Abstract:The offshore Renminbi (CNH) has surged past the critical 7.0 per Dollar barrier for the first time in 14 months, trading at 6.9977 as of Dec 25. The move marks a significant shift in sentiment, driven by year-end corporate settlement flows and a broadly softer US Dollar.

The offshore Renminbi (CNH) has surged past the critical 7.0 per Dollar barrier for the first time in 14 months, trading at 6.9977 as of Dec 25. The move marks a significant shift in sentiment, driven by year-end corporate settlement flows and a broadly softer US Dollar.
Market analysis from Shenwan Hongyuan Securities indicates that the appreciation is heavily influenced by the traditional “year-end settlement wave.” Exporters, sitting on accumulated foreign earnings, are converting funds back to RMB for operational needs.
Looking ahead, the divergence between onshore (CNY) and offshore (CNH) rates suggests international capital is betting on further appreciation. However, with the looming threat of tariff uncertainties returning under a potential shift in US trade policy, volatility is expected to remain high. The consensus target for the RMB in 2026 has shifted to a “mild appreciation” bias, potentially stabilizing in the 6.80-7.00 range.

Performance like this hasn't been seen since 2021

BEIJING — The People's Bank of China (PBOC) is set to initiate a major overhaul of its central bank digital currency (CBDC) framework, with the "New Generation Digital RMB" system scheduled to go live on January 1, 2026.

Amidst a gloomy global trade outlook, China's equity markets are flashing green, potentially offering support to the Chinese Yuan (CNY) and its liquid proxies, the Australian Dollar (AUD) and New Zealand Dollar (NZD).

Thin holiday liquidity amplified moves in global markets this week, with the Chinese Yuan staging a significant rally against the Dollar, while precious metals retreated from record valuations.