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Any quary

The yuan's status as a global currency might be gaining ground. But top CEOs see more hurdles to clear

The yuan's status as a global currency might be gaining ground. But top CEOs see more hurdles to clear

CNBC

For China’s yuan to be used more globally, the currency needs more “applications” such as stocks and bonds, Bonnie Chan, CEO of Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Limited, said on a panel Tuesday. “We’re not just going to hold on to a bunch of RMB and put it into this bank account,” she said. Fred Hu, founder, chairman and CEO of Primavera Capital, said on the same panel Tuesday that the internationalization of the yuan is probably going to take longer than many expect, despite increased statements from Beijing. A bank employee count China’s renminbi (RMB) or yuan notes next to U.S. dollar notes at a Kasikornbank in Bangkok, Thailand, January 26, 2023. Athit Perawongmetha | Reuters

DALIAN, China — For China’s yuan to be used more globally, the currency needs more “applications” such as for stocks and bonds, Bonnie Chan, CEO of Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Limited, said on a panel Tuesday.

Beijing has long touted its ambitions for increasing global use of the Chinese yuan — also known as the “renminbi” or “RMB” — in an international financial market where the U.S. dollar is the dominant currency. U.S. sanctions on Russia have also increased the pressure on some countries to have alternatives to the greenback.

Chan, speaking during the World Economic Forum’s “Summer Davos” meeting in Dalian, China, noted that people hold a currency for trade, or, more importantly, as a store of wealth.

“We’re not just going to hold on to a bunch of RMB and put it into this bank account,” she said. “You want to have bonds, you want to have equities, etc.”

“One of our strategic imperatives [has] been changed to make sure that we continue to produce more RMB-denominated security products,” Chan said, “so that investors around the world can actually see more applications of the RMB and be able to use those as the medium to store wealth in the form of the RMB.”

Last year, the HKEX announced a “Dual-Counter” program that allows investors to trade Hong Kong-listed securities in Hong Kong dollars or Chinese yuan.

In a significant step toward internationalization of the yuan, the International Monetary Fund in 2015 announced that it would add the yuan to its basket of reserve currencies

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The full article is available here. This article was published at CNBC Finance.

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