|

PBOC sets USD/CNY reference rate at 6.8130 vs. 6.8096 previous

On Thursday, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) sets the USD/CNY central rate for the trading session ahead at 6.8130 compared to the previous day's fix of 6.8096 and 6.7752 Reuters estimate.

PBOC FAQs

The primary monetary policy objectives of the People's Bank of China (PBoC) are to safeguard price stability, including exchange rate stability, and promote economic growth. China’s central bank also aims to implement financial reforms, such as opening and developing the financial market.

The PBoC is owned by the state of the People's Republic of China (PRC), so it is not considered an autonomous institution. The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) Committee Secretary, nominated by the Chairman of the State Council, has a key influence on the PBoC’s management and direction, not the governor. However, Mr. Pan Gongsheng currently holds both of these posts.

Unlike the Western economies, the PBoC uses a broader set of monetary policy instruments to achieve its objectives. The primary tools include a seven-day Reverse Repo Rate (RRR), Medium-term Lending Facility (MLF), foreign exchange interventions and Reserve Requirement Ratio (RRR). However, The Loan Prime Rate (LPR) is China’s benchmark interest rate. Changes to the LPR directly influence the rates that need to be paid in the market for loans and mortgages and the interest paid on savings. By changing the LPR, China’s central bank can also influence the exchange rates of the Chinese Renminbi.

Yes, China has 19 private banks – a small fraction of the financial system. The largest private banks are digital lenders WeBank and MYbank, which are backed by tech giants Tencent and Ant Group, per The Straits Times. In 2014, China allowed domestic lenders fully capitalized by private funds to operate in the state-dominated financial sector.

Author

Haresh Menghani

Haresh Menghani is a detail-oriented professional with 10+ years of extensive experience in analysing the global financial markets.

More from Haresh Menghani
Share:

Editor's Picks

USD/JPY bulls pause after hawkish Fed-inspired rally to nearly two-year high

USD/JPY is seen consolidating below its highest level since July 2024, touched the previous day, with intervention fears lending support to the Japanese Yen and capping the upside amid a modest US Dollar downtick. The signing of a US-Iran peace deal to end the war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz undermines the Greenback's reserve-currency status. However, the Fed's projection of a rate increase this year favors USD bulls and should provide a tailwind for the currency pair.

AUD/USD benefits from softer USD as US-Iran deal counters Fed's hawkish tilt

AUD/USD edges higher during the Asian session on Thursday as the US Dollar retreats from its highest level since late March, touched in reaction to the Fed's hawkish tilt the previous day. The US and Iran signed a MoU aimed at ending the war and reopening the Strait of Hormuz, boosting investors' confidence and undermining the safe-haven USD. Furthermore, the RBA's signal that additional rate hikes remain possible, if inflation persists, acts as a tailwind for the Aussie.

Gold scales higher as USD trims post-Fed gains amid US-Iran peace deal

Gold attracts fresh buyers during the Asian session on Thursday, reversing part of the previous day's hawkish Fed-inspired slump to a fresh weekly low. As traders price in the possibility of a Fed rate hike this year, the signing of a US-Iran peace deal – to end the war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz – drags the safe-haven US Dollar away from its highest level since late March. This offers some support to the bullion, though the overnight failure near the 200-day SMA warrants caution for bulls.

Binance founder CZ urges governments to tokenize stock markets and launch sovereign stablecoins

Binance founder Changpeng Zhao has called on governments to tokenize their stock markets and issue sovereign stablecoins, arguing that blockchain technology can expand access to capital markets and increase the global use of national currencies. In an X post on Wednesday, CZ said countries should "tokenize their stocks, allowing worldwide buyers."

The next big AI trade may not be about chips or software
Artificial intelligence has already created some of the biggest winners in modern market history. Chipmakers have surged, data centre construction is booming, and electricity demand forecasts are changing globally.
Why a hawkish RBA is no longer enough to lift the Australian Dollar

The Reserve Bank of Australia delivered more than what markets expected: a hawkish hold that should have supported the Aussie. But markets widely ignored it, focusing instead on slowing economic growth and proving that central bank messaging alone isn’t always enough to drive currencies.