Start Trading Now Get Started
Table of Contents
Affiliate Disclosure
Affiliate Disclosure DailyForex.com adheres to strict guidelines to preserve editorial integrity to help you make decisions with confidence. Some of the reviews and content we feature on this site are supported by affiliate partnerships from which this website may receive money. This may impact how, where and which companies / services we review and write about. Our team of experts work to continually re-evaluate the reviews and information we provide on all the top Forex / CFD brokerages featured here. Our research focuses heavily on the broker’s custody of client deposits and the breadth of its client offering. Safety is evaluated by quality and length of the broker's track record, plus the scope of regulatory standing. Major factors in determining the quality of a broker’s offer include the cost of trading, the range of instruments available to trade, and general ease of use regarding execution and market information.

Yuan Joins The Club

By Dr. Mike Campbell
Dr. Mike Campbell is a British scientist and freelance writer. Mike got his doctorate in Ghent, Belgium and has worked in Belgium, France, Monaco and Austria since leaving the UK. As a writer, he specialises in business, science, medicine and environmental subjects.

From next October, the Yuan will join the Euro, the Yen, the Dollar and Sterling as an IMF reserve currency. A reserve currency is regarded as a strong currency, widely used in international trade and that central banks will hold as a component of their foreign exchange reserves. It is perhaps arguable that the Yuan is yet to fulfil the requirement of being widely used in international trade at the moment, but agreements that the Chinese have struck with the UK are designed to boost this in the coming years.

The inclusion of the Yuan as an IMF reserve currency reflects the fact that China has emerged as the world’s second largest economy and therefore plays a major role on the world’s economic stage. Whilst the Yuan has strengthened against other major currencies, this has been on the coat-tails of a strengthening US Dollar that the Yuan has shadowed. The US has long suspected the Chinese of artificially undervaluing the Yuan to ensure that Chinese exports have an advantage in importing markets. If the US were to declare that the Yuan is being manipulated, the US authorities would be forced to take sanctions against the Chinese, so they have always fought shy of making such a declaration. However, all one needs to do is to plot the values of the Yuan, Dollar, Yen, Euro and Sterling on a time chart and the conclusion is inescapable.

The head of the IMF, Christine Lagarde noted that the inclusion was “an important milestone in the integration of the Chinese economy into the global financial system”. China requested that the Yuan be given reserve currency status last year.

It is probable that the Chinese will have to allow the Yuan to trade freely eventually. It is likely to have to appreciate against the US Dollar before it finds its natural value, but that remains a political question for the Chinese as much as an economic one.

Dr. Mike Campbell
About Dr. Mike Campbell
Dr. Mike Campbell is a British scientist and freelance writer. Mike got his doctorate in Ghent, Belgium and has worked in Belgium, France, Monaco and Austria since leaving the UK. As a writer, he specialises in business, science, medicine and environmental subjects.
 

Most Visited Forex Broker Reviews