
The Yuan's Central Parity Rate Strengthens Significantly, Indicating Policy Intentions Aligning with Market Resonance
On August 4, the China Foreign Exchange Trade System announced that the RMB central parity rate against the US dollar was set at 7.1395, an increase of 101 basis points from the previous trading day, marking the largest single-day rise since January 21, 2025. This strong trend occurred as the US dollar index weakened and expectations for the Federal Reserve's easing increased, showing that the RMB market is not only driven by international macro factors but also possibly accompanied by a regulatory intention to actively guide exchange rate stability.
The rapid pace and significant magnitude of this adjustment far exceeded the moderate fluctuations of the past few weeks, signaling marginal fine-tuning in monetary policy. Analysts pointed out that the adjustment in the central parity rate might aim to stabilize market expectations and curb the overflow of RMB depreciation sentiment, in coordination with the central bank to stabilize capital markets.
The Likelihood of a Fed Rate Cut Surges, Introducing New Variables to Exchange Rate Expectations
Latest data shows that market bets on a Federal Reserve rate cut are rapidly increasing. According to CME's FedWatch tool, the probability of a 25-basis-point cut in September is as high as 89.1%, with a possibility of a further cut to 50 basis points in October nearing 61%. Within a few days, market sentiment shifted from cautious observation to aggressive bets, causing volatile reactions in bond and foreign exchange markets.
The uncertainty surrounding the Fed's policy outlook has led to a decline in the US dollar index, becoming a crucial external factor supporting the yuan's strength. As US and Chinese monetary policy cycles further diverge, the yuan is likely to technically rebound against the dollar in the short term, but its long-term trajectory will still depend on multiple variables, including US-China interest rate differentials, capital flows, and global risk-aversion sentiment.
Can Weak Non-Farm Data Undermine Powell's Hawkish Tone?
Following the release of the July non-farm employment report, concerns about an economic slowdown were raised. The number of new jobs added fell significantly short of expectations, and data from the previous two months was sharply revised downward. However, the unemployment rate only slightly increased, remaining at a relatively low level. The market briefly considered this data might force the Fed to a dovish turn, but analysts' views are mixed.
Guotai Huashan commented that the recent increase in US immigration deportations may have structurally disrupted non-farm employment data. As immigrant populations serve as a crucial supplement to the labor market, their reduction could affect new job statistics, but have limited direct impact on the unemployment rate. This "structural contraction" creates a misalignment between weak non-farm data and the "stable appearance" of the labor market.
Therefore, despite the market's high pricing of rate cuts, Powell might still maintain a hawkish stance to strategically remain patient with the inflation target and avoid signaling excessive easing.
Can the Yuan Maintain a Stable Rise?
Currently, the yuan's trend is at a critical juncture. On one hand, a weakening dollar and renewed risk appetite provide short-term support; on the other, domestic economic fundamentals still face pressure, and the willingness of foreign trade companies to settle in RMB and capital market inflows remain uncertain.
Looking ahead, the yuan's ability to maintain its upward trend will depend on three key factors: first, the changes in US-China interest rate differentials—if the Fed accelerates rate cuts while China maintains stable monetary policy, the yuan will gain more room; second, whether domestic macroeconomic data shows signs of stabilization to boost confidence in the foreign exchange market; third, geopolitical risks and the direction of global liquidity, which may trigger fluctuations in foreign capital sentiment.
Overall, the significant adjustment in the yuan's central parity rate not only serves as a technical adjustment but also reveals signals of flexible exchange rate policy adaptation. Against the backdrop of a reshuffling global monetary environment, the elasticity of the yuan's exchange rate will continue to enhance, becoming an important tool for adjusting internal and external balance.






