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    HomeTop StoriesChina's yuan to hit record lows as U.S. tariff threat mounts, investment...

    China’s yuan to hit record lows as U.S. tariff threat mounts, investment banks forecast

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    A Chinese bank worker prepares to count a stack of US dollars together with stacks of 100 Chinese yuan notes at a bank in Hefei, east China’s Anhui province on March 9, 2010.  

    STR/AFP | Getty Images

    Chinese authorities are contending with a weakening yuan as global investment banks forecast the currency to hit record lows, in anticipation of U.S. president-elect Donald Trump following through with his tariff threats.

    Major investment banks and research firms project offshore yuan to weaken to an average 7.51 per dollar through the end of 2025, according to CNBC’s calculation of forecasts from 13 institutions.

    That would mark the currency’s weakest level on record, according to LSEG data going back to 2004.

    Chinese currency forecasts against U.S. dollar

    End-2024 End-2025
    UBS7.307.60
    BNP Paribas7.70
    Barclays7.257.50
    J.P. Morgan7.307.50
    BMI7.307.60
    Societe Generale7.10
    Morgan Stanley7.307.60
    Goldman Sachs7.257.50
    Macquarie Group7.257.38
    Capital Economics7.308.00
    Nomura7.50*
    ING7.207.30
    Oxford Economics7.40

    Source: Investment banks, research houses.

    *Aug 2025 expiry

    Trump on Monday said he would impose an additional 10% tariff on all Chinese goods coming into the U.S., according to a post on his social media platform Truth Social. Trump had already pledged 60% or higher tariffs on Chinese goods during his election campaign.

    “U.S. tariffs would, other things equal, lead to an appreciation of the dollar … currencies of economies with close trade links to the U.S. would see the largest currency adjustments,” said Jonas Goltermann, deputy chief markets economist at Capital Economics.

    The yuan would need to move to a level of 8.42 against the dollar to fully factor in 60% tariffs on all Chinese goods, according to the projection of Mitul Kotecha, Barclays’ head of FX & EM macro strategy of Asia.

    The offshore yuan has lost over 2% since the U.S. presidential election on Nov. 5, and last traded at 7.2514 on Thursday.

    The uncertainty is a lot higher this time than for Trump’s first term in office, given the size of the tariff threat, the magnitude of the trade imbalance.

    Ju Wang

    Head of Greater China FX & rates strategy at BNP Paribas

    During the initial round of U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods under Trump’s first term as president in 2018, the yuan depreciated by about 5%, according to Reuters, and weakened another 1.5% the following year when trade tensions intensified.

    China has maintained a tight control over the yuan’s value onshore by setting a daily price with the currency allowed to trade within a 2% band around that price. Offshore trading is more market-driven.

    “The uncertainty is a lot higher this time” than during Trump’s first term in office, given the size of tariff threat and magnitude of trade imbalance between China and the U.S., said Ju Wang, head of Greater China FX & rates strategy at BNP Paribas.

    “Any perceived lack of consistency in the new US administration’s policy statements would also add to the uncertainty,” Wang added, who expects the PBOC to take “counter-cyclical measures to prevent its currency from overshooting the topside.”

    PBOC conundrum

    China is constrained in both fiscal, monetary policy: Strategist

    This month, the central bank also kept several major policy rates unchanged as it seeks to stabilize the currency.

    The exchange rate will be maintained “basically stable at an adaptive and balanced level,” a central bank official said in a statement last week.

    The stabilizing efforts will arrest some depreciation expectation and support broader Asian FX stability, said Wei Liang Chang, global FX and credit strategist at DBS Bank, who is hopeful that “a recovery is on the cards when U.S. rates soften further.”

    The U.S. dollar index has pared its gains after Trump announced the nomination of Scott Bessent as the next U.S. Treasury secretary, coming off from a two-year peak of 108.09 last Friday.

    While Bessent, a hedge fund manager, has supported Trump’s tariffs, he has advocated a “layered in” approach. “Such policy positions should help contain trade risks, create room for negotiations, and ultimately curb excessive RMB outflows,” Chang added.

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