(1) Lingling Wei and Anjani Trivedi, 人民币缘何惨遭 '空' 袭? 华尔街日报中文版, Jan 8, 2016
cn.wsj.com/gb/20160108/fin111210.asp
, which is translated from
Lingling Wei and Anjani Trivedi, China's Shift on Yuan Strategy Backfires; Efforts to guide yuan down to spur exports send investors to the exits. Wall Street Journal, Jan 8, 2016.
http://www.wsj.com/articles/cont ... -beijing-1452178733
Quote:
"the International Monetary Fund added the Chinese yuan to its elite basket of global reserve currencies in late November [Nov 30]* * * The IMF stamp of approval * * * also, Chinese officials believed, gave them the ability to shift priorities from bolstering the yuan in the eyes of the world to enlisting the yuan in the national effort to stimulate the slowing economy, according to interviews with more than a dozen Chinese officials and advisers to the central bank. * * * [Ever since] the [Beijing] authorities have embarked on a perilous path of trying to gradually weaken the currency to help make China’s exports relatively cheaper in foreign markets, these people say.
"Even after guiding the yuan to its lowest level against the dollar in five years on Thursday, the central bank was forced ['by intervening in the Hong Kong market Thursday'] to start buying [yuan to increase its value] again to stop the decline turning into a rout at the hands of global traders, many of whom sit just off China’s mainland coast in the skyscrapers of Hong Kong. For the traders, the PBOC’s convulsions left them shellshocked as bets as big as $50 million placed by hedge funds that trade the yuan outside of China were put in jeopardy, traders said.
"The fallout in other markets [those outside China] was severe as other investors interpreted the central bank’s moves in two ways—as a sign that China’s economy is slowing more precipitously than many expected, and as an indication that the Chinese leadership isn’t on top of how to deal with it, a recurring worry since the government bungled a stock-market rescue in the summer.
"Since mid-August, when the central bank delivered a surprise devaluation, it has been blowing through the country’s foreign-exchange reserves to fend off those betting against the yuan. China’s reserves slumped a record $108 billion to $3.33 trillion as of the end of December from the previous month, data showed Thursday. The drop is nearly five times what analysts estimated.
There are prevailing "market expectations for a still-weaker yuan. In Hong Kong, where the yuan can be bought and sold freely, the Chinese currency now trades at a steep discount to its mainland cousin, whose trading is limited within a government-dictated band. The gap has led some investors to try to profit from the different exchange rates, causing irregular flow of funds across China’s borders. * * * Wary of continued weakening of the yuan, some Chinese companies are moving to pay off their [dollar-denominated] debt early.
My comment: Quotation 4 comes with a graphic. However, many reports have attributed lower foreign exchange reserve to capital flight. Likely only China's PBOC knows how much it has spent (dollars in buying yuan so as to defend yuan from too much depreciation).
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