Why PBOC’s New Fixing Rule Could Be Good News to Dollar?

 | May 29, 2017 04:19AM ET

U.S. to release NFP this week, long USD/JPY?


Are you ready for a strong dollar in second half of the year?
Bloomberg reported last week that China is considering changes to the way it calculates the yuan’s daily reference rate against the dollar, as policy makers may add a “counter-cyclical factor” to the yuan’s daily fixing. China’s foreign-exchange market can be driven by irrational expectations, resulting in "unreal" supply and demand that increases the risk of overshooting, according to an official statement on Chinamoney.com, run by China Foreign Exchange Trade System. The counter-cyclical factor may ease "herd actions" and help guide investors to pay more attention to economic fundamentals, according to the statement.

Some market participants view the change would give authorities more control over the fixing and restrain the influence of market pricing. We think this move reveal some of the attentions behind the Chinese central bank, which has been communicating with the Federal Reserve in the past few years.

1) Strong dollar fears
Dollar has been in a soft trend since beginning of the year, largely due to Trump policy disappointing and priced-in Fed’s rate hikes. But no one knows the Fed’s tone and plans in second half of the year. There is some rumour in the market recently that “Fed would be much more hawkish than most people think in the fourth quarter”, and definitely markets are not preparing for that. So this counter cyclical factor introduced by the PBOC could be considered as a pre-emptive move in case domestic capital flows accelerate when dollar gets firm later on. If one of the biggest central banks in Asia stands by for a stronger dollar to emerge, that is an important signal for the rest of the markets.

2) Spill over effect
The new “counter-cyclical factor” is a component that potentially drives the yuan lower versus basket of currencies, which could induce other currencies to follow the yuan. China CFETS yuan index has been digging into another fresh low after the index was introduced in 2015. A chart below shows that CNY has been in depreciation trend versus SGD, EUR.