BEIJING, July 16 (Xinhua) -- China's currency, the yuan, hit a new high
against the U.S. dollar on Monday, according to the Chinese Foreign Exchange
Trading System.
The value of the yuan, or RMB, went up 50 basis points from last Friday's
7.5731 against the U.S. dollar to open for trade on Monday at 7.5681, the
highest rate since the yuan was revalued by 2.1 percent from 8.28 yuan in July
2005.
It is the 51st time that the yuan's value has hit a record this year,
climbing by 2,406 basis points from 7.8087 on the last trading day of 2006.
Market observers said the yuan was brought under pressure, with the United
States complaining a slow appreciation gave Chinese exporters unfair trading
advantages.
China's customs authorities said the country's monthly trade surplus hit a
new high of 26.91 billion U.S. dollars in June, up 85.5 percent over the same
month last year.
This was mainly because domestic companies, whose export tax rebates were
cut on July 1, were rushing exports, said Huang Guohua, senior analyst with the
General Administration of Customs.
The government announced on June 19 it would cut or eliminate export tax
rebates for 2,831 commodities from July 1 in an attempt to "suppress overheated
export growth and ease frictions between China and its trade partners".
With June's consumer price index, China's inflation rate, predicted to
remain above three percent, the market expectation for an interest rate hike had
also pushed up the yuan's value, according to the observers.
The People's Bank of China, the central bank, said in May thatit would
allow the yuan to fluctuate against the U.S. dollar by 0.5 percent a day, up
from 0.3 percent.
On Monday, the central parity rate of RMB against the euro stood at
10.4296, up 54 basis points from Friday level, while yuan's value against the
Japanese yen went down 232 basis points to 6.2003 yuan against 100
yen.