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China’s yuan has strengthened to its highest level in more than three years against the U.S. dollar, driven by growing optimism around a U.S.-Iran peace deal and sustained Chinese export strength. But the rally is raising concerns among analysts about the toll a stronger currency could take on Chinese manufacturers already grappling with deflationary pressures.
The onshore yuan was trading around 6.76 per dollar on Friday, according to Trading Economics, extending a rally that has seen the currency appreciate more than 3% against the greenback since the start of the year. The offshore yuan tracked the move, with the currency hitting levels not seen since early 2023.bofit
The People’s Bank of China has been setting its daily midpoint fixing at progressively stronger levels, but continues to guide the rate weaker than market estimates — a signal that Beijing favors measured appreciation rather than a rapid run-up. On June 2, the PBOC set the midpoint at 6.8187 per dollar, some 467 pips weaker than Reuters’ estimate, representing the largest such gap in months.sahmcapital
Much of the yuan’s strength reflects broad dollar weakness tied to shifting Middle East dynamics. The U.S. dollar index has declined as ceasefire talks between Washington and Tehran have progressed. Reports in late May of a 60-day memorandum of understanding between the U.S. and Iran to extend their ceasefire sent the dollar lower against most major currencies, though fresh U.S. strikes have periodically revived safe-haven demand for the greenback.cnbc
China’s large current account surplus and booming export receipts have provided additional structural support for the yuan, with foreign exchange conversion inflows surging to record levels earlier this year.investinglive
Analysts warn the appreciation carries economic risks. According to UPI, the gains could hurt Chinese exporters and deepen deflation risks in an economy still struggling with weak domestic demand. A February Reuters survey found that while markets broadly expected further yuan gains, policymakers were signaling resistance to rapid or uncontrolled appreciation.upi
Beijing’s toolkit includes state bank dollar purchases, adjustments to foreign exchange reserve requirements, and verbal guidance — all aimed at ensuring appreciation remains gradual. Global banks including Goldman Sachs, HSBC, and Bank of America have raised their yuan forecasts, with year-end targets ranging from 6.50 to 6.70 per dollar.investinglive
The Council on Foreign Relations noted in a June analysis that China “has been resisting pressure on its currency to appreciate for most of the past year,” underscoring the tension between market forces and policy preferences.cfr