China's foreign
exchange reserves fell to near six-year lows in December, but held just above
the critical $3 trillion level (2.44 trillion pounds), as authorities stepped
in to
support the weakening yuan ahead of U.S. President-elect Donald Trump's inauguration.
China's reserves
shrank by $41 billion in December, slightly less than feared but the sixth
straight month of declines, data showed on Saturday, after a week in which
Beijing moved aggressively to punish those betting against the currency and
make it harder for money to get out of the country.
Analysts had
forecast a drop of $51 billion.
For the year as a
whole, China's reserves fell nearly $320 billion to $3.011 trillion, on top of
a record drop of $513 billion in 2015.
While the $3 trillion
mark is not seen as a firm "line in the sand" for Beijing, concerns
are swirling in global financial markets over the speed with which the country
is depleting its ammunition to defend the currency and staunch capital
outflows.
Some analysts
estimate it needs to retain a minimum of $2.6 trillion to $2.8 trillion under
the International Monetary Fund's (IMF's) adequacy measures.
If pressure on the
yuan persists, analysts suspect China will continue to tighten the screws on
outflows via administrative and regulatory means, while pouncing sporadically
on short sellers in forex markets to discourage them from building up excessive
bets against the currency.
But if it continues
to burn through reserves at a rapid rate, some strategists believe China's
leaders may have little choice but to sanction another big "one-off"
devaluation like that in 2015, which would likely roil global financial markets
and stoke tensions with the new Trump administration.
The yuan depreciated
6.6 percent against the surging dollar in 2016, its biggest one-year loss since
1994, and is expected to weaken further this year if the dollar's rally has
legs.
Adding to the
pressure, Trump has vowed to label China a currency manipulator on his first
day in office, and has threatened to slap huge tariffs on imports of Chinese
goods.
That has left
Chinese eager to get money out of the country, creating what some researchers
describe as a potentially destructive negative feedback loop, where fears of
further yuan falls spur outflows that pile fresh pressure on the currency.
"For 2016 as a
whole we estimate total capital outflows to have been around $710
billion," Capital Economics' China economist Chang Liu told Reuters in an
email.
Capital Economics
estimated net outflows in November and December alone were $76 billion and $66
billion, respectively.
The main reason
China's forex reserves fell in 2016 was because the central bank used them to
stabilise the yuan, the country's foreign exchange regulator said in a
statement after the data.
With the dollar
gaining ground, a decline in the value of other currencies held by China also
contributed to the decline, the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE)
said.
"Forex reserves
are likely to fall again in January," China's SWS MU Fund Management said
in a note, predicting the U.S. economy and the dollar would continue to
strengthen.
CLAMPDOWN ON
OUTFLOWS TIGHTENS
China has stepped up
efforts in recent weeks to shore up the yuan and curb capital outflows,
sparking speculation it wants a firm grip on the currency ahead of Trump's
inauguration on Jan. 20 and the long Lunar New Year holidays at the end of the
month.
State banks have
bought yuan and sold dollars and regulators have tightened restrictions on
individuals and companies who want to move funds out of the country, while
denying they are imposing fresh capital controls.
This week the
central bank also set higher daily guidance rates for the yuan, hiking it the
most in a decade on Friday, and Beijing was suspected of pushing up yuan
borrowing costs in Hong Kong to discourage offshore investors from making
bearish bets on the currency. [CNY/]
SAFE said in late
December that net cross-border capital outflows were expected to narrow in the
fourth quarter in 2016, while the People's Bank of China (PBOC) said last week
that it would push reforms of the yuan regime, while keeping the currency
basically stable in 2017.
The PBOC also raised
reporting requirements for overseas transfers last Friday. The reporting
threshold for cash and overseas transfers was cut to just 50,000 yuan ($7,230)
from 200,000 yuan.
Regulators recently
said they would step up monitoring of individual foreign exchange purchases to
close loopholes, but the $50,000 yearly quota would not change.
While the yuan has
soared this week as China bears down on the market, a Reuters poll showed it is
expected to slide at least 4 percent this year, largely as expectations of
interest rate hikes in the United States drive the dollar higher.
REUTERS
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