China’s yuan, meanwhile, goes in to Tuesday on the back of a roller-coaster couple of days. It sank on Friday and rebounded on Monday thanks to suspected dollar selling by state-owned banks as the central bank set its daily ‘fixing’ rate much stronger than analysts had expected.
The People’s Bank of China set the yuan fixing rate at 7.0996 per dollar, some 1,300 basis points lower than the market’s neutral estimate of 7.23. Analysts at Deutsche Bank said this marked the largest strengthening bias since November.
According to analysts at Rabobank, this suggests Beijing does not want the yuan to weaken excessively ahead of the U.S. presidential election in November.
Whatever the reasoning, it was a dramatic reversal from Friday, when the offshore yuan slumped 0.75% against the dollar for its biggest fall in over a year.
That was on huge volume too – spot volume on trading platform EBS was $24.2 billion, the fourth highest ever, according to CME Group, which owns EBS.