WRAPUP 1-China’s exporters need not fear freer yuan: Mofcom

BEIJING, June 25 (Reuters) – China’s Ministry of Commerce, a long-standing opponent of a stronger yuan, fell into line on Friday behind the scrapping of the currency’s peg to the dollar but said the exchange rate would climb only gradually.

The ministry has traditionally resisted a rise in the yuan CNY=CFXS, arguing it would spell bankruptcy for many export-oriented manufacturers working on thin margins.

But Vice Commerce Minister Jiang Yaoping said the impact of the exchange rate was secondary to a host of other factors, including final demand, wages, the cost of raw materials, the level of interest rates and tax rates.

“Looking at the timing of China’s currency reform, we can say that the overall benefits to exports are greater than the damage,” he told a forum.

The People’s Bank of China said on Saturday that it would once again allow the yuan to move more freely after having kept the currency more or less pegged to the dollar for two years to provide stability for exporters during the global downturn.

The yuan has risen about 0.5 percent against the dollar since then to its highest level since its July 2005 revaluation, though gains have been kept in check by big state-owned banks. [CNY/] <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Full coverage [ID:nCHINATAKE]

PDF on yuan: r.reuters.com/fuk43m

Yuan microsite: china.thomsonreuters.com/yuan/

Yuan graphics: r.reuters.com/byq23m

Insider TV

-- Yuan to rise before G20 link.reuters.com/jes92m

-- Yuan shows confidence link.reuters.com/hyc33m

-- Some see delay tactic link.reuters.com/xad33m ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

Jiang cited conditions in 2005-2008, when Chinese exports continued to grow strongly despite a cumulative 21 percent rise in the yuan against the dollar.

But he said the pace of future currency appreciation would be gradual and rejected charges that China was unfairly holding down the yuan to give its companies an advantage in global markets.

Some Western economists believe the yuan is undervalued by as much as 40 percent.

Jiang sidestepped a question about whether exporters could cope with a yuan rise of 3 to 5 percent within a year, saying the rate of appreciation would be decided by the market.

“First, China’s yuan currency reform will be gradual. Second, accusations that China is manipulating its currency are groundless. The facts have proved that it’s not true.”

NOT TOO QUICK

A second government official also ruled out a big move in the yuan in coming months and said last Saturday’s announcement was timed to take pressure off China at this weekend’s summit of Group of 20 leading economies in Toronto.

“In the longer term, the yuan will appreciate but only very gradually,” the official, who declined to be identified, said.

The comments are likely to be grist for the mill of U.S. lawmakers who are sceptical of China’s willingness to permit a substantial rise in the value of a currency they argue is kept deliberately undervalued, to the detriment of U.S. jobs.

As the dominant player in China’s tightly controlled currency market, the PBOC could let the yuan appreciate more swiftly by scaling back its purchases of dollars.

Thanks to the central bank’s intervention down the years, China has built a stockpile of official currency reserves worth $2.45 trillion at the end of March.

With Congress weighing legislation to prod Beijing to relax its grip, U.S. President Barack Obama said China had made progress by announcing greater currency flexibility, but it was too early to say whether it would go far enough.

“The initial signs were positive. But it is too early to tell whether the appreciation, that will track the market, is sufficient to allow for the rebalancing that we think is appropriate,” Obama said on Thursday. [ID:nN24164984]

The PBOC has said the main aim of reverting to the managed float that it suspended in mid-2008 is to inject more two-way volatility into the currency, not to propel it sharply higher.

Some economists have speculated that the central bank, to underline its point, might let the yuan decline at times, for instance if the euro were to fall further against the dollar.

But the second government official ruled out this option as a political non-starter.

“It would be too costly because it would lead to more criticism and pressure from the international community,” he said.

“You know, so many eyes are now trained on China’s foreign exchange policy.” (Additional reporting by Aileen Wang; Editing by Kim Coghill)

WRAPUP 1-China’s exporters need not fear freer yuan: Mofcom

BEIJING, June 25 (Reuters) – China’s Ministry of Commerce, a long-standing opponent of a stronger yuan, fell into line on Friday behind the scrapping of the currency’s peg to the dollar but said the exchange rate would climb only gradually.

The ministry has traditionally resisted a rise in the yuan CNY=CFXS, arguing it would spell bankruptcy for many export-oriented manufacturers working on thin margins.

