Yuan Hits Highest Since 2018 as Easing Virus Worry Fuels Risk-On

Dec 7, 2021

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(Bloomberg) -- China’s yuan advanced to the strongest level since May 2018 as the market appetite for emerging-market currencies grew amid easing fears over the new Covid variant. 

The onshore yuan gained as much as 0.2% to 6.3515 per dollar, breaching a year-to-date high reached in May, while the offshore rate advanced 0.2%. The moves came as the dollar is poised to decline for a second straight week amid bets that the omicron variant won’t stall global recovery. 

The yuan has gained 2.7% this year, making it the best performer among major currencies, as the nation’s economy recovered from the pandemic and foreign investors added Chinese bonds. A lack of aggressive measures from the central bank to stall the yuan’s advance also boosted traders’ confidence that the appreciation will be sustained. 

The outlook on the currency, however, is looking uncertain as the People’s Bank of China moves to ease monetary policy by cutting the amount of cash lenders need to set aside as reserves this week. That means Beijing’s policy will diverge further from the U.S., making yuan-denominated assets less appealing for foreign investors.

On Wednesday, Thai baht led gains among emerging Asian currencies with a 0.6% advance, followed by a 0.4% rise in the Malaysian ringgit. 

 

 

 

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