China's currency, the yuan, hit a new high against the U.S.
dollar on Tuesday, breaking the 7.25 mark to reach a central parity
rate of 7.2454 yuan to one dollar.
The yuan, also known as the Renminbi, went up 112 basis points
from Monday.
The local currency smashed psychological barriers for three
trading days in a row. This was the sixth time that the yuan hit a
new high against the U.S. dollar since the beginning of this
year.
Analysts said mounting expectations for interest rate cut by the
Federal Reserve of the United States helped push down the U.S.
dollar continuously. On Monday, the greenback went down on global
forex markets in response to the news about Citibank writing off 24
billion dollars of assets.
The yuan rose 6.9 percent against the dollar last year and has
appreciated against the greenback by more than 12 percent since a
new currency regime was imposed in July 2005 to discontinue the
local currency's peg to the dollar.
The analysts forecast that the Chinese currency would appreciate
at least 7-10 percent against the U.S. dollar for the whole of this
year.
On Tuesday, the Renminbi lost 305 basis points against the
unified European currency to 10.7757 yuan to one euro, and 414
basis points against the Japanese currency to 6.7059 yuan to 100
Japanese yen. But it gained 568 basis points to reach 14.1582 yuan
to one British pound.
(Xinhua News Agency January 15, 2008)