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View Full Version : UK and China sign three year currency swap to make business in Yuan... V



Ponce
24th June 2013, 10:39 AM
I forgot when I said this......"Keep an eye on the UK and when they start to deal with China's currency the will be the start of dowfall of the greenback"........well, here it is. The UK is the leader in the Euro zone and most countries follows them.
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The UK is looking to become a centre for the Chinese currency, also known as the Renminbi. British banks hold 35bn Yuan worth of deposits in the Chinese currency.

Currency-swap agreements allow central banks to swap currencies and can be used by firms to settle trade in local currencies rather than in US dollars, as happens now, since China's currency is not fully convertible to other currencies.

The prospective deal was first announced in February by BoE Governor Sir Mervyn King.

“In the unlikely event that a generalised shortage of offshore Renminbi liquidity emerges, the Bank will have the capability to facilitate Renminbi liquidity to eligible institutions in the UK,” Sir Mervyn said on Saturday.

Last year, the UK Treasury announced plans to make London - the world's largest currency trading hub - the leading international centre for trading the Yuan outside mainland China and Hong Kong.

China has been gradually relaxing strict controls on the value of its currency and on flows of capital. Beijing has been using these pacts as part of its push for a more global role for the Yuan.

It has a swap agreement with Brazil worth 30bn dollars and has also signed similar agreements with other trading partners such as Japan, Australia and Hong Kong

http://en.mercopress.com/2013/06/24/uk-and-china-sign-three-year-currency-swap-to-make-business-in-yuan

Horn
24th June 2013, 10:45 AM
since China's currency is not fully convertible to other currencies.

Pretty significant step towards it becoming, a big signal coming from U.K.

Guess they're happy with Chinese style redcoats...

JohnQPublic
24th June 2013, 12:55 PM
The Brits don't want to lose whats left of their dominance in currency markets.

vacuum
24th June 2013, 01:15 PM
It looks like this is less about trade, and more about currency market dominance.

I do wonder who was the hold-out on this deal. Was it the UK (bankers) because they didn't want the Yaun to be highly convertible? Or was it china who didn't want their currency to be able to be manipulated in London?

Does this mean they are allowing their currency to "float" somewhat? It used to be everyone criticized them for not allowing that in the past. Perhaps with recent trade deals with russia, brazil, etc, china feels more comfortable with their currency going head-to-head with the dollar?