China's mountain of foreign exchange reserves dropped around $19 billion in September to a five-year low, government data showed, with the central bank spending heavily to defend its currency against capital outflows. The world's largest currency hoard fell to under $3.17 trillion, the People's Bank of China (PBOC) said on its website Friday, below median analyst forecasts of $3.18 trillion in a Bloomberg News survey. It was the third straight month of declines and brought China's reserves to their lowest level since April 2011, Bloomberg said.
Analysts said the decline indicated China was selling foreign exchange to buy its yuan currency amid capital flight spurred by slowing growth in the world's second largest economy. The data came days after the yuan's official entry into the International Monetary Fund's elite SDR basket of currencies, a symbolic coup for Beijing policymakers who are seeking to expand international use of the currency. In the months preceding the currency's formal inclusion, China's central bank spent "heavily" to keep the yuan's value stable, roughly $27 billion last month, said Julian Evans-Pritchard of Capital Economics.
But "with the inclusion of the renminbi in the SDR basket now complete, the PBOC may no longer feel the need to intervene as heavily to counter capital outflows", he said, adding that US Federal Reserve rate hikes could increase depreciation pressure on the yuan in coming months.
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