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China Chooses Yuanstability Over Growth To Stem Outflows

Published 02/19/2017, 02:12 AM
Updated 11/07/2017, 03:10 AM

Economic Commentary

In January,China’s foreign currency reserves dipped below USD3tn, their lowest level in five years and down from the USD4tn peak reached in June 2014. The precipitous decline reflects the policy of People’s Bank of China (PBoC) to support the yuan by selling dollar reserves to prevent it from depreciating. The key cause of the downward pressure on the yuan, and the incipient decline in reserves, has been surging capital outflows. Net capital outflows totalled USD654bn in 2016 and USD673bn in 2015, or approximately 6% of GDP. The authorities have responded by recently raising interest rates and tightening capital controls, which should staunch outflows going forward.

Four factors have driven the large capital outflows. First, China’s trend growth has slowed as it transitions from investment and export-led growth, requiring substantial domestic and foreign capital, to a less-capital intensive consumption-based economy. Real GDP growth has fallen in each consecutive year since 2010, when growth averaged 10.6%, to a rate of 6.7% in 2016.

Second, mounting financial vulnerabilities have diminished investor confidence over the long-term potential of the economy. Overcapacity plagues key industrial sectors such as steel and coal; corporate debt now exceeds 160% of GDP; and the housing market has turned frothy. Moreover, the government has begun to gradually unwind its stimulatory policies and tighten lending rules in a bid to curtail these vulnerabilities. These developments have reduced the attractiveness of capital inflows and consequently, outward direct investment exceeded foreign direct investment in 2016. Net direct investment outflows were 0.6% of GDP compared to net inflows of 0.6% in 2015 and 1.4% in 2014.

Third, higher interest rates in the United States have lured capital away from China. The U.S. Federal Reserve has increased its policy rate by 50 basis points since December 2015 and an additional 50 basis point increase is expected in 2017 (see our commentary, The U.S. economy in 2017 - 2 percent growth and 2 rate hikes). Monetary tightening has supported another dollar bull market.

Since June 2014, the U.S. dollar has appreciated by 24.7% against a basket of other currencies. Faced with diminishing returns at home and a squeezed currency, Chinese investors have begun to diversify their portfolios and are gradually moving away from a long-held home bias. China posted net portfolio outflows of 0.6% of GDP in both 2015 and 2016 compared to a net inflow of 0.8% in 2014.

China’s foreign currency reserves (tn USD)

China’s Foreign Currency Reserves Chart

Fourth, concerns about the depreciation of the yuan led to outflows as corporates and banks sought to repay their foreign debt. In the aftermath of the financial crisis, China liberalised access to foreign debt markets. External debt jumped from less than 4% of GDP in 2010 to over 12% in 2015 ascorporates and banks took advantage of low interest rates and a subdued U.S. dollar. However, after the government surprised markets by unexpectedly devaluing the yuan in August 2015, outflows to repay foreign liabilities accelerated on concerns of further devaluation. This dominated capital outflows in 2015 but slowed after the authorities tightened capital controls. External liabilities stabilised after 2015 and outflows to reduce foreign debts have abated.

Chinese authorities have responded to these developments by tightening restrictions on foreign acquisitions (particularly property) and imposing annual limits on the value of foreign exchange transactions and cross-border remittances. Furthermore, on January 24th and February 3rd, the PBoC raised a series of short-term interbank rates. This was the first such increase in these rates since they were established in 2013. Although these are not the key benchmark rates, the move was seen as the beginning of a shift in the PBoC’s easing bias to a moderately tighter stance.

These measures suggest the government is committed to stemming capital outflows and willing to bear the cost. Higher rates will slow growth and the perception of excessive use of capital controls bears the risk of creating financial volatility in markets. Nevertheless, in choosing to adopt these measures, Chinese authorities are prioritising currency stability over growth.

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