“From today, the USD is no longer needed for trading between CNY and EUR. The two currencies can be traded direct against each other."
Analysts
hail yuan-euro direct trading announcement
Analysts
have given the thumbs up to the Chinese central bank’s announcement
on Monday that the Chinese currency can now be traded directly
against the euro in its interbank currency market.
30
September, 2014
This
would be a major boost to trade between China and the Eurozone, says
Nordea. China stepped up plans to increase the international use of
its currency last October with an agreement between the European
Central Bank and the PBOC to swap euros and yuan.
“From
today, the USD is no longer needed for trading between CNY and EUR.
The two currencies can be traded direct against each other. This
would lower transaction cost in EURCNY trading and push for yuan
internationalization,’ said Amy Yuan Zhuang, senior Asia analyst at
Noredea Research.
The
yuan is now the second most-used currency in international trade
after the US dollar.
“Implications
for European companies are beneficial in terms of lower transaction
costs in exchange and trading. Generally it will increase convenience
in trade and investment between China and the Euro area. Implications
for China are more important. It is a cornerstone in CNY
internationalisation and it becoming a global reserve currency,”
said Zhuang in an emailed statement.
Beijing
is keen on substituting the US dollar with the yuan in all of China’s
trade with other countries. The Chinese currency now trades directly
with the Japanese yen, the Australian dollar, the Brazilian real, the
EU’s euro, the New Zealand dollar and many other currencies.
“This
is an important step in strengthening bilateral economic and trade
connections between China and Eurozone member states. This will help
lower currency conversion cost for economic entities, facilitate the
use of RMB and Euro in bilateral trade and investment, promote the
financial cooperation and enhance economic and financial ties between
China and Eurozone member states,” said the People’s Bank of
China in a
statement on its website.
Earlier
this month, China’s
central bank said that
it had authorized the Bank of China (BOC) as a clearing bank for RMB
business in Paris.
BOC
has so far opened more than 1,200 inter-bank RMB clearing accounts
and 1.7 million RMB accounts for corporate and individual clients
overseas.
Competition
is fierce among Europe’s major financial centres, Frankfurt, London
and Luxembourg to trade in China’s currency.
In
a major highlight of an investment meet earlier this month, Moscow
and Beijing have entered into a pact
to boost use of the rouble and yuan for trade transactions
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