WikiBit 2026-01-26 18:02China has fixed the yuan at its strongest level since 2023, betting on continued U.S. policy that ke
China has fixed the yuan at its strongest level since 2023, betting on continued U.S. policy that keeps the dollar weak. According to Xinhua, the currency has stayed below the 7 yuan‑per‑dollar mark, strengthening to 6.9843 yuan per dollar on Monday.
Peoples Bank of China Sets Yuan Stronger as Dollar Weakens
China has signaled it is ready to strengthen its currency.
The People‘s Bank of China (PBOC), the institution that sets what’s called the daily fixing price of the yuan, has allowed the currency to reach its strongest level since May 2023.
In its latest fixing operation, the PBOC fixed the exchange rate at 6.9843 yuan per dollar, taking it under the 7 yuan per dollar mark, a figure considered a benchmark for Chinas monetary policy.
The strengthening of the yuan can be seen as a move to level the playing field, as the dollar index (DXY) has also fallen 10% during the last year.
He Wei, an economist at Beijing-based research firm Gavekal Dragonomics, agreed with this take. He stated:
“The PBOC seems happy to permit more appreciation against the dollar, as long as the dollar‘s weakness against other currencies means that the renminbi’s competitiveness is little affected.”
Rumors of a possible intervention to aid the yen, with help from the U.S. Treasury, selling dollars to strengthen the Japanese currency, have also affected forex markets worldwide, as it is seen as a development to avoid a possible treasury selloff by the Japanese government.
Takayuki Kobayashi, a senior official of Takaichis Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), declared that this could be troublesome for international markets. “Using reserves set aside for currency intervention would require selling U.S. Treasuries. That could affect markets,” he assessed.
Nonetheless, Wei states that the PBOC will be cautious about further strengthening the yuan. “Given Chinas economic growth is still highly dependent on exports, the PBOC may not yet be willing to risk a more significant appreciation of the currency,” he concluded.
Read more: De‑Dollarization Reaches Critical Phase: Chinas Yuan Adoption for Cross‑Border Flows Tops 50%
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