Yuan Drops Toward This Year’s Low as Chinese Economy Sputters

China’s yuan fell toward its weakest level this year after a series of disappointing economic figures added to concern about the nation’s sputtering growth.

(Bloomberg) — China’s yuan fell toward its weakest level this year after a series of disappointing economic figures added to concern about the nation’s sputtering growth.

The offshore yuan dropped as much as 0.3% Monday to 7.2785 per dollar, only about 0.1% from its 2023 low of 7.2857 set in June. The currency has now tumbled about 5% this year, the worst performer in Asia after the yen.

The yuan has been undermined as Chinese economic data for July have almost all trailed market expectations. Among the worst readings, bank loans slid to a 14-year low, consumer and producer prices both declined, and exports slid the most since February 2020. The stumbling economy and lack of any effective stimulus measures have left the yuan with little support as the dollar has rallied.

Still, the yuan’s recent weakness may prompt the central bank to deliver more measures to slow its losses. The People’s Bank of China on Monday set its daily currency fixing 668 pips stronger than the average estimate in a Bloomberg survey, the largest premium in three weeks. Last month it also adjusted some rules to allow companies to borrow more from overseas to encourage inflows.

‘Fighting Back’

“The PBOC is fighting back the rising USD tide with another stronger-than-expected yuan fixing today,” said Wei Liang Chang, a macro strategist at DBS Bank Ltd. in Singapore. “This underscores the authorities’ preference for RMB stability, as well as to curb excessive RMB speculation.”

The yuan is likely to find support at 7.30 per dollar, Wei said. 

China’s 10-year bond yield fell two basis points to 2.62%, approaching this year’s low of 2.59%. The CSI 300 Index of shares slipped 2%, wiping out almost all the gains it had made following the pro-growth tone of the Politburo meeting on July 24.

Investors will evaluate more July data due Tuesday including industrial output, retail sales and fixed-assets investment. The central bank’s monthly operation that day for 400 billion yuan ($55.1 billion) of maturity policy loans will also provide some clues on its willingness to loosen policy. 

“If more sectors – for example, highly indebted local governments – succumb to deleveraging, there could be a bigger and longer toll on mainland China’s economy,” HSBC Holdings Plc analysts wrote in a research note, “In such slowdowns, currency depreciation tends to be both a consequence and part of the solution.”

–With assistance from April Ma.

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