Red dragon wants yuan to be world’s fifth reserve currency

Published Mar 24, 2015

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Bloomberg Hong Kong

CHINA is a step closer to obtaining Special Drawing Rights (SDR) status for its currency from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), a move that would see the yuan joining the greenback, euro, yen and British pound.

At a forum on Sunday, central bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan swapped the topic of a panel discussion so he could pitch the renminbi’s (RMB) readiness for reserve status to his co-speaker, IMF managing director Christine Lagarde. It may have worked.

“The authorities have also expressed interest in having the RMB included in the SDR basket,” Lagarde said yesterday. “We welcome and share this objective and we will work closely with the Chinese authorities in this regard.”

Addition to the SDR – created in 1969 to support the Bretton Woods system of fixed exchange rates after supplies of gold and dollars proved inadequate – would add the yuan to the basket of currencies IMF member countries can count toward their official reserves.

Approval at the once-in-five-year review due later in 2015 hinges partly on whether the IMF reverses its 2010 decision that it was not “freely usable”.

Here are a few reasons why Zhou wants in:

1. Global prestige

Already the world’s second-largest economy, its currency has lagged behind in international stakes.

SDR status “will be recognition of China’s rise”, said Xi Junyang, a finance professor at Shanghai University of Finance and Economics.

2. Lower borrowing costs

A reduction in regulations on capital flows accompanying China’s SDR push will result in an internationalised yuan. That could help Chinese companies venture abroad and cut their borrowing costs.

“A more open capital market can better meet domestic firm’s financing needs,” HSBC analysts, including chief China economist Qu Hongbin wrote in a note.

“Capital account convertibility and associated reforms are well aligned with China’s longer term financing needs.”

3. A multi-polar world

China’s strategic view is for a “multi-polar” world where the US is just one player rather than a hegemon. In the past, Zhou has called for expanded use of the SDR as an alternative to the dollar. Globally recognised reserve status makes that a step closer, at least on the currency front.

4. Price setter

The yuan’s use to settle cross-border trade and investment has been rising but the currency is not used to set prices of international commodities from oil to iron ore.

“It may help to make the yuan a pricing currency,” said Shanghai University’s Xi.

That means more influence in setting global commodity prices and helps remove currency volatility from the equation.

5. Yuan demand

More than 60 central banks currently invest in the RMB, according to an estimate by Standard Chartered. A move into the SDR basket would lure more official buyers.

“One of the key practical implications is that all central banks around the world would become holders of RMB exposure overnight,” said Jukka Pihlman, the global head of central banks and sovereign wealth funds at Standard Chartered.

“But even more significant thing is the automatic acknowledgment of ‘official reserve currency’ status, which would remove the remaining impediments from several central banks wanting to invest in RMB.”

6. Reform driver

To win the SDR prize, China will have to press on with plans to open its capital account – a reform that stands to shake up industries and the way Chinese companies do business.

“It will make Chinese officially more confident in, say, pushing forward full yuan convertibility,” said Li Jie, the head of the foreign-exchange reserve research office at the Central University of Finance and Economics in Beijing.

7. IMF recognition

For People’s Bank of China Governor Zhou, SDR status would represent endorsement from the IMF for his reform efforts that have also included steps to liberalise interest rates and ease the so-called financial repression of savers subsidising investment-led growth.

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