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Home Latest News

China banks’ forex settlement deficit enhances in H1

byCustoms Today Report
24/07/2015
in Latest News
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BEIJING: China continued to see a deficit in its foreign exchange settlement in the first half of the year with expanded volume from that in the second half of 2014, official data showed here the other day.

Chinese lenders bought $866.5 billion worth of foreign currency and sold $971.9 billion, resulting in a net sale of $105.4 billion, said Wang Chunying, spokeswoman with the State Administration of Foreign Exchange.

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The forex settlement deficit stood at $62.5 billion in the second half of 2014 and China continued to see a surplus in its foreign exchange settlement in 2014, but the volume narrowed significantly, indicating easing capital inflows.

The fluctuations in cross-border capital flows have been stabilizing recently, Wang said.

The forex settlement deficit hit $91.4 billion in the first quarter, but narrowed to $13.9 billion in the second quarter. In April alone the deficit hit $17.3 billion, but May saw $1.3 billion of surplus and June reported $2.1 billion of surplus.

The strengthening US dollar was a key factor for China’s cross-border capital outflow in the first quarter, but the pace of outflow slowed in the second quarter, Wang said.

“There was no continuous large-scale capital outflow in the first half of the year. The pressure in the second quarter was down from the first quarter,” Wang said.

Forex reserves saw a similar picture. China’s forex reserves dropped $113 billion in the first quarter, but only $36.2 billion in the second quarter.

It is a common practice for banks to sell foreign currencies to firms or individuals and buy foreign currencies from them. Known as bank exchange, it can be used to measure the supply-demand relationship in the interbank forex market and impact the yuan’s exchange rate.

 

 

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