Equity Opening Calls

 | Aug 13, 2015 04:11AM ET

China is undertaking a large scale devaluation that could see the CNY depreciate 10% or more over the next 12-months. Even if officially the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) is stating that this is to make the fixing more reflective of the market rate, it is, nonetheless, a de facto devaluation.

The PBOC has come out today saying that they see no reason for the currency to depreciate further and talked down the prospect of a 10% devaluation. However, deflationary pressures and increasingly tight monetary conditions are likely to force their hand again at some point.

Today’s fixing announcement saw a further 1.1% decline from yesterday’s rate-setting. The CNY has now depreciated 3.5% this week, but this rate of decline is unlikely to continue. Towards market close yesterday there were reports of major state banks selling US dollars in the market to slow down the CNY’s decline. While the CNY fixing will take into account the close of the previous day, we may see further direct intervention in the market by state-related arms to pull the currency back to a close that provides a steadier downwards trajectory. After today’s fixing, the CNY has been trading largely unchanged - only up 70 pips. Expect further late-China session selling of the USD in the days ahead to put the close where the government wants it. The CSI 300 has not taken the news well declining 0.9% today, as concerns over companies with US dollar denominated debt weigh down the index.

The PBOC stated that based on their inflation-based real exchange rate calculations the CNY is 17% overvalued. Leaving the door open to a 10% or more devaluation. A lot of people in the market are speculating that this is primarily about boosting exports and stimulating the slowing economy. While this no doubt will help, the primary concern for the government is deflation. Producer prices declined 5.4% year-on-year in July—its biggest drop since 2009. The driving force behind China’s devaluation is to halt deflation and ease monetary conditions.

China’s growth since it introduced an undervalued fixed exchange rate in 1994 has been driven by huge credit expansion and fixed asset investment. As capital flowed into China over this period, China’s FX reserves grew to record levels, leading to phenomenal growth in the money supply. This growth machine was contingent on continued capital inflows and growing FX reserves. As soon as these stopped China was faced with tighter monetary conditions and restricted credit growth. This turnaround happened in June 2014, since then FX reserves have declined 8.5% to US$3.65 trillion. As liquidity in the banking system tightened, China began to suffer dramatically increased deflationary pressures. China’s producer prices have been declining since February 2012, but took a dire turn since China’s FX reserves began to decline in June 2014.

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