On Monday, the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) set the USD/CNY central rate at 7.0108, slightly lower than the previous rate of 7.0128. This set rate contrasts with an estimate from Reuters, which predicted a rate of 6.9849.
The PBoC’s primary goals are maintaining price stability, safeguarding exchange rate stability, and fostering economic growth. The bank also endeavours to enact financial reforms, such as developing the financial market.
Ownership And Influence
The People’s Republic of China owns the PBoC, with the Chinese Communist Party having considerable influence over its management. Mr. Pan Gongsheng currently holds the roles of governor and CCP Committee Secretary.
To achieve its goals, the PBoC uses various monetary policy instruments, such as the seven-day Reverse Repo Rate, Medium-term Lending Facility, and Reserve Requirement Ratio. The Loan Prime Rate (LPR) serves as China’s benchmark interest rate, affecting loan, mortgage rates, and the Chinese Renminbi exchange rates.
China allows 19 private banks, including digital lenders WeBank and MYbank, to operate, which were permitted in 2014. These private banks form a small portion of China’s financial system and are backed by tech giants Tencent and Ant Group.
The People’s Bank of China is signaling a desire for a stable or slightly stronger yuan with its daily reference rate. This action, setting the USD/CNY rate at 7.0108, suggests the central bank is actively managing the currency’s value against market expectations. We should therefore anticipate continued intervention to prevent significant yuan depreciation in the coming weeks.
Economic Context And Implications
This policy makes sense when we look at the economic data from the end of last year. Throughout 2025, we saw China’s GDP growth struggle to remain above 5%, and the latest official PMI figures from December showed factory activity remaining in contraction. With consumer price inflation running at a reported -0.3% year-over-year in the fourth quarter of 2025, a stable currency is needed to prevent capital flight and boost confidence.
The central bank’s actions are a counterforce to its own easing policies, such as the multiple reserve requirement ratio cuts we saw in 2025. This contrasts with the US Federal Reserve, which, after a series of cuts last year, is now signaling a pause, narrowing the interest rate differential between the two countries. The PBOC is using its broad set of tools to balance stimulating the domestic economy while managing the currency.
For derivative traders, this managed currency environment suggests that implied volatility for the yuan may remain suppressed. Options strategies that benefit from low volatility, such as selling short-dated USD/CNH strangles, could be advantageous. The central bank’s consistent and strong fixing limits the potential for large, unexpected moves in the exchange rate.
We should watch the 7.00 level closely as a key psychological and policy line. Given the PBOC’s current stance, traders can likely expect the USD/CNY to trade within a relatively tight range, with the central bank defending the yuan from significant weakness. Any deviation in the daily fix from this pattern would be a major signal of a shift in policy direction.