But Vice Commerce Minister Jiang Yaoping said the impact of the exchange rate was secondary to a host of other factors, including final demand, wages, the cost of raw materials, the level of interest rates and tax rates.

“Looking at the timing of China’s currency reform, we can say that the overall benefits to exports are greater than the damage,” he told a forum.

The People’s Bank of China said on Saturday that it would once again allow the yuan to move more freely after having kept the currency more or less pegged to the dollar for two years to provide stability for exporters during the global downturn.

The yuan has risen about 0.5 percent against the dollar since then to its highest level since its July 2005 revaluation, though gains have been kept in check by big state-owned banks. [CNY/] <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Full coverage [ID:nCHINATAKE]

PDF on yuan: r.reuters.com/fuk43m

Yuan microsite: china.thomsonreuters.com/yuan/

Yuan graphics: r.reuters.com/byq23m

Insider TV

-- Yuan to rise before G20 link.reuters.com/jes92m

-- Yuan shows confidence link.reuters.com/hyc33m

-- Some see delay tactic link.reuters.com/xad33m ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

Jiang cited conditions in 2005-2008, when Chinese exports continued to grow strongly despite a cumulative 21 percent rise in the yuan against the dollar.

But he said the pace of future currency appreciation would be gradual and rejected charges that China was unfairly holding down the yuan to give its companies an advantage in global markets.

Some Western economists believe the yuan is undervalued by as much as 40 percent.

Jiang sidestepped a question about whether exporters could cope with a yuan rise of 3 to 5 percent within a year, saying the rate of appreciation would be decided by the market.

“First, China’s yuan currency reform will be gradual. Second, accusations that China is manipulating its currency are groundless. The facts have proved that it’s not true.”

NOT TOO QUICK

A second government official also ruled out a big move in the yuan in coming months and said last Saturday’s announcement was timed to take pressure off China at this weekend’s summit of Group of 20 leading economies in Toronto.

“In the longer term, the yuan will appreciate but only very gradually,” the official, who declined to be identified, said.

The comments are likely to be grist for the mill of U.S. lawmakers who are sceptical of China’s willingness to permit a substantial rise in the value of a currency they argue is kept deliberately undervalued, to the detriment of U.S. jobs.

As the dominant player in China’s tightly controlled currency market, the PBOC could let the yuan appreciate more swiftly by scaling back its purchases of dollars.

Thanks to the central bank’s intervention down the years, China has built a stockpile of official currency reserves worth $2.45 trillion at the end of March.

With Congress weighing legislation to prod Beijing to relax its grip, U.S. President Barack Obama said China had made progress by announcing greater currency flexibility, but it was too early to say whether it would go far enough.

“The initial signs were positive. But it is too early to tell whether the appreciation, that will track the market, is sufficient to allow for the rebalancing that we think is appropriate,” Obama said on Thursday. [ID:nN24164984]

The PBOC has said the main aim of reverting to the managed float that it suspended in mid-2008 is to inject more two-way volatility into the currency, not to propel it sharply higher.

Some economists have speculated that the central bank, to underline its point, might let the yuan decline at times, for instance if the euro were to fall further against the dollar.

But the second government official ruled out this option as a political non-starter.

“It would be too costly because it would lead to more criticism and pressure from the international community,” he said.

“You know, so many eyes are now trained on China’s foreign exchange policy.” (Additional reporting by Aileen Wang; Editing by Kim Coghill)

Yuan hits post-revaluation high ahead of G20 summit

SHANGHAI, June 25 (Reuters) – The yuan CNY=CFXS climbed on Friday to its highest since its July 2005 revaluation after the central bank set the daily reference rate at a post-revaluation high in an apparent goodwill gesture ahead of the G20 summit.

But trade was sluggish with market players cautious over how much the yuan could appreciate in the near term, despite a gain so far of 0.5 percent in the first week after China’s weekend announcement of a depegging from the dollar, marking the biggest weekly gain since December 2008.

Weekly volatility in the spot yuan rate versus the dollar hit its highest since mid-2008, when China repegged the yuan to the dollar to help ease the impact of the global financial crisis on its economy.

