Home>News Center>China
       
 

China's yuan closes just shy of post-reval high
(Reuters)
Updated: 2005-08-04 16:59

China's yuan strengthened to within a whisker of its post-revaluation high on Thursday, amid renewed appeals from Japanese and German officials for the currency to appreciate further, the Reuters reported.

Dealers cited a softening dollar for the yuan's closing at an intraday high of 8.1027 per dollar, just shy of an 8.1025 peak after Beijing revalued the currency by 2.1 percent on July 21.

The yuan moved in a range of 23 points, hitting a low of 8.1050, compared with Wednesday's close at 8.1051.

"Dollar-buying was weak for most of the day until the yuan rose up to the 8.1030 level," said a dealer with the Bank of China, the country's top foreign exchange lender.

"The key reason was dollar softness on global markets."

The dollar hit a two-month low against the euro on Thursday before bouncing back, as investors started to shift to the sidelines ahead of a monthly U.S. jobs report.

On Thursday, Japan's vice finance minister for international affairs, Hiroshi Watanabe, said in Sydney that China should take another significant step towards revaluing the yuan, although he added that the central bank had shown more flexibility with the yuan's exchange rate in past days.



Twin panda cubs doing well
Villages flooded in Anhui
Pet dogs tie the knot in Changchun
  Today's Top News     Top China News
 

Washington and Beijing will unite to block G4 plan

 

   
 

Imports of crude oil expected to slow down

 

   
 

Supervision of pork markets tightened

 

   
 

Roadside bomb kills 14 US marines in Iraq

 

   
 

Beijing welcomes talks on charter flights

 

   
 

Six-party talks totter into no man's land

 

   
  Ordinary house buyers unhurt by revaluation
   
  Investors relieved after CNOOC drops bid
   
  India says closer US ties won't distance China
   
  Country soaked in torrential downpour
   
  Henan coal mine accident kills 24
   
  Six-Party Talks approaches final stage
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  News Talk  
  It is time to prepare for Beijing - 2008  
Advertisement