China’s Yuan Strengthens Most in Three Weeks; Bonds Decline

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China’s yuan gained the most in three weeks as the People’s Bank of China set a stronger reference rate to reflect an overnight drop in the dollar. Government bonds declined.

The ICE’s Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against the currencies of six major U.S. trading partners, slumped 1.3 percent yesterday, the most since March 19. Seven of Asia’s 10 most-active currencies excluding the yen advanced against the dollar today. China, Japan and Korea should establish a mechanism to diversify their currency reserves away from the dollar, the China Securities Journal reported, citing central bank adviser Fan Gang.

“The yuan’s reference rate, typically used by the PBOC to guide the currency’s trading, was set stronger in line with a weaker dollar in global markets yesterday,” said Gong Chao, a Beijing-based dealer at Bank of China Ltd., the nation’s biggest foreign-exchange trader. “The government will stick to a stable currency policy in the first half of the year at least.”

The currency rose 0.08 percent to 6.8294 per dollar as of 12:32 p.m. in Shanghai, according to the China Foreign Exchange Trade System. The People’s Bank of China has kept the yuan little changed since July, having allowed it to appreciate 21 percent after a dollar peg was scrapped three years earlier.

The People’s Bank of China set the currency’s reference rate at 6.8296 today, the strongest since March 20. The yuan, which is managed against a basket of the currencies of China’s trading partners, is allowed to trade by up to 0.5 percent either side of the central bank’s rate.

From Bloomberg News.
 

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China’s economy is in goof position than predictable, the Country’s Premier said, but in Japan a huge fall in wholesale prices showed the world’s second-largest economy was down back towards deflation.

Last month a jump in china’s industrial production, with a record climb in new lending, gave additional credibility to the plan that the bottom of the worst global financial crisis as the Great Depression may not be distant.
On Saturday, Premier Wen Jiabao told to the reporters in Thailand, that China’s economy had shown some latest signs, but we all know that our financial system still facing big difficulties.

The China Securities Journal reported on Monday that china was planning a new economic stimulus package targeted to increasing consumption, citing a senior officer of the State Information Center which is associated with the top planning agency of the country. The economic positions in Japan remain doubtful while in China things were looking intense.