since the
2008-2009 global financial crisis.
The yuan has dropped just one per
cent this year, but the fall has come after years of gains amid foreign
pressure by China's trading partners, especially the United States, who claimed
it was undervalued.
The China Securities Journal, a
state newspaper, carried a front-page commentary this month saying markets have
now accepted that the currency is on a weakening track, calling that a
potential boon for the economy.
A weaker yuan could spur positive
effects such as boosting exports, it added.
Broader trends are also
pressuring the yuan as the dollar has started to strengthen this year against
other Asian currencies, said Bill Belchere, chief emerging markets economist at
Mirae Asset Securities in Hong Kong.
Analysts say that the decline so
far in the yuan, also known as the renminbi, would be far larger if authorities
were not providing a floor by selling some of China's trove of US$3 trillion in
foreign reserves.
"If it were freely traded
today the RMB would be 10 per cent below where it is," said Shanghai-based
independent economist Andy Xie. "That's what the real economy is trying to
get."
Xie added, however, that
authorities cannot let that happen as they are dealing with a serious property
slump which, if mishandled, could lead to a loss of confidence.
"If the currency drops significantly,
the property market will collapse," he said. "They are trying to
achieve some sort of soft landing."
The dollar traded late Friday at
about 6.36 yuan. Though the Chinese currency is down one per cent since the
start of the year, it has risen about 30 per cent over the past seven years.
China has taken a series of steps
since July 2005 to loosen its grip on the yuan, but it remains highly
controlled compared to the dollar, euro and yen, that float freely.
The People's Bank of China, the
central bank, has since April set a daily central parity rate from which the
yuan can only trade one per cent up or down, though that is a doubling from the
previous 0.5 per cent band.
Another reason economists cite
for the yuan's atypically bearish 2012 also includes capital outflows,
evidenced by China in the second quarter recording its first capital account
deficit since 1998.
"There is a flight to
quality," said Alistair Thornton of IHS Global Insight in Beijing.
"You've seen this against all broad emerging markets, you've seen risk-on,
risk-off, all this capital leaving emerging markets."
Not everyone agrees.
Wang Qinwei, China economist for
Capital Economics, cites a surge in foreign currency deposits in China, which
on the books are classified as an outflow, as likely pressuring the central
bank to sell reserves.
"Fears about capital leaving
China are overdone," he wrote in a report, adding that "firms are in
less of a hurry to exchange foreign currency receipts into renminbi now that
expectations for renminbi appreciation have fizzled out".
The State Administration of
Foreign Exchange said in a report in March that "expectations on the
yuan's unilateral appreciation have been broken", citing volatility in
global markets from late last year.
"The weakening of the
Chinese yuan indicates that the currency now fluctuates on both sides and
suggests it has become more flexible, which is good for the Chinese
economy," Juzhong Zhuang, deputy chief economist at the Asian Development
Bank in Manila, said in an email.
Longer term, economists say the
yuan's prospects for a return to strengthening mode depend on recovery in the
broader global economy and the government carrying out structural reforms.
Last month, the International
Monetary Fund said the yuan was now more closely aligned with China's overall
economy, yet remained "moderately undervalued".
A stronger currency would
increase household purchasing power and facilitate reform of the financial
sector, among other positives, the IMF said in a report.
"Currency appreciation
continues to be an important component of the package of reforms needed to
transform China's economy," it said.
- AFP/wm
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