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.

US Decides That The Yuan Is Not Being Manipulated

Most independently minded observers would say that the Chinese use their currency as a tool to aid their export sector and that it stays closely aligned to the US Dollar. Until recently, Donald Trump was making just such a claim about the Yuan and stating that it was giving the Chinese an unfair edge in the US market. I seem to recall that this was part of the motivation he cited when declaring a trade war with the Chinese in the first place. However, the official US position is that China is not manipulating its currency. Had that position changed, a certain course of action would have been mandated.

The good news, from a Chinese perspective, pushed the Yuan down to its weakest position against the Dollar since January 2017; it is currently trading at 6.9391 to the Dollar, having ended last week at 6.9219. Ironically, this makes Chinese imported goods a little cheaper in the US (before the trade war erupted in May, the Yuan was trading at 6.3616 to the Dollar).

There was speculation that the US Treasury was prepared to declare that China was manipulating its currency when it made this week’s declaration, but in the end, it rowed back from doing so. However, the Treasury is plainly not delighted with China, stating that its policies remained “of particular concern”. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin blamed what the US saw as China’s lack of transparency and the recent weakness of its currency (say, since May…) as posing challenges to the US’s stated goal of achieving “more balanced trade” with it (the US position being that they want to export more to China and import less from them). This desire is behind the current crop of tariffs on more than $250 billion worth of Chinese imports, of course.

The Treasury is apparently scrutinising the currencies of India, Japan, South Korea, Switzerland and Germany for signs of manipulation. One wonders if they know the Germany uses the Euro and that, by implication, they are being suspicious about all 19 Euro state members, not just Germany…

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