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SHANGHAI: China’s yuan touched a two-week high on Thursday, as the central bank lifted the official guidance by the most in six weeks to reflect broad dollar weakness after comments from the US Federal Reserve appeared to be less hawkish than expected.

The US central bank delivered another 75-basis-point rate hike at the end of its July policy meeting on Wednesday, and Fed Chair Jerome Powell noted that although the labour market remained strong, other economic indicators have softened.

“The market appears to have taken the development as confirmation of its recent pricing about the future pace of Fed hikes, even though Powell left the door open to another ‘unusually large’ rate hike in the next meeting,” said Alvin Tan, strategist at RBC Capital Markets.

Yuan weakens ahead of Fed

Prior to the market’s open, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) set the midpoint rate at 6.7411 per dollar, 320 pips or 0.47% firmer than the previous fix 6.7731.

Thursday’s fix was the strongest level for the yuan in two weeks, and the biggest strengthening in percentage terms since June 16.

The firmer midpoint lifted the spot market higher.

The onshore yuan opened at 6.7534 per dollar and surged to a high of 6.7175, the strongest since July 13.

By midday, it was changing hands at 6.7473, 127 pips stronger than the previous late session close.

Traders said the yuan was mostly reacting to the soft dollar in morning deals, but some saw little upside room as the higher US yields capped the strength in the local currency.

China, along with Japan, has been a major outlier in the global tightening spree. Mary Xia, strategist at UBS said Beijing’s monetary policy stance would mainly focus on domestic macro situations.

“The necessity to inject more liquidity or cut the amount of cash banks must set aside as reserves is not huge now,” Xia said.

She expects market rates and yield on China’s government bonds to mildly rise in the remainder of this year, and the yuan to trade at 6.9 per dollar at end-December.

The PBOC has adopted a cautious approach to cash offerings this month due to ample liquidity conditions in the financial system. And a further widening in monetary policy stance with the United States could risk capital outflows and yuan depreciation.

Ken Cheung, chief Asian FX strategist at Mizuho Bank, said domestic factors including COVID-19 developments have become more important driver for the market.

“In the rest of this year, the headwinds of COVID spread and the property market rout are likely to keep the CNY under pressure,” Cheung said, expecting a steady yuan with downside bias.

The market barely reacted to a Financial Times report that China will help property developers by issuing 1 trillion yuan in loans for stalled developments.

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