Spot yuan’s range for the week ran to 416 pips and averaged more than 200 pips per day, compared with moves of only a few pips per day during the two-year dollar peg. [ID:nTOE65M062]

Many dealers expect two-way volatility to remain the norm after China’s weekend currency policy reform, although the yuan’s rise will not likely be enough to satisfy U.S. lawmakers and other critics who want the yuan to rise as much as 40 percent. China is not expected to accept such a demand.

“Beijing told us that any appreciation would be gradual, and that is what is happening, with the reference rate for the yuan against the dollar today set little more than half a percent stronger than where it was last Friday,” said Brian Jackson, strategist with Royal Bank of Canada in Hong Kong.

“But the rest of the G20 was not born yesterday, and there may be some suspicion that the move over the last week was just window-dressing to take the exchange rate issue off the top of the agenda at this weekend’s summit,” he said.

“To reduce the risk of trade tensions, we will need to see further yuan gains in the days and weeks ahead.”

A Reuters poll of 33 economists projected that China would be true to its word and prevent a sharp rise in the newly unshackled yuan, with a median forecast of a 2.4 percent rise over the next year from the level before depegging. [ID:nSGE65L01H]

The yuan gave up some early gains to trade at 6.7926 to the dollar at midday, still up from Thursday’s close of 6.7997 but lower than Friday’s central bank mid-point of 6.7896, which was up sharply from Thursday’s mid-point of 6.8100. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Full coverage [ID:nCHINATAKE] PDF on yuan: r.reuters.com/fuk43m Yuan microsite: china.thomsonreuters.com/yuan/ Yuan graphics: r.reuters.com/byq23m Insider TV

-- Yuan to rise before G20 link.reuters.com/jes92m

-- Yuan shows confidence link.reuters.com/hyc33m

-- Some see delay tactic link.reuters.com/xad33m ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

MIXED SIGNALS

U.S. administration officials and some lawmakers appear to have differing views over the initial rise in the yuan.

U.S. President Barack Obama said in Washington on Thursday that China had made progress by announcing greater currency flexibility, but it was too early to tell if the yuan’s rise would be enough to help rebalance world growth.

“We did not expect a complete 20 percent appreciation overnight, for example, simply because that would be extremely disruptive to world currency markets and to the Chinese economy,” Obama said. [ID:nN24164984]

A U.S. lawmaker said on Thursday, however, that the United States should keep open a bill that would pressure China to raise the value of its currency.

“I think we need to keep that legislation on the burner. I think whether we act on it will be affected by what China does,” House of Representatives Ways and Means Committee Chairman Sander Levin told reporters. [ID:nN24134208]

China announced over the weekend that it would allow the yuan’s exchange rate to move more freely but it has made it clear that its currency reform would be gradual and controllable.

It is widely believed in the domestic market that China will not make any further concessions and that fresh pressure from U.S. lawmakers would very likely backfire due to more volatile market and economic conditions since the global financial crisis.

The euro zone’s debt woes have cast doubt on the pace of China’s economic recovery, reminding Beijing how vulnerable the world’s third-largest economy is to a global slowdown.

Chinese economists often argue that Western critics underestimate that vulnerability, especially given how far China’s per capita income lags developed countries.

They say it may be inappropriate to apply Western standards to the currency of a country whose per capita GDP is only one-20th that of the United States.

Caution about Beijing’s stance was reflected in the offshore forwards markets. Benchmark dollar/yuan one-year non-deliverable forwards (NDFs) rose to 6.6750 bid by midday from Thursday’s close of 6.6670, with implied yuan appreciation over that period falling to 1.72 percent from 2.14 percent the previous day. (Editing by Edmund Klamann)

PBOC adviser sees yuan rising 3 pct vs dlr in 2010

June 24 (Reuters) – The yuan is likely to rise about 3 percent against the dollar by the end of this year, assuming the euro stays around current levels against the U.S. dollar, Li Daokui, a central bank adviser, said on Thursday.

Li, one of three academic members of the People’s Bank of China monetary policy advisory committee, said the reform of the exchange rate regime announced at the weekend would help tame inflation.

But, in an interview with Reuters, Li said depegging of the yuan would have a limited impact on China’s interest rate decision-making.

Li, an economics professor at Tsinghua University in Beijing, also said freeing up the yuan was unlikely to trigger big inflows or outflows of capital.

