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China's yuan soars against dollar as liquidity tightens offshore

Published 01/05/2017, 04:30 AM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Chinese 100 yuan banknotes are seen in a counting machine while a clerk counts them at a branch of a commercial bank in Beijing
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HONG KONG/SHANGHAI (Reuters) - China's yuan soared against the U.S. dollar on Thursday following a sharp rise in the offshore spot rate as China worked to stem capital flows and stabilize the currency ahead of Donald Trump's inauguration as U.S. president and the Lunar New Year.

The offshore yuan

It was not clear if Chinese authorities had engineered the spike in yuan borrowing rates in Hong Kong. But they had used such a tactic several times last year to support offshore yuan exchange levels and by extension relieving some of the pressure on the yuan onshore, which is at more than eight-year lows.

The cost of borrowing yuan surged in Hong Kong, with the rate of overnight contracts

The CNH Hong Kong Interbank Offered Rate benchmark (CNH Hibor), set by the city's Treasury Markets Association (TMA), rose to 38.33500 percent for overnight contracts, the highest since Jan. 12, 2016. It was 16.94767 percent on Wednesday.

With signs of short-term liquidity stress, the implied overnight deposit rate for the offshore yuan

The rate closed at 10.587 percent a day earlier.

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Onshore, the yuan was on track for its biggest one-day gain since the first quarter of 2016.

"London traders have come into the market in the afternoon and that's why you saw another round of yuan short sellers squaring their positions," said a trader with an American bank in Hong Kong.

The yuan is limited onshore to trading within a 2 percent band on either side of a reference rate set each day by the central bank. But offshore, it can move more freely, which accounts for the different exchange rates.

Traders in the onshore market said they were primarily trying to stop the bleeding on Thursday.

"The onshore market is reacting to the offshore as traders were liquidating their positions to prevent further losses," said a trader at a Chinese bank in Shanghai.

Another trader at a foreign bank said the sell-offs kicked off at the market open, right after the central bank fixed a stronger-than-expected midpoint at 6.9307 per dollar, the strongest in nearly three weeks. The previous fix was 6.9526.

Other Asian currencies rose on Thursday in response to the surging yuan.

The spot market

The yuan had settled at 6.9485 at 4:30 pm on Wednesday, and finished that day's late session at 6.9306.

Some analysts said the liquidity conditions in Hong Kong were unlikely to improve in the short term as the peak season for cash demand - the Lunar New Year holiday - was nearing. This year, the holiday starts just before the end of January.

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Beijing has recently rolled out a slew of measures to stabilize the Chinese currency including tightening scrutiny on individuals' foreign exchange purchases.

Some analysts said the Chinese government was keen to keep the yuan stable around Trump's inauguration on Jan. 20. Trump had threatened during the election campaign to slap high import tariffs on Chinese goods and label Beijing a currency manipulator.

The Thomson Reuters/HKEX Global CNH index (RXYH), which tracks the offshore yuan against a basket of currencies on a daily basis, stood at 97.3, firmer than the previous day's 96.47.

The global dollar index (DXY) fell to 102.17 from the previous close of 102.7.

Offshore one-year non-deliverable forwards contracts (NDFs)

One-year NDFs are settled against the midpoint, not the spot rate.

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