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Yuan Forwards Rise on Signs China May Permit Gains; Bonds Fall

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littlekracker



Yuan Forwards Rise on Signs China May Permit Gains; Bonds Fall


By Bloomberg News

March 29 (Bloomberg) -- Yuan forwards strengthened the most in four weeks on growing speculation China will allow the currency to appreciate to help tame inflation and because of general weakness in the dollar.

Traders have increased bets on how far the yuan will rise in a year since Fan Gang, an adviser to the central bank, wrote in the Melbourne-based Age newspaper on March 26 that China may resume a “managed float” of the currency. The Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against those of six major trading partners, dropped 0.4 percent, slipping for a second day.

“It’s unavoidable that China will move the currency to contain inflation,” said Liu Xin, an analyst at the Hong Kong branch of Bank of Communications Ltd., China’s fifth-biggest lender. “The broad dollar weakness also boosts demand for the Chinese currency in the NDF market.”

Twelve-month non-deliverable yuan forwards climbed 0.2 percent to 6.6633 per dollar as of 5:41 p.m. in Hong Kong, reflecting bets the currency will strengthen 2.4 percent from the spot rate of 6.8264, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The contracts are little changed so far this year, after posting gains in every quarter of 2009.

U.S. lawmakers have stepped up pressure on China to revalue the currency since Premier Wen Jiabao on March 14 rebuffed international calls for appreciation, saying the yuan isn’t undervalued. The currency was allowed to strengthen 21 percent in three years before the central bank adopted a de facto peg against the dollar in July 2008 to help Chinese exporters survive a global recession.

Inflation Outlook

“If Washington could be a bit quieter, there is a good chance China would move the currency because their biggest problem is trying to keep inflation under control,” Jim O’Neill, chief global economist for Goldman Sachs Group Inc., said in an interview with Bloomberg Television on March 26. “But it doesn’t help with Washington just shouting all the time.”

Government bonds declined today on concern inflation will quicken, eroding the value of fixed-income securities.

Consumer prices rose 2.7 percent from a year earlier in February, the biggest increase in 16 months, and the government aims to keep the inflation rate below 3 percent this year. The rate may average as much as 3 percent in the coming quarter, up from about 2 percent in the first three months of the year, according to Hu Hangyu, a Beijing-based bond analyst at Citic Securities Co., China’s biggest listed brokerage.

“People’s expectation for mildly rising inflation have driven up bond yields slowly,” Hu said.

The yield on the 3.48 percent bond due in July 2019 rose six basis points to 3.46 percent, and the price of the security slid 0.48 per 100 yuan face amount in the period to 100.16, according to the National Interbank Funding Center. The yield has dropped 17 basis points this year. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.

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