HONG KONG: China’s yuan strengthened against the dollar on Tuesday after three straight sessions of losses, as investors trimmed their dollar long positions amid US recession fears, supporting the yuan and other Asian currencies.
Risk-off global investors piled into the Japanese yen on Tuesday amid fears about a tariff-driven slowdown in US growth. Analysts also noted the lack of flight to the dollar even as it has been sinking in recent weeks as noteworthy.
That also eased pressure on the yuan which had been battling with tariff and domestic economy concerns, allowing China’s central bank to scale down some support on daily fixed rate guidance.
Prior to the market opening, the People’s Bank of China set the midpoint rate, around which the yuan is allowed to trade in a 2% band, at 7.1741 per dollar, its weakest level in over a week and 856 pips firmer than a Reuters estimate.
By 0436 GMT, the yuan was 0.2% higher at 7.2450 to the dollar after trading in a range of 7.2426 to 7.2608.
“Since Trump’s inauguration, the materializing US tariff hikes have continued to keep the RMB on the back foot,” Ken Cheung, chief Asia FX strategist at Mizuho Bank, said in a note.
“But the recent USD decline gave the PBOC a sigh of relief in preserving FX stability,” he added.
Some analysts believed the recent breakthroughs in artificial intelligence from DeepSeek to Manus also served as a catalyst, but the question is how long the optimism can last.
Yuan slips against dollar
The key question over the dollar versus the yuan is whether developments in Chinese technology can challenge US exceptionalism and the dollar’s high valuation, and if this is able to resolve the binding constraints plaguing the Chinese economy, Michael Wan, senior currency analyst at MUFG, wrote in a note.
Meanwhile, DBS analysts noted that the steady yuan exchange rates also opened the window for liquidity injection.
The offshore yuan traded at 7.2448 yuan per dollar, up about 0.28% in Asian trade.
HONG KONG: China’s yuan strengthened against the dollar on Tuesday after three straight sessions of losses, as investors trimmed their dollar long positions amid US recession fears, supporting the yuan and other Asian currencies.
Risk-off global investors piled into the Japanese yen on Tuesday amid fears about a tariff-driven slowdown in US growth. Analysts also noted the lack of flight to the dollar even as it has been sinking in recent weeks as noteworthy.
That also eased pressure on the yuan which had been battling with tariff and domestic economy concerns, allowing China’s central bank to scale down some support on daily fixed rate guidance.
Prior to the market opening, the People’s Bank of China set the midpoint rate, around which the yuan is allowed to trade in a 2% band, at 7.1741 per dollar, its weakest level in over a week and 856 pips firmer than a Reuters estimate.
By 0436 GMT, the yuan was 0.2% higher at 7.2450 to the dollar after trading in a range of 7.2426 to 7.2608.
“Since Trump’s inauguration, the materializing US tariff hikes have continued to keep the RMB on the back foot,” Ken Cheung, chief Asia FX strategist at Mizuho Bank, said in a note.
“But the recent USD decline gave the PBOC a sigh of relief in preserving FX stability,” he added.
Some analysts believed the recent breakthroughs in artificial intelligence from DeepSeek to Manus also served as a catalyst, but the question is how long the optimism can last.
Yuan slips against dollar
The key question over the dollar versus the yuan is whether developments in Chinese technology can challenge US exceptionalism and the dollar’s high valuation, and if this is able to resolve the binding constraints plaguing the Chinese economy, Michael Wan, senior currency analyst at MUFG, wrote in a note.
Meanwhile, DBS analysts noted that the steady yuan exchange rates also opened the window for liquidity injection.
The offshore yuan traded at 7.2448 yuan per dollar, up about 0.28% in Asian trade.







