The
People's Bank of China (PBOC) said it will raise the foreign
exchange reserve requirement ratio (RRR) by 200 basis points
(bps) to 9% from 7% from Dec. 15 to strengthen FX liquidity
management at financial institutions.
The move would force banks to set aside more of their FX
deposits, which stood at $1.02 trillion at end-November, and
markets widely believe the decision is intended to slow the
yuan's recent rapid appreciation.
The yuan has risen more than 2% against the dollar since late
July. In trade-weighted terms it is at its strongest since late
2015.
"The hike in FX RRR shows the PBOC thinks the appreciation of
the RMB is too strong and too quick," said Gary Ng, economist at
Natixis in Hong Kong.
"The move will increase the cost of speculation and forces banks
to hold more foreign currencies instead of converting them into
the RMB. With the upcoming downward economic pressure, a
excessive strong RMB may not bode well for growth, especially
with the high base in Q1 2022."
With the adjustment coming into effect on Dec. 15, the PBOC's
decision earlier this week to cut the RRR in local currency
deposits for banks by 50 bps would also be effective to free up
1.2 trillion yuan ($188.20 billion) in long-term liquidity to
bolster slowing economic growth.
However, some market analysts and traders said the PBOC's move
caught them off guard as the authorities have appeared to have a
higher tolerance for a stronger yuan over the past few months.
"It was a surprise as the U.S. Federal Reserve is already on
course for the first post-pandemic interest rate hike next
year," said Ken Cheung, chief Asian FX strategist at Mizuho Bank
in Hong Kong
"The PBOC's insistence on raising the RRR for FX deposits
suggested it is keen to stabilise the FX market."
Still, some traders said the move showed the authorities have
become uncomfortable with pace of recent yuan appreciation,
especially at a time corporates had higher demand for yuan
towards the year-end.
"It's just freezing about $20 billion and should not pile too
much downside pressure," said a trader at a Chinese bank.
"We believe that companies' FX settlement into yuan has not yet
come to an end," said Marco Sun, chief financial markets analyst
at MUFG Bank, expecting the yuan to trade in a range of 6.34 to
6.40 per dollar in the near term.
The PBOC previously raised the FX reserve requirement ratio for
financial institutions by the same margin in June to make it
more expensive for banks to hold dollars.
($1 = 6.3762 Chinese yuan)
(Reporting by Kevin Yao, Winni Zhou, Andrew Galbraith and
Beijing newsroomEditing by David Goodman, Kirsten Donovan and
Bernadette Baum)
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