China's forex reserves reach $3.25 trillion, hitting 6-year high
Sunday, 9 January 2022
China's foreign exchange reserves stood at $3.25 trillion at the end of December, 2021, up $27.8 billion month-on-month and hitting a six-year high, according to data released by the State Administration of Foreign Exchange on Friday, reports Global Times.
The Chinese currency's rising valuation continued to be the main factor behind the increase in China's foreign exchange reserves in 2021, officials said.
Wang Chunying, a spokesperson from the forex administration, said that due to the recent coronavirus flare-ups and expectations of monetary policy shift in some major countries, the US dollar index has fallen, which caused "valuation rise" of non-US dollar currencies and contributing to the upward trend of China's foreign exchange reserves.
Resulting from the stronger-than-expected production of the manufacturing sector thanks to the government's effective anti-pandemic prevention and control measures, China's exports are fired up, which help support the robust growth in the country's foreign exchange reserves, Xi Junyang, a professor at Shanghai University of Finance and Economics, told the Global Times on Saturday.
While China's December trade data is due to be released on Friday, the market is broadly expecting Chinese exports to continue its upward trajectory.
China's solid economic fundamentals and rising foreign exchange reserves are to offer support to the yuan's value in 2022, which performed relatively well against a variety of other currencies in 2021, particularly the US dollar.