Namely, traders were looking for a haven play; with gold and most other assets not providing such a place, a rush to the US dollar took place. Furthermore, a power play by China’s president Xi during the communist party congress wrapped up on October 22 ensures his reign for the foreseeable future, further depressing the yuan.  Welt’s Holger Zschaepitz took to Twitter on October 23 to proclaim that the yuan had just hit its lowest level since 2007.  He added:

Depreciation pressure

On October 21, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) set the midpoint rate at 7.1186 per dollar, in an attempt to cap the downside of the yuan.  In the interval, Maybank analysts stated that the Forex markets premium for US/CNH could widen given the caps, claiming that “such signs of depreciation pressure could also spill over to regional EM FX.”

Tensions with the US

Despite the yuan conversion into the US dollar by Chinese traders, the distrust between the two superpowers seems to be at the highest level.  The chips act passed in the US was primarily aimed at bringing chip manufacturing back to US soil; however, it represented a result of more wide-ranging tensions between the US and China.  Recently, US-listed Chinese firms are facing more trouble as well as Nasdaq reportedly halted initial public offering (IPO) for a handful of small companies that had seen returns as high as 2,000% during their first day of trading.  Oversees investors bought up huge amounts of these IPO stocks, allegedly pushing the price up and increasing distrust towards Chinese IPOs on US markets.  Buy stocks now with Interactive Brokers – the most advanced investment platform Disclaimer: The content on this site should not be considered investment advice. Investing is speculative. When investing, your capital is at risk.