The PBOC said on Saturday that it would once again let the yuan move more freely after having kept the currency more or less pegged to the dollar for two years to provide stability for exporters during the global downturn.

The yuan CNY=CFXS drifted slightly lower on Thursday to around 6.8141 per dollar, representing a rise of about 0.2 percent since the long-awaited policy shift. [CNY/] (Reporting by Chen Min and Alan Wheatley; Editing by Chris Lewis)

Yuan edges up in NDFs, political risks re-emerge

SHANGHAI, June 24 (Reuters) – Dollar/yuan offshore forwards edged lower on Thursday, implying slightly higher yuan appreciation that dealers said was now settling at reasonable levels after the weekend’s official depegging from the dollar, although political risks resurfaced.

Political concerns intensified overnight when several U.S. lawmakers renewed calls for legislation to press China on yuan appreciation, casting uncertainty over how willing the People’s Bank of China will be to allow the yuan to move in the short term and making even a slight yuan rise implied in NDFs appear potentially risky.

Spot yuan CNY=CFXS drifted lower against the dollar as some banks and their clients now have too few dollars on hand, after the PBOC’s weekend announcement it would depeg the yuan from the the U.S. currency spurred them to aggressively sell dollars on Monday, to bet on yuan appreciation.

Trading was sluggish on Thursday, after China’s state-owned banks bought dollars heavily on behalf of the PBOC in the spot market on Tuesday and continued sporadic buying on Wednesday, dealers said, effectively helping the Chinese central bank to take back control of the yuan’s value by draining dollar supply.

“After a flood of dollars into the (spot) market, those who sold them too cheaply early in the week must buy them back at higher prices if they need them,” said a dealer at a major Chinese commercial bank in Shanghai.

“The market has had to learn that the central bank is still in firm control of the yuan’s value. With speculation dying down, real demand is pushing the dollar slightly higher.”

The yuan was quoted at 6.8134 to the dollar at midday, slightly weaker than Wednesday’s close of 6.8124 and Thursday’s central bank mid-point of 6.8100, which was little changed from Wednesday’s mid-point of 6.8102.

The yuan moved in a 57-pip range on Thursday, shrinking from the daily ranges of 300 pips or more early in the week but still much wider than the moves of only a few pips per day seen during most of the two-year dollar peg. <^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Full coverage [ID:nCHINATAKE] PDF on yuan: r.reuters.com/fuk43m Yuan microsite: china.thomsonreuters.com/yuan/ Yuan graphics: r.reuters.com/byq23m Insider TV

-- Yuan to rise before G20 link.reuters.com/jes92m

-- Yuan shows confidence link.reuters.com/hyc33m

-- Some see delay tactic link.reuters.com/xad33m ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

POLITICAL RISKS

U.S. senators said on Wednesday they were unmoved by China’s steps to partially free the yuan since the weekend and vowed to push forward legislation to punish a yuan misalignment they say distorts trade and steals U.S. jobs. [ID:nN23216546]

China announced over the weekend that it would allow the yuan’s exchange rate to move more freely but it has made it clear that its currency reform would be gradual and controllable.

It is widely believed in the domestic market that China will not concede any more from its present stance and fresh pressures from U.S. lawmakers are very likely to backfire.

“Market and economic conditions have changed so much since the global financial crisis that it is unrealistic to think China still has firm plans to allow the yuan to appreciate to a certain degree in a certain period of time,” said a senior trader at a major European bank in Shanghai.

“The best China can do is to show that it is friendly, it is cooperative and it is willing to change in line with market and economic conditions.”

The latest euro zone debt crisis has cast doubt on the pace of China’s economic recovery, giving a warning to Beijing once again how vulnerable the world’s third-largest economy is to a global slowdown.

Chinese economists often argue that Western critics underestimate that vulnerability, especially given how far China’s per capita income lags developed countries.

They say it may be inappropriate to apply Western standards to the currency of a country whose per capita GDP is only one-20th that of the United States.

Caution about Beijing’s stance was reflected in the offshore forwards markets, where speculators were wary about shorting dollars and suspected that Beijing’s currency moves after the weekend were aimed primarily at appeasing critics before the G20 summit late this week.

Benchmark one-year dollar/yuan NDFs CNY1YNDFOR= eased to 6.6670 bid by midday from Wednesday’s close of 6.6700, with implied yuan appreciation over that period rising to 2.14 percent from 2.10 percent the previous day.

