China’s Yuan Strongest Since 1993
May 14, 2011 No CommentsTimes are good for the yuan, which strengthened beyond 6.5 per dollar for the first time since 1993, Bloomberg.com reported.
The currency’s seventh weekly gain, its longest winning streak since July 2008, may damp U.S. criticism of China’s exchange-rate policy before Vice Premier Wang Qishan heads to Washington next month for talks with Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner. Consumer prices in Asia’s biggest economy rose 5.4 percent from a year earlier in March, exceeding the government’s 4 percent goal for this year.
“Inflation is still higher than what the government would like to see,” said David Cohen, a Singapore-based economist at Action Economics, who previously worked for the Federal Reserve. “The central bank is tolerating faster currency appreciation to contain import costs.”
The yuan strengthened 0.16 percent to close at 6.4910 per dollar in Shanghai, earlier touching a 17-year high of 6.4892, according to the China Foreign Exchange Trade System. It rose 0.9 percent this month, the best performance of 2011. In Hong Kong’s offshore market, the currency jumped 0.28 percent to 6.4645, the biggest gain in Bloomberg data going back to Aug. 24.


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