BEIJING, May 21 (Xinhua) -- The Chinese currency, the yuan, rose sharply to
a fresh high on Wednesday following an overnight fall of the U.S. dollar.
The central parity rate of the Renminbi (RMB) was set at 6.9597per dollar,
up 183 basis points from a day earlier, according to the China Foreign Exchange
Trading System.
The currency has risen nearly 5 percent since the beginning of the year,
and it was the 36th time that it set a new high against the greenback this year.
The yuan made a breakthrough to the 7-yuan mark against the dollar in early
April, and the fast pace of its appreciation has slowed down in the past month
as the dollar gradually gained on better-than-expected economic data.
Wednesday's sharp gain of the yuan was buoyed by an overnight fall of the
dollar, which fell against most major currencies on Tuesday, hit by U.S.
inflation data and talk of higher euro zone interest rates.
The U. S. Labor Department said the producer price index rose 0.2 percent
last month after rising 1.1 percent in March. However, core producer prices,
which strip out volatile energy and food costs, increased by 0.4 percent, twice
the rate forecast on Wall Street.
The report raised investors' concerns about the impact of inflation on
consumer spending.
The dollar was also hit by remarks from Wolfgang Franz, president of
Germany's ZEW research institute. Franz said the European Central Bank might be
forced to tighten credit in the coming months in the face of rising inflation.
The Chinese government may come to rely more on the yuan's appreciation to
offset inflationary pressure, faced with a complicated situation of rising
inflation, slowing export and the Sichuan quake that caused huge losses,
analysts said.
China's central bank has allowed banks in six cities that were hardest hit
by the quake to temporarily keep their deposit reserve ratio unchanged, while
lenders in other regions must raise the ratio on Tuesday to curb excess
liquidity.
Ha Jiming, chief economist with the China International Capital Corporation
(CICC) said the appreciation of the yuan would help curb inflation in China but
might not be very effective, since the rise of global product prices and U.S.
monetary policies also had an effect.
China's consumer price index (CPI), the main inflation indicator, rose 8.5
percent year-on-year in April, compared with 8.3 percent in March and a nearly
12-year-high of 8.7 percent in February.
On Wednesday, the yuan also lost 666 basis points against the euro, 337
basis points against the Japanese yen, and 816 basis points against the British
pound, while it strengthened against the Hong Kong dollar by 242 basis points.