The nation's foreign exchange stockpile
climbed to $3.056 trillion in June, up by around 0.11 percent from the
previous month, according to data released by the State Administration
of Foreign Exchange on Friday.
The currency regulator attributed the
continued positive trend in the data to basically balanced foreign
exchange supply and demand and the appreciation of a basket of
currencies against the dollar.
Economists on Friday said that supported
by strong economic fundamentals and the government's efforts to open up
the domestic capital market, the reserves are likely to rise slightly
in the coming months, while remaining largely stable.
Guan Tao, former director of the
international payments department at China's State Administration of
Foreign Exchange, said during a conference on the renminbi in late June
that forex reserves appeared to have stabilized, mainly supported by
eased capital outflow pressures in recent months.
Aside from the forex reserves fall in
January to $2.998 trillion-the first since March 2011-reserves have
risen by around 1.5 percent as of June, compared with the start of the
year, the currency regulator said.
Guan said the government's enhanced
supervision of outbound investment had gradually taken effect to help
curb capital outflow pressures.
From December 2016, the government
introduced a slew of measures tightening screening of overseas
investment projects-amid concern about capital outflows and market
expectations for a continued depreciation of the yuan.
Analysts say that after the yuan
exchange rate against the dollar hit a six-year low level in December,
the yuan's performance against the greenback has been steady after the
US currency lost its upward momentum.
Wang Youxin, an economist at Bank of
China, said the central bank does not need to deplete its reserves in
order to stabilize the yuan.
More balanced cross-border flows will
also be supported by the government's efforts to open up the domestic
capital market, according to Cheng Shi, ICBC International Research
Director, referring to measures such as the mainland-Hong Kong bond
connect program.
"The program is not something that has only symbolic meaning. It will generate long-term positive impact," he said.
"An expected increase in foreign capital inflows will help offset domestic capital outflows," he said.
Source: China Daily
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