BEIJING - China's capital and financial account remained in deficit in the third quarter as a result of the global financial crisis and a domestic economic slowdown, the country's foreign exchange regulator said Friday.
The capital and financial account deficit shrank to 71 billion US dollars from 71.4 billion US dollars in the second quarter, the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) said in an online statement.
It said the surplus was mainly a result of global financial headwinds and the domestic slowdown and does not suggest "capital flight."
The surplus showed that foreign exchange assets are gradually shifting from the central bank to institutions and individuals, SAFE said.
Meanwhile, China's current account surplus reached 70.6 billion US dollars during the July-September period, the regulator SAID.
In the first nine months, the current account surplus came in at 147.8 billion US dollars, accounting for 2.6 percent of China's GDP during the period, down 0.3 percentage points year on year, the regulator said.
Excluding the effect of changes in exchange rates and asset prices, the country's international reserve assets shed 400 million US dollars in the third quarter.
Foreign exchange reserves increased by 300 million US dollars during the period, with reserves in the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and special drawing right (SDR) both decreasing by 800 million US dollars.