FOREX-Yuan, Aussie on back foot as China markets stumble on virus scare

Published 03/02/2020, 04:47
Updated 03/02/2020, 04:55
© Reuters.  FOREX-Yuan, Aussie on back foot as China markets stumble on virus scare
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* A$ near decade low; China equities, commodities tumble

* Yen, franc supported by virus uncertainty

* Graphic: World FX rates in 2020 https://tmsnrt.rs/2RBWI5E

By Hideyuki Sano

TOKYO, Feb 3 (Reuters) - The yuan and its proxy, the

Australian dollar, were on the defensive on Monday as China's

share market reopened with big losses after the Lunar New Year

break and anxiety over a virus outbreak in the country kept

investors on guard.

Chinese shares tumbled after the 10-day break was extended

to help stem the epidemic though falls were in line with what

had been indicated by Chinese share futures and ETFs (Exchange

Traded Funds) traded outside China.

Reaction in currency markets has been limited so far

although the mood remained cautious as authorities have taken

drastic steps worldwide to curb the epidemic.

Travel curbs and business shut-downs are hitting many parts

of China as the death toll rose by 56 to 350 on Monday in Hubei

province, ground zero of the epidemic.

Australia, Singapore and the United States are among

countries to have banned entry by foreign nationals who have

recently visited China. "The number of new patients continues to rise. And even

though the virus may be turning out not to be that severely

pathogenic, movements of people and goods will likely be

restricted for the time being," said Masashi Hashimoto, senior

currency analyst at MUFG Bank.

"That will surely pour cold water on signs of rebound in the

Chinese economy we saw since December."

The offshore yuan eased 0.1%, hitting one-month low of

7.0117 per dollar CNH= while its onshore unit fell over 1%

from its levels before the holiday to 7.0125 per dollar

CNY=CFXS .

The Australian dollar fetched $0.66925 AUD=D4 , up slightly

on the day but was precariously close to its 10-1/2-year low of

$0.6670 touched last October.

The currency is often regarded as a proxy to the yuan, being

more freely traded and because of Australia's reliance on trade

with China.

"Given the current fragile sentiment, I would not be

surprised to see the Australian dollar slipping below its

previous 10-year low," said senior strategist Yukio Ishizuki at

Daiwa Securities.

To head off any panic, China's central bank took a range of

steps to shore up an economy hit by travel curbs and business

shut-downs because of the epidemic, including an injection of

1.2 trillion yuan ($173.81 billion) worth of liquidity into

financial markets. Still, uncertainty created by the epidemic is keeping

investors cautious, helping support safe-harbour currencies.

"Fleeing to safe-havens is a big theme now. Investors will

continue to sell currencies in which they have long positions.

It will be difficult to buy the yuan at the moment," said Bart

Wakabayashi, Tokyo branch manager of State Street Bank.

The yen traded at 108.48 yen per dollar JPY= , a tad weak

so far in Asia but still close to its three-week high of 108.305

set on Friday.

The Swiss franc changed hands at 0.96395 franc per dollar

CHF= , near its 15-month high of 0.96135 set last month.

Against the euro, the franc stood at 1.06810 per euro

EURCHF= , just below its 33-month high of 1.0666 touched last

week.

The euro stood at $1.1084 EUR= , having risen 0.6% last

week for its first weekly gain in five helped by a boost from

month-end money flows from European exporters on Friday.

Elsewhere, sterling fell 0.2% to $1.3172 GBP=D4 .

Britain laid out a tough opening stance for future talks

with the European Union following its exit last week, saying it

would set its own agenda rather than meeting the bloc's rules.

Sentiment toward sterling may also be coloured by a stabbing

incident in London on Sunday, which police described as a

terrorist incident. Looking ahead, traders will keep an eye on the start of a

U.S. state-by-state nominating process to pick presidential

nominees, with Iowa holding caucuses on Monday. Senator Bernie Sanders and former Vice President Joe Biden

are running neck-to-neck among Democratic contenders vying to

challenge Republican President Donald Trump in November.

($1 = 6.9040 Chinese yuan)

China's Hubei reports 56 new coronavirus deaths, total at 350

central bank to inject $174 bln via reverse repos on Feb.

3 yen, Swiss franc advance as virus fears

snowball attacker served prison term for terrorism offences,

police say ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

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