A couple weeks ago, I posted on this very subject- that the value of
the Chinese Yuan is largely tied to inflation and interest rate
differentials. With this week’s commentary piece, I wish to further
expound upon this theory, because it appears to really carry weight.
Most traders who have an opinion on the Chinese Yuan base their
forecasts for the Yuan’s appreciation on political developments: how
much diplomatic pressure the world will apply to China and how much
China will capitulate on this most delicate of economic issues. A
Stanford economist, however, has demonstrated that political guesswork
might not be necessary, by connecting the Yuan’s appreciation to several
important economic indicators.
Let me explain. There are two closely related theories in classical
economics which attempt to account for changes in the relative value of
currencies: interest-rate parity and purchasing power parity. The
theories hold that the relative value of a nation’s currency should move
inversely with price levels and interest rates, respectively. The
reasoning is straightforward enough: the return on risk-free investments
denominated in two different currencies should be equal in order for
the markets to clear. However, as in many areas of economics, the gap
between theory and reality in currency markets is significant, for high
interest rates often attract risk-averse foreign investors instead of
repelling them, which ultimately leads to the currency increasing in
value.
In contrast, the Stanford economist seems to have established that
the laws of parity seem to be holding in the case of the Chinese Yuan.
It turns out the China-US inflation and interest rate differentials have
almost perfectly mirrored the movement of the Yuan in the past year. As
growth in the US began to drive inflation, the Fed raised interest
rates to the extent that they currently exceed Chinese rates by over
3.5%- the precise amount by which the Chinese Yuan has appreciated
against the USD this year! This phenomenon indicates that the Central
Bank has allowed the Yuan to appreciate only so much as to offset the
value by which the USD has been eroded by inflation. Coincidence?
Probably Not. In short, we should expect the Yuan to appreciate only by
the amount that American price and interest rate levels exceed those of
China.
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