Showing posts with label yuan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label yuan. Show all posts

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Retaliation in reserve as China faces yuan tensions

BEIJING - Expect harsh words but no concrete retaliation from Beijing if the US labels China a currency manipulator in a report due later on Friday.

China is focused on trying to defuse tensions with the US by yielding some ground in a mini-burst of yuan appreciation and hopes that these efforts will still pay off, even if Washington brands it a manipulator.

But should the US ratchet up the pressure yet further by passing into law a bill that could penalize China, Beijing will not be so docile, Chinese analysts say.

"China is telling the US that it is willing to help to resolve the problems. Things have not gotten out of hand yet and both sides still have some room to maneuver," said Zhao Xijun, an economist at Renmin University in Beijing.

President Barack Obama's administration faces a deadline on Friday to decide whether to formally label China as a currency manipulator.

A desire to look tough on "unfair" trade practices ahead of US congressional elections on Nov. 2, in which Obama's fellow Democrats are battling to retain control of Congress, could tempt the administration to cite China for the first time in 16 years.

The Chinese commerce ministry made its feelings clear on Friday, warning the US not to make a scapegoat of the yuan. Rhetoric aside, though, Beijing knows that the currency manipulator designation carries no specific consequences, apart from forcing Obama to seek consultations with China.

Preparing for the worst

A different calculus would apply if the Senate approved a bill already passed by the House of Representatives that would allow the US to slap duties on countries with undervalued currencies.

"It will be a very serious issue if the US legislation is approved by the Senate and signed by the president," said Li Wei, a researcher under the commerce ministry.

For starters, China would challenge the US law at the World Trade Organization -- a case that some trade experts think China would be able to win.

Analysts say Beijing is also bracing for the law by considering possible retaliation, from imposing curbs on US businesses in China to the so-called nuclear option of dumping its holdings of US Treasuries.

But Beijing is not going to jump the gun. It is first taking what it sees as pre-emptive steps to keep US anger from boiling over -- and to keep the legislation from becoming law.

"If China doesn't let the yuan appreciate a little bit, foreign criticism will be stronger. China wants to avoid a trade war with the US," said Guo Tianyong, an economist at the Central University of Finance Economics in Beijing.

To that end, Beijing has allowed the yuan to gain 2.6 percent since it scrapped a 23-month dollar-peg on June 19, quickening the appreciation in recent weeks as pressure mounted.

On their own terms

Ever sensitive to appearing weak domestically, Chinese leaders have insisted that the yuan's rise is not a response to US pressure but part of a broader reform agenda to spur domestic consumption.

They have also said that currency reforms will be done on China's own gradual terms.

Central bank chief Zhou Xiaochuan told International Monetary Fund meetings in Washington that demands on China to let the yuan rise rapidly are akin to seeking a magic cure to a problem that requires a slow-working, herbal remedy.

Foreign ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu tried to inject some levity into the dispute on Thursday: "If appreciation of a currency could solve all of the world's economic problems, then what use would economists be?"

But it will be no laughing matter if the US follows up the currency manipulator report with real punitive measures.

Although retaliation by China would likely hurt its own interests, rising nationalistic sentiment on the currency issue might force the government to take a tough stance, analysts say.

"China wants to use diplomacy before a confrontation. It will have no choice but to engage in a trade war if all courteous means fail," Guo, of the Central University of Finance Economics, said.

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Retaliation in reserve as China faces yuan tensions

BEIJING - Expect harsh words but no concrete retaliation from Beijing if the US labels China a currency manipulator in a report due later on Friday.

China is focused on trying to defuse tensions with the US by yielding some ground in a mini-burst of yuan appreciation and hopes that these efforts will still pay off, even if Washington brands it a manipulator.

But should the US ratchet up the pressure yet further by passing into law a bill that could penalize China, Beijing will not be so docile, Chinese analysts say.

"China is telling the US that it is willing to help to resolve the problems. Things have not gotten out of hand yet and both sides still have some room to maneuver," said Zhao Xijun, an economist at Renmin University in Beijing.

President Barack Obama's administration faces a deadline on Friday to decide whether to formally label China as a currency manipulator.

A desire to look tough on "unfair" trade practices ahead of US congressional elections on Nov. 2, in which Obama's fellow Democrats are battling to retain control of Congress, could tempt the administration to cite China for the first time in 16 years.

The Chinese commerce ministry made its feelings clear on Friday, warning the US not to make a scapegoat of the yuan. Rhetoric aside, though, Beijing knows that the currency manipulator designation carries no specific consequences, apart from forcing Obama to seek consultations with China.

