China’s Central Bank, in an effort to rein in the nation’s runaway
economy, recently raised the country’s benchmark lending rate by 27
basis points. With most countries, an increase in interest rates would
propel the country’s respective currency upward in value, as risk-averse
investors would bring capital to that country’s bond markets. In the
case of China, however, monetary policy tends to have a pretty
negligible effect on the currency, primarily because the Yuan remains
pegged to a basket, and its appreciation is being carefully managed by
the government.
Read More: China announces 0.27 percentage point increase in key interest rates
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment