Not unexpected with the fiat based capital boom ending as they always do. Yet i do not really know just how significant all this is. The sheer size of the Chineses economy puts all this into a different realm as we have learned watching China over decades.
All instincts turn out to be wrong.
Recall that just transitioning the last third of the Chinese completely into the modern economy will still take time and will still expand the Chinese economy. So it should work out just fine.
Chinese Yuan Crashes, Central Bank Move Coming?
By Antonio Perez, Epoch Times | February 1, 2015 http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/1233262-chinese-yuan-crashes-central-bank-move-coming
http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/1233262-chinese-yuan-crashes-central-bank-move-coming/
http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/1233262-chinese-yuan-crashes-central-bank-move-coming/
China’s yuan crashed against the dollar on Jan. 30 in offshore
trading, spurring rumors that a central bank action to devalue the
currency could be imminent.
Offshore yuan’s valuation dropped to 6.28 per U.S. dollar in New York
Friday afternoon, which is a two-year low. The rate is also 2 percent
lower than the official midday fixing by the People’s Bank of China
(PBOC), China’s central bank.
There are two exchange rates for the Chinese yuan. One is the
official reference exchange rate (USD-CNY) set by the PBOC daily in
China. This rate trades in a narrow band as designated by the central
bank. The other exchange rate (USD-CNH) is for overseas trading of the
yuan. This rate is watched by the international community as trading is
open to foreigners and many FX traders deem this to be a more accurate
rate which is less manipulated by the PBOC.
When there’s a spread between the official and offshore rate, it
usually signals a dislocation in demand for the currency between
mainland and offshore traders. It could also means that traders are
predicting a policy action in the near future.
Currency Devaluation
The U.S. dollar’s recent surge prompted central banks of many
export-oriented countries to cut rates and weaken their currencies.
Last week, the central banks of Russia and Denmark both trimmed
official interest rates. The action followed similar decisions earlier
at the European Central Bank, and the central banks of Japan and Korea
to devalue their currencies.
Lowering interest rates could stimulate lending and investments,
while a weak currency could spur demand for that country’s goods and
products.
That puts the PBOC in a tough spot. So far, the PBOC has tried to
rein in such lending to curb bad debts and slow down certain overheating
asset classes. But the country’s export-driven economic engine has
stalled in recent months, and given the recent export-friendly moves by
its competitors Japan and Korea, the PBOC may have no choice but to take
action.
Dollars in Demand
The yuan has already been pressured by asset conversion undertaken by
wealthy Chinese. Locals recently rushed to convert their
yuan-denominated assets into dollar-denominated investments.
The disposition of yuan-denominated assets has been a concern for the
Chinese Communist regime. So much so that the government has urged
caution for anyone considering to sell their yuan assets. On the
Chinese-language China Business News, a report noted that U.S.
dollar-denominated notes generated 1.2 to 2.5 percent in annual returns,
while yuan-denominated products had returns of 3 to 5 percent.
But most astute investors in China probably already know that the
stability and appreciation potential of dollar-denominated assets would
likely trump most high-yielding yuan-denominated financial products,
risk-adjusted.
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