Preparing for the worst

A different calculus would apply if the Senate approved a bill already passed by the House of Representatives that would allow the US to slap duties on countries with undervalued currencies.

"It will be a very serious issue if the US legislation is approved by the Senate and signed by the president," said Li Wei, a researcher under the commerce ministry.

For starters, China would challenge the US law at the World Trade Organization -- a case that some trade experts think China would be able to win.

Analysts say Beijing is also bracing for the law by considering possible retaliation, from imposing curbs on US businesses in China to the so-called nuclear option of dumping its holdings of US Treasuries.

But Beijing is not going to jump the gun. It is first taking what it sees as pre-emptive steps to keep US anger from boiling over -- and to keep the legislation from becoming law.

"If China doesn't let the yuan appreciate a little bit, foreign criticism will be stronger. China wants to avoid a trade war with the US," said Guo Tianyong, an economist at the Central University of Finance Economics in Beijing.

To that end, Beijing has allowed the yuan to gain 2.6 percent since it scrapped a 23-month dollar-peg on June 19, quickening the appreciation in recent weeks as pressure mounted.

On their own terms

Ever sensitive to appearing weak domestically, Chinese leaders have insisted that the yuan's rise is not a response to US pressure but part of a broader reform agenda to spur domestic consumption.

They have also said that currency reforms will be done on China's own gradual terms.

Central bank chief Zhou Xiaochuan told International Monetary Fund meetings in Washington that demands on China to let the yuan rise rapidly are akin to seeking a magic cure to a problem that requires a slow-working, herbal remedy.

Foreign ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu tried to inject some levity into the dispute on Thursday: "If appreciation of a currency could solve all of the world's economic problems, then what use would economists be?"

But it will be no laughing matter if the US follows up the currency manipulator report with real punitive measures.

Although retaliation by China would likely hurt its own interests, rising nationalistic sentiment on the currency issue might force the government to take a tough stance, analysts say.

"China wants to use diplomacy before a confrontation. It will have no choice but to engage in a trade war if all courteous means fail," Guo, of the Central University of Finance Economics, said.

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Sunday, December 26, 2010

China warns US bill on yuan could hurt trade ties

BEIJING - China on Thursday rejected US legislation seeking to punish Beijing for allegedly manipulating its currency, warning that pressure on the yuan issue could "severely damage" trade ties.

Beijing also said the bill -- overwhelmingly approved by the US House of Representatives on Wednesday -- violates World Trade Organization rules, and insisted it has not deliberately undervalued its currency.

Angry US lawmakers, who accuse Beijing of keeping the value of the yuan artificially low to give its exporters an unfair competitive edge, blamed the weak yuan for the loss of US jobs, just weeks ahead of key midterm elections.

"We firmly oppose the US Congress approving these bills," Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu told reporters.

"Exercising protectionism against China under the excuse of the renminbi exchange rate will only severely damage China-US trade and economic ties and have a negative impact on the two countries' economies and the world economy."

The legislation was passed even as the United States announced a resumption of military ties with China after a 10-month break, saying the two powers both wanted to avoid miscalculations in an increasingly tense region.

In Beijing, commerce ministry spokesman Yao Jian said the US bill was "inconsistent with relevant rules of the World Trade Organization to conduct an anti-subsidy investigation based on exchange rate reasons".

"China has never undervalued its currency in order to gain a competitive advantage. The US cannot use its trade deficit with China as an excuse to adopt trade protectionist measures," Yao said, state media reported.

The House bill calls on the US government to consider Beijing's currency policy as an improper trade subsidy, and expands the powers of the Commerce Department by allowing it to slap retaliatory tariffs on Chinese goods.

The chamber passed the bill by a 348-79 margin, one of its strongest showings against China in years, fuelled by voter anger at the struggling economy and joblessness near 10 percent ahead of November 2 elections.

Some critics say the yuan could be undervalued by as much as 40 percent.

"The US-China relationship is an important one in every way -- culturally, politically, diplomatically, economically, commercially -- but we need to have them play by the rules," said Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

The US Senate has signaled it will take up a companion bill after the elections, but the legislation's fate is unclear and President Barack Obama has not formally taken a position on whether he supports it.

Ahead of the vote, Obama said at a campaign-style event in Iowa that the yuan was "undervalued" and was "a contributing factor" to the yawning US trade deficit with China -- the world's second biggest economy.

"People generally think that they are managing their currency in ways that make our goods more expensive to sell and their goods cheaper to sell here," he said.

China pledged in June to loosen its grip on the yuan, which had been effectively pegged at about 6.8 to the dollar since mid-2008. Since then, the currency has gained less than two percent against the greenback.

The central bank on Thursday set the central parity rate -- the middle of the allowed trading band for the currency -- at 6.7011 to the dollar. The yuan can move up or down 0.5 percent from that rate during the trading day.

That was weaker than the 6.6936 rate set Wednesday, which was the strongest against the greenback since June's pledge.

Last week, before meeting Obama, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao rejected a drastic appreciation of the yuan, warning that it would cause Chinese companies to go bankrupt and workers to lose their jobs.

Ahead of the House vote, China's central bank issued a statement pledging to increase the flexibility of the yuan and "gradually improve the exchange rate setting mechanism" -- near-identical to the wording it used in June.

A group representing US businesses in China criticized the bill, saying it puts thousands of American jobs in export-related industries at risk and would not spur growth in the world's biggest economy.

"Blaming China won't help the US economy but this legislation may cost American jobs," John Watkins, chairman of the American Chamber of Commerce in China, said in a statement.

"We call on the US Senate to thoroughly review the proposed legislation and we hope it does not move forward in the legislative process."

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Sunday, November 14, 2010

China says pressure on yuan will not help

BEIJING - Pressuring China about its yuan exchange rate could backfire, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said on Thursday, maintaining that Washington is wrong to blame the yuan for US economic woes.

"I want to stress that appreciation of the renminbi would not resolve the problem of the deficit between the US and China and will not resolve the US domestic unemployment problem," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu told a regular news conference, using the currency's formal name.

"Trade and economic cooperation between China and the United States is mutually beneficial and a win-win proposition. We have always maintained that problems in trade and economic relations between our two countries should be appropriately resolved through consultation on an equal basis. I believe that pressure not only would fail to solve the problems; on the contrary, it could have the opposite effect."

Jiang's comments were Beijing's first official statement on the yuan after sharpened criticism from US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, who said on Wednesday that the appreciation of the Chinese currency has been too slow and limited.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry does not have a direct hand in setting exchange rate policy, and can only voice broad official positions on the issue.

US lawmakers are considering a tough new trade law aimed at pressing Beijing to raise sharply the value of the yuan, which many of them say is behind the gaping US trade deficit with China, worth $226.9 billion in 2009.

Asked about US Congress bills on the yuan, Jiang said China had been improving the currency's flexibility since June, when Beijing announced it was ending a currency peg. The yuan has risen about 1.4 percent against the dollar since then, most of that coming in the last 10 trading sessions.

"I can tell you that since June China has been advancing reform of the mechanism of renminbi exchange rate formation based on domestic and external economic and financial conditions and China's international balance of payments, and has been enhancing the elasticity of the renminbi," she said.

"The direction of reforming the renminbi exchange rate that we're adhering to will not change," Jiang added.

Geithner said he wanted China to achieve a "significant, sustained appreciation over time" and for the yuan to "fully reflect market forces."

In recent days, the yuan has scored its fastest rise since February 2008 -- a move that some analysts view as a concession to growing US rancor over the issue.

This year, Beijing and Washington have also gone through bouts of tensions over Chinese Internet censorship, US arms sales to Taiwan, Tibet and human rights, and China's disputed maritime territorial claims.

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Thursday, August 19, 2010

China starts trading Malaysian ringgit against yuan

yuan

China began trading the Malaysian ringgit against the Chinese yuan on the domestic foreign exchange market Thursday in the latest step towards making the yuan an international currency.

The People's Bank of China, the nation's central bank, set a central parity rate, to be published daily before trading starts, of 0.46204 ringgit per yuan, according to the website of the China Foreign Exchange Trading Centre (CFETC).

The yuan is allowed to move a maximum of five percent up or down against the ringgit from the central parity rate.

The band is wider than the 0.5 percent range set for the yuan and the dollar, and the three percent band for four other major currencies currently traded on the onshore market.

The move is aimed to "promote bilateral trade between China and Malaysia and facilitate using the yuan to settle cross-border trade", the CFETC said in a statement late Wednesday.

Beijing has been taking steps including promoting the use of the yuan to settle international trade and forging currency swap agreements in a bid to make the yuan a major global currency.

The central bank said earlier this week it would allow foreign financial institutions that participate in the yuan settlement program to invest their yuan proceeds in China's interbank bond market, giving those receiving yuan as payments an investment channel.

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