Chinese Yuan Closes Below 7 per Dollar
Thursday, April 10th, 2008
The Chinese yuan ended the domestic OTC trading session today below 7 yuan per U.S. dollar level — for the first time since the end of the peg to dollar in 2005.
The Chinese yuan ended the domestic OTC trading session today below 7 yuan per U.S. dollar level — for the first time since the end of the peg to dollar in 2005.
The Chinese yuan rose to the highest rate against the U.S. dollar since the end of the yuan’s peg to dollar in 2005 as the government is believed to start fighting the domestic inflation rate more devotedly.
The Chinese yuan rose to its new highest rate against the U.S. dollar since the end of a currency’s peg to the dollar in 2005.
The People’s Bank of China released a monetary policy report for the fourth quarter of 2007 today. In this report, Chinese monetary authorities noted that the yuan’s appreciation really helps in fighting the national inflation.
Today was the fifth straight day when the Chinese yuan grew against the U.S. dollar and other major Forex currencies after the People’s Bank of China introduced its new anti-inflation policy.
The Chinese yuan continued its triumph this week and was set at a new record high value against the U.S. dollar today at the Shanghai Foreign Currency Trade session.
With almost every day on Forex being bullish for the Chinese yuan, today it continued its appreciation against other major currencies and particularly against the U.S. dollar, which is now in a bearish trend after the latest Fed’s rate cut.
France’s European Affairs Minister Jean-Pierre Jouyet said today in St. Julians, Malta, at the press-conference devoted to the euro’s introduction to Malta, that the European economy can’t cope with the current exchange rates of the European currency against its major foreign counterparts - yuan, yen and dollar.
According to the China Foreign Exchange Trading System, the dollar/yuan central parity rate was set at its record low since the scrap of peg to dollar - 7.2775; down from 7.2996 previous recent record level.
The United States Treasury International Capital report showed that China has been selling its Treasuries for a third month in a row in October 2007, which may signal for the start of the funds diversification.