China to launch RMB/GBP trading (Reuters) Updated: 2006-07-03 16:42
China said on Monday it would allow trading between the yuan and the British
pound from Aug. 1 on its foreign exchange market, in the latest step to reform
the currency system.
China is speeding up market-based reforms to prepare for greater currency
flexibility after revaluing the yuan by 2.1 percent to the dollar and abandoning
a decade-old dollar peg for a managed float a year ago.
"Approved by the State Administration of Foreign Exchange, the China Foreign
Exchange Trade System will introduce spot, forward and swap trading between the
yuan and the pound," the interbank foreign exchange market said in a statement
posted on the official Web site (Chinamoney.com.cn).
The country's decade-old interbank market currently trades four currency
pairs between the yuan and foreign currencies -- the euro, yen, Hong Kong dollar
and U.S. dollar
That was on top of trading in eight foreign currency pairs.
The pound would be subject to a daily trading band of 3 percent from its
mid-point against the yuan, the statement said. That would be in line with the
range limiting the yuan's daily trading movements against other non-dollar
currencies.
The daily yuan/pound mid-point rate would be calculated on the basis of the
yuan's mid-point exchange rate against the U.S. dollar and the spot exchange
rate between sterling and the dollar on the international market, it said.
The People's Bank of China, the central bank, set the mid-point of the yuan's
exchange rate against the dollar on Monday at a post-revaluation high of 7.9924.
The yuan may rise or fall 0.3 percent from its mid-point each day, but it has
moved only a fraction of that range in most trading sessions since the floating
regime was introduced, allowing the yuan to appreciate 1.47 percent since
then. (For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)
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