Three-month NDFs’ implied yuan appreciation rose to 0.62 percent from Wednesday’s 0.56 percent, as measured from the central bank’s spot mid-point. (Editing by Edmund Klamann)

FOREX-Euro, Aussie pare post-yuan fixing gains

TOKYO, June 22 (Reuters) – The euro slipped on Tuesday, returning gains as China’s yuan retreated against the dollar after an early surge, prompting short-term speculators to cut back on their initial buying of risky currencies including the Australian dollar.

The euro and the Australian dollar hit their highs for the day after China’s central bank set the yuan’s daily mid-point at 6.7980 against the dollar, stronger than Monday’s 6.8275 per dollar and the highest since the yuan’s revaluation in 2005.

Traders initially took this as a sign China could allow the yuan to rise further. But the climb in the euro and the Australian dollar was short-lived as spot yuan CNY=CFXS slumped back versus the dollar after rising to a fresh post-revaluation high of 6.7900 in early trade.

“The euro and the Aussie slipped simply because the yuan eased, with some players suspecting Chinese authorities might be intervening to rein in the yuan’s rise,” said a senior FX trader at a big Japanese brokerage.

The market took the yuan 0.42 percent higher on Monday, its biggest one-day rise since the 2005 revaluation. But dealers fear the central bank will not let the market keep boosting the yuan at the pace seen that day.

Chinese state-owned banks are aggressively buying dollars and selling the yuan, traders said, but it was not clear if the buying was due to Chinese central bank intervention to keep the yuan stable. [ID:nBJD003806]

The euro EUR= dipped 0.1 percent to $1.2307, off the day’s peak of $1.2355. It hit a one-month high of $1.2490 on trading platform EBS on Monday after China pledged to allow the yuan to rise, boosting confidence in the global economy.

Near-term support was seen at $1.2253, a 38.2 percent Fibonacci retracement of the rise from a four-year low of $1.1875 on June 7 to Monday’s high of $1.2490.

On the other hand, the dollar index .DXY was up 0.1 percent at 85.97, holding well above support at 85.13. The index posted a bullish reversal on Monday, suggesting more gains for the greenback in the near term.

Beijing’s vow of flexibility for the yuan, which should boost purchasing power and demand in the the world’s third-largest economy, had initially fuelled a rally in risky assets on Monday.

But the rally ebbed with not much follow-through buying, with China’s move undertaken primarily for political purposes, analysts said.

Leaders of the Group of 20 leading industrialised and developing economies are to meet this weekend in Toronto, where global trade imbalances are expected to be a key issue.

China on Monday ruled out a one-off revaluation and said it will reform its exchange rate regime in a gradual manner. [ID:nBJC002566]

“The Chinese decision provided a welcoming short-term distraction in a market gripped by fear and anxiety, but the underlying European fiscal headaches and global growth uncertainties remain unaltered,” wrote Matthew Strauss, currency strategist at RBC Capital.

<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Main yuan coverage [ID:nCHINATAKE]

Winners and losers from a firmer yuan [ID:nTOE65K02D]

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

Some traders said they expect the yuan to be a short-term trading factor until a bigger trend comes to the market.

RBC’s Strauss said the euro’s failure to break past resistance near $1.25 was likely to result in a period of weakness for the single currency.

Against the yen, the euro was down 0.3 percent at 111.89 yen EURJPY=R, having shed about 0.2 percent on Monday.

The euro in recent months has moved with swings in risk appetite. On Monday, the 25-day rolling correlation between the euro and the S&P 500 .SPX was at a robust 54 percent.

The fading risk rally was also evident in stock markets.

The Australian dollar AUD=D4, which had gained 1.4 percent in the previous session, was at $0.8783, with support at $0.8750 — Monday’s low — and strong resistance at Monday’s $0.8860 high.

The Aussie earlier jumped to hit the day’s peak at $0.8834 after the yuan mid-point fixing. (Additional reporting by Anirban Nag in Sydney and Satomi Noguchi in Tokyo; Editing by Joseph Radford)

FOREX-Euro, Aussie pare post-yuan fixing gains

TOKYO, June 22 (Reuters) – The euro slipped on Tuesday, giving back gains made after China set the yuan’s mid-point at its highest since the yuan’s revaluation in 2005, as players wondered how fast the Chinese authorities would let their currency rise.

