Yuan slides past key 6.9/dollar mark on fresh U.S.-China tensions

Reuters

Published May 17, 2019 01:46AM ET

Yuan slides past key 6.9/dollar mark on fresh U.S.-China tensions

SHANGHAI (Reuters) - China's yuan fell past the psychologically-important 6.9 per dollar level to its weakest in nearly five months on Friday, amid signs of an escalation in Sino-U.S. trade tensions.

The Chinese currency is set for a fifth straight weekly loss and has already shed around 2.5 percent to the dollar since U.S. President Donald Trump said on May 5 he was going to raise tariffs on $200 billion of Chinese imports.

Market sentiment has been hurt further by U.S. government moves to block China's Huawei Technologies from buying vital American technology, throwing into question prospects for sales at some of the largest tech companies and drawing a sharp rebuke from Beijing.

Traders and analysts said many corporate clients had set the strike price for their option contracts at around 6.9 per dollar, meaning a breach of that level could quickly send the Chinese currency to 7.

The yuan has lost all its gains made this year. Markets are now debating whether the authorities will let the renminbi breach the 7 per dollar level, which was last seen during the global financial crisis.

Prior to market opening, the People's Bank of China (PBOC) lowered the midpoint rate to 6.8859 per dollar, 171 pips or 0.25 percent weaker than the previous fix of 6.8688. Friday's fixing was the weakest since Dec. 27, 2018.

In the spot market, onshore yuan opened at 6.9000 per dollar, fell to a low of 6.9099 at one point, the softest level since Dec. 24, 2018.

At midday, spot yuan was changing hands at 6.9068, 228 pips weaker than the previous late session close and 0.30 percent softer than the midpoint.

If the yuan finishes late night trade at the midday level, it would have lost 1.3 percent to the dollar for the week, the biggest weekly loss since July 2018.

But losses in the onshore yuan were capped as several traders said investors were unwilling to test fresh lows below 6.9 per dollar - a level the market widely believes the authorities will guard to prevent it from sinking further.

"The market does not dare to buy a lot of dollars, as investors are worried that the central bank could step in any time soon," said a trader at a Chinese bank.

Philip Wee, FX strategist at DBS, said the yuan was likely to be capped at 7 per dollar ahead of a possible meeting between President Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping at the G20 summit in late June.

"Assuming the Xi-Trump meeting takes place next month, no one expects a trade deal, if any, to roll back existing tariffs but to hold off Trump's threat to hit a 25 percent tariff on the remaining $325 billion of Chinese goods," he said in a note on Friday.