China Daily (Hong Kong)

Capital outflows may crimp forex reserves

Nation’s foreign exchange holdings drop by $36.6b from January to April

- By CHEN JIA chenjia@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s $3.12 trillion foreign exchange reserve may further decline under the pressure of capital outflows, said experts, predicting a stronger US dollar supported by the Fed’s possible interest rate hike in June.

The nation’s foreign exchange reserves, which were used as a currency defense when the yuan suffered strong depreciati­on pressure two years ago, has dropped $36.6 billion from January to April, after 12 months of growth since February 2017, according to data from the central bank.

Due to the continuall­y strengthen­ing US dollar, on Monday, the onshore Chinese yuan’s spot exchange rate hit its lowest level since Jan 23 to 6.3888 per dollar, and the offshore yuan declined by 150 points to lower than 6.38 on the same trading day.

The 10-year US Treasury yields, which usually have a positive correlatio­n with the US dollar and the Federal funds rate, exceeded 3.1 percent last week, up from 2.8 percent a month earlier, the highest level since May 2011, which has sparked turbulence in some emerging markets including Argentina and Turkey.

Regional financial vulnerabil­ity is emerging as those emerging economies increased interest rates to deal with surging capital outflows, resulting the gap has fallen to 60 basis points.

“If there were major fund outflows and excessive market volatility, the central bank could be pressured to hike local interest rates to support the currency and avert underminin­g investor confidence,” said Jonathan Cornish, an analyst with the global credit ratings agency Fitch Ratings.

But any local rate increase could pressure the asset quality of domestic enterprise­s and increase funding costs, especially given the current high level of private-sector credit in China, although the PBOC has responded to recent Fed hikes, according to Cornish, who predicted the Fed’s fund rate to be 2.50 percent at the year end and 3.25 percent by 2019.

Pedro Martins, chief emerging markets equity strategist and head of LatAm Equity Research with JPMorgan, predicted that US policy rates should gradually move upward within two years, and the central bank balance sheet normalizat­ion will likely result in rising long-term rates over time in emerging markets.

“There is limited room for further sovereign spread compressio­n across emerging markets,” he said.

“The drivers behind emerging markets’ economic growth are growing large and include a solid pickup in global trade fueling more benign emerging market dynamics via a sustained rise in private sector confidence and the credit impulse turning positive for the first time since 2014.”

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