Advertisement

Don’t expect a U-turn in the yuan’s downtrend, but pace of depreciation likely to soften, traders say

The yuan, now trading at an eight-year low, is expected to continue trending lower

Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
The yuan has depreciated 4 per cent since a nationwide week-long holiday to mark the founding of modern China on October 1. Photo: Imaginechina

The latest restrictions over capital outflows from China should be seen as Beijing’s intention to tap the brakes on the pace of yuan depreciation, rather than drawing a line in the sand for a defence of the currency, according to experts.

Advertisement

As the latest move to control capital outflows from China, the central bank will curb the amount of yuan that Chinese companies can remit outside the country, imposing a cap for the first time in more than two decades to stem the yuan’s outflow as the currency plumbs daily lows.

According to a special order issued by the PBOC on Monday, Non-financial companies in China will be limited to lending the equivalent of 30 per cent of the owners’ equity to an overseas company.

Analysts said this announcement along with other recent restrictions are intended to help calm market and ensure an orderly pace of adjustment in the currency.

Advertisement

“The intervention by the authority is aimed to slow down the pace of the yuan’s weakening, instead of changing its direction, ” said Hong Hao, managing director and chief strategist at Bocom International in Hong Kong.

Advertisement