Linda Kim Trump has frequently accused China of artificially devaluing its currency in order to support its exports -- charges long denied by Beijing. The US president jolted global stock markets last week when he issued the threat of more tariffs just a day after US and Chinese trade negotiators revived talks aimed at ending the year-long dispute. The extra 10% duties Trump threatened to implement from Sept 1 would mean he has now targeted virtually all of the $500 billion in goods America buys from China every year.
Currency instability China on Friday threatened to retaliate to any new tariffs slapped on by the US -- it has already imposed its own duties on $110 billion in American goods, almost all of the products it imports from the US. The yuan is not freely convertible and the government limits its movement against the US dollar to a two% range on either side of a central parity rate which the People's Bank of China (PBOC) sets each day to reflect market trends and control volatility. The daily central rate was at 6.9225 per dollar on Monday, 0.33% weaker from Friday. "It appears that the tariffs hike suggests the return of tit-for-tat moves and a suspension of trade talks, and the PBOC sees no need to keep the yuan stable in the near term," Ken Cheung, a senior currency strategist at Mizuho Bank said. In a statement Monday morning, the PBOC said it would "resolutely crack down on short-term speculation and maintain stable operation of the foreign exchange market and stabilise market expectations." It went on to say that it had the "experience, confidence and ability to keep the RMB exchange rate basically stable at a reasonable and balanced level."
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