Yuan’s Global Popularity Keeps Rising With Usage at Record High

  • Renminbi’s share hits 3.2%, posting highest-ever transactions
  • Dollar, euro lose ground but still retain the top two spots

The Chinese yuan is making deeper inroads as a currency of choice for global payments, with international transactions climbing to their highest level ever.

Payments using the renminbi, as the currency is also known, jumped to a record 3.2% of market share, according to data from the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunications, breaking through its previous high set in 2015 that came on the back of a currency devaluation in a bid to increase exports.

Usage has jumped in the past three months as international funds boosted holdings of Chinese government bonds, pushing their share to a fresh record, and amid gas producer Gazprom Neft’s decision to accept yuan rather than dollars for fueling the Russian airplanes at China’s airports. The People’s Bank of China governor Yi Gang urged emerging economies to promote the use of local currencies at a Group-of-20 central banks’ gathering Wednesday, echoing a similar call from Indonesia to reduce reliance on the dollar to manage the risk of Federal Reserve’s stimulus withdrawal.

The yuan will be one of the biggest beneficiaries as “trade between various Asian countries and China grows, and more of it is denominated in yuan,” said Alvin T. Tan, head of Asia FX strategy at Royal Bank of Canada in Hong Kong.

Renminbi Internationalization

Yuan’s share of world payments hits record high in January

Yuan’s growing popularity could also provide additional support for assets denominated in the currency, even as China’s yield premium over the U.S. narrows due to policy divergence between the two nations. China’s bond market may see an inflow of 700 billion yuan to 800 billion yuan ($110 billion to $126 billion) in 2022, compared with 755 billion yuan last year, according to Becky Liu, head of China macro strategy at Standard Chartered Bank Plc.

She expects yuan to be assigned a larger share in the International Monetary Fund’s reevaluation of Special Drawing Rights basket in July. The Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership trade deal that deepens China’s regional foreign trade ties will also prompt member nations to raise yuan asset holdings due to further economic integration with China, she wrote in a note Wednesday.

The currency retained its fourth place in the past two months, compared with being the 35th most-popular medium of exchange for payments in October 2010 when Swift, which handles cross-border payment messages for more than 11,000 financial institutions in 200 countries, started tracking.

Still Lagging

Despite its rise in the rankings and having upped its market share by orders of magnitude over the last 12 years, the renminbi is still dwarfed in popularity by its more established peers, notably the U.S. dollar and the euro.

The dollar kept its top spot in January, a position it’s held since June, even though its market share fell to about 39.9% from 40.5% in December. The euro also lost ground but held onto second place, while the British pound and yen rounded out the top five in third and fifth place, respectively.

CURRENT RANK CURRENCY JAN. 2022 DEC. 2021 NOV. 2021
1 USD 39.92% 40.51% 39.16%
2 EUR 36.56% 36.65% 37.66%
3 GBP 6.30% 5.89% 6.72%
4 CNY 3.20% 2.70% 2.14%
5 JPY 2.79% 2.58% 2.58%

 

Authors: Payne Lubbers, Alexandre Tanzi, Wenjin Lv, Bloomberg

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