The euro and the Australian dollar hit their highs for the day after China’s central bank set the yuan’s daily mid-point at 6.7980 against the dollar, stronger than Monday’s 6.8275 per dollar. Traders took it as a sign it could allow the yuan to rise further.

The rise in the euro and the Australian dollar was short-lived, however, as spot yuan CNY=CFXS eased against the dollar after soaring to its highest level since its July 2005 revaluation.

“The euro and the Aussie slipped simply because the yuan eased, with some players suspecting Chinese authorities might be intervening to rein in the yuan’s rise,” said a senior FX trader at a big Japanese brokerage.

The market took the yuan 0.42 percent higher on Monday, its biggest one-day rise since the 2005 revaluation. But dealers fear the central bank will not let the market keep boosting the yuan at the pace seen the previous day.

The euro EUR= dipped 0.1 percent to $1.2298, off the day’s peak of $1.2355. It hit a one-month high of $1.2490 on trading platform EBS on Monday after China pledged to allow the yuan to rise, boosting confidence in the global economy.

Near-term support was seen at $1.2253, a 38.2 percent Fibonacci retracement of the rise from a four-year low of $1.1875 on June 7 to Monday’s high of $1.2490.

On the other hand, the dollar index .DXY was up 0.1 percent at 86.01, holding well above support at 85.13. The index posted a bullish reversal on Monday, suggesting more gains for the greenback in the near term.

Beijing’s vow of flexibility for the yuan, which should boost purchasing power and demand in the the world’s third-largest economy, had initially fuelled a rally in risky assets on Monday.

But the rally ebbed with not much follow-through buying, with China’s move undertaken primarily for political purposes, analysts said. Leaders of the Group of 20 leading industrialised and developing economies are to meet next week in Toronto, where global trade imbalances are expected to be a key issue.

China on Monday ruled out a one-off revaluation and said it will reform its exchange rate regime in a gradual manner. [ID:nBJC002566]

“The Chinese decision provided a welcoming short-term distraction in a market gripped by fear and anxiety, but the underlying European fiscal headaches and global growth uncertainties remain unaltered,” wrote Matthew Strauss, currency strategist at RBC Capital.

<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Main yuan coverage [ID:nCHINATAKE]

Winners and losers from a firmer yuan [ID:nTOE65K02D]

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

Some traders said they expect the yuan to be a short-term trading factor until a bigger trend comes to the market.

RBC’s Strauss said the euro’s failure to break past resistance near $1.25 was likely to result in a period for weakness for the single currency. Against the yen, the euro was down 0.3 percent at 111.94 EURJPY=R, having shed about 0.2 percent on Monday.

The euro in recent months has moved with swings in risk appetite. On Monday, the 25-day rolling correlation between the euro and the S&P 500 .SPX was at a robust 54 percent.

The fading risk rally was also evident in stock markets.

The Australian dollar AUD=D4, which had gained 1.4 percent in the previous session, was at $0.8785, with support at $0.8750 — Monday’s low — and strong resistance at Monday’s $0.8860 high.

The Aussie jumped to hit the day’s peak at $0.8834 after the yuan mid-point fixing. (Additional reporting by Anirban Nag in Sydney and Satomi Noguchi in Tokyo; Editing by Chris Gallagher)

Chinese c.bank sets yuan mid-point at 6.8259

SHANGHAI, April 12 (Reuters) – The central bank set the
mid-point of the yuan’s CNY=CFXS CNY=SAEC exchange rate
against the dollar on Monday, little changed from Friday, despite
mounting speculation that China may soon shift currency policy.

Mid-point Previous day’s mid-point Previous day’s close

6.8259 6.8260 6.8239

Expectations that China will let the yuan resume its rise, in
one form or another, have grown in tandem with a recent easing in
Sino-U.S. tensions over the currency. Markets are speculating
that the yuan could be depegged by mid-year.

The People’s Bank of China, the central bank, issues the
mid-point data through the interbank market, the China Foreign
Exchange Trade System (www.chinamoney.com.cn).

The yuan may rise or fall 0.5 percent from its mid-point each
day, but it has moved only a small fraction of its band in most
trading sessions since it was revalued by 2.1 percent to 8.11 per
dollar on July 21, 2005.

In the three years following the revaluation, the central
bank allowed the yuan to appreciate a further 19 percent against
the dollar. The yuan’s traded peak since the revaluation was
6.8099, reached on Sept. 23, 2008.

Since July 2008, however, the central bank has used the
mid-point to keep the yuan at a virtual peg to the dollar within
a narrow 100-pip range, to protect China’s economy as it
confronted a slowdown due to the global financial crisis.
(Reporting by Chen Yixin and Edmund Klamann)

Chinese c.bank sets yuan mid-point at 6.8266

SHANGHAI, March 29 (Reuters) – The central bank set the
mid-point of the yuan’s CNY=CFXS CNY=SAEC exchange rate
against the dollar on Monday as follows.

Mid-point Previous day’s mid-point Previous day’s close

6.8266 6.8268 6.8270

SOURCE: The People’s Bank of China, the central bank, issues
the data through the interbank market, the China Foreign Exchange
Trade System (www.chinamoney.com.cn).

The yuan may rise or fall 0.5 percent from its mid-point each
day, but it has moved only a small fraction of its band in most
trading sessions since it was revalued by 2.1 percent to 8.11 per
dollar on July 21, 2005.

In the three years following the revaluation, the central
bank allowed the yuan to appreciate a further 19 percent against
the dollar. The yuan’s traded peak since the revaluation was
6.8099, reached on Sept. 23, 2008.

Since July 2008, however, the central bank has used the
mid-point to keep the yuan at a virtual peg to the dollar within
a narrow 100-pip range, to protect China’s economy as it
confronted a slowdown due to the global financial crisis.
(Reporting by Chen Yixin and Edmund Klamann)

Research and Markets: Name, Website, Stock Code, Main Business, Revenue and Profit in Past 5 of the Global Top 500 Companies Report for Mining and Metal – 2008-2009 Edition

DUBLIN–(Business Wire)–
Research and Markets
(http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/b0c6d9/global_top_500_rep) has
announced the addition of the “Global Top 500 Report of Mining and Metal,
2008-2009″ report to their offering.

This top 500 report is based over 1,000 mining companies (excluding coal,
petroleum and natural gas) and metal companies (excluding metalworks) are listed
over 50 stock exchanges in the world, by downloading their latest annual reports
and financial reports, and according to the indices such as the turnover, net
profit and total assets.

With the increasingly processing of industrialization and urbanization, China’s
demand for mineral resource remained strong. China has accelerated its move of
oversea acquisitions and enhanced its mineral resource reserves since 2009. For
example, Aluminium Corporation of China Limited plans to invest CNY19.5 billion
over Rio Tinto, the tender offer from China Minmetals Corp over Oz Minerals with
a sum of US $1.7 billion, and the Loan-for-Oil agreements with Brazil and
Russia.

In addition, the large steel corporations like Wisco, Nonfemet, Angang, and
Shougang have also accelerated their move of oversea mineral resource
acquisition. The iron ore producer of NMDC and the zinc producer of BINANI from
India are also planning their oversea acquisitions.

This report firstly gives the full picture of the turnover, net profit and total
assets, of global top 500 mining and metal companies in FY 2007, considering
some companies have not issued their FY 2008 annual reports yet, the 2008 data
will be released in a few months.

Followed by the description of mining industry and investment in different
continents, and recommend 23 countries rich in mineral resources, and deserving
to invest.

Then the profile of global top 500 including the company name, website, stock
code, main business, revenue and profit in past five years.

Finally, the series gives an in-depth analysis of global top 120 including their
financial results, operations and products besides company profile.

Notes:

1 The rank was by turnover in FY2007.

2 All the local currencies are converted into US dollar according to the
exchange rate in Jan, 2008.

Key Topics Covered:
1 Global Top 500 Mining and Metal Companies
2 Australia
3 Asia
4 Europe
5 Africa
6 America
7 Overview of Global Top 500 Mining and Metal Companies
8 Analysis of Global Top 120 Mining and Metal Companies

For more information visit

http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/b0c6d9/global_top_500_rep

Research and Markets
Laura Wood
Senior Manager
press@researchandmarkets.com
Fax from USA: 646-607-1907
Fax from rest of the world: +353-1-481-1716

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