Yuan Drops to Key 7.2 Level on Slow Stimulus, PBOC’s Greenlight
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2023-06-21 10:45
China’s yuan weakened past the closely watched 7.2-per-dollar level as investor sentiment soured on a lack of aggressive

China’s yuan weakened past the closely watched 7.2-per-dollar level as investor sentiment soured on a lack of aggressive stimulus and Beijing signaled a level of comfort about the declines.

The offshore yuan fell as much as 0.3% to 7.2007 per dollar, the weakest since November, while the onshore unit declined 0.2%. The yuan has tumbled more than 4% over the last three months to become the second worst performer in Asia following the yen.

The People’s Bank of China set its fixing for the managed currency at a level that was slightly weaker than the average estimate in a Bloomberg survey, stoking bets Beijing is on board with yuan depreciation amid a flagging economy. Local banks delivered only a modest reduction to key borrowing costs on Tuesday, disappointing traders anticipating stronger support measures after authorities cut a string of policy rates last week.

“Markets are growing impatient over lack of follow-through on China stimulus,” said Christopher Wong, strategist at Overseas Chinese Banking Corp. Resistance for the offshore yuan is at 7.2150, he added. “A timeline to look forward to is the Politburo’s semi-annual economic conference in end July for any major fiscal announcement. But in the meantime, the silence is deafening.”

China’s economic recovery since the dismantle of its Covid curbs has been unimpressive, with the nation’s manufacturing sector contracting and retail sales trailing estimates in May. Beijing’s slow stimulus rollout is adding to concerns about the economy and investors continue to debate what steps authorities will take to reignite growth.

With strategists from Goldman Sachs Group Inc. to Mizuho Bank Ltd. flagging 7.20 as a potential soft floor for the yuan, traders will be watching to see if the currency’s weakness can be slowed. Sentiment in the options market shows some small signs of optimism even if the broader mood remains negative.

The currency is also weighed by capital outflows and bets that the Federal Reserve will keep hiking rates. The fixing limits moves of the onshore yuan by 2% on either side.

(Updates to add quote. Previous version of the story corrected move in onshore yuan in second paragraph.)

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