Of the three criteria, China only meets (a), NOT (b) and (c). China’s current account balance only averaged 1.0% of GDP over the past four quarters. The country’s net foreign exchange intervention, per US Treasury estimates, was -0.2% of GDP in the 12 months up to April 2019. Furthermore, Eastspring Singapore’s Multi Asset Solutions Team believes that China’s real effective exchange rate is currently above its 10-year average (see Fig. 1), implying the currency is ‘overvalued’, rather than ‘undervalued’, as the US Treasury claims.
Reinforcing their view were the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the People’s Bank of China (PBOC). In its latest country report, the IMF concluded that “… the Renminbi remains broadly in line with fundamentals even as the external position in 2017 was moderately stronger than implied by fundamentals…”3.
Additionally, the governor of PBOC commented on 5 August 2019 (Monday) that “the CNY exchange rate is now at an appropriate level, from both China’s economic fundamentals and market supply-demand point of views”. The central bank further explained that the depreciation of the Renminbi beyond 7 was mainly caused by unilateralism and trade protectionism.
However, given US’ stance that China is using currency devaluation to gain unfair trade advantage, the Multi Asset Solutions Team believes the Chinese authorities will be under pressure to engineer a more modest Renminbi depreciation in the near term. And, if the US authorities remain unhappy with the currency moves, a further escalation in the trade war, such as raising tariffs from 10% to 25% on USD 300 billion worth of goods, cannot be ruled out. Such an outcome will strengthen the case for further Fed rate cuts in the next few meetings, making a September cut a high possibility.
Eastspring Singapore’s Fixed Income Team is also of the view that central bank will keep the Renminbi weakness in check and that it is unlikely that China will undertake indiscriminate depreciation of the currency which could a) raise the ire of the G7/20 communiques denouncing competitive devaluation, b) jeopardise ongoing efforts to encourage domestic capital market inflows, and c) trigger capital outflow pressures.
Nonetheless, the Renminbi breaking the 7-level is an important development for the global foreign exchange market. The Chinese currency exchange rate has been regarded as a stabiliser, especially for Emerging Market (EM) currencies. Thus far, the Multi Asset Solutions Team believes that the PBOC has been keen to keep the Renminbi relatively stable. If the central bank changes its stance and the Renminbi experiences greater volatility, it may have repercussions on other Asian currencies, particularly those of small open economies, such as the Singapore dollar, the Korean won and the new Taiwan dollar.
Ultimately, Chinese authorities have made significant strides to open their domestic financial markets. China would not want to lose market credibility as its bonds are being included in the Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Index4.
Recent policy announcements have also been towards greater openness, including a more recent measure to remove shareholding limits on foreign ownership of securities, insurance and fund management firms by 2020. If the trade war poses further downside risks to China’s growth, the Multi Asset Solutions Team thinks that Chinese authorities would prefer to ease monetary conditions and loosen fiscal policy further to ensure that growth remains steady.