China’s yuan has
become one of the top five most-used currencies in the world, overtaking the
Canadian dollar and the Australian dollar, according to the Society for
Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT), an international financial transactions agency.
The yuan ranked fifth, accounting for a
record 2.17 percent of global payments in December, up from 1.59 percent in
October. The yuan was preceded by the Japanese yen with 2.69 percent, while the
U.S. dollar topped the chart with 44.6 percent, followed by the euro and the
British pound with 28.3 percent and 7.92 percent, respectively, according to
SWIFT.
“It is a great testimony to the
internationalization of the RMB (renminbi) and confirms its transition from an
‘emerging’ to a ‘business as usual’ payment currency,” Wim Raymaekers, head of
banking markets at SWIFT, said in a statement, obtained by Reuters.
The Chinese government has been trying to
boost the use of the yuan globally by appointing more clearing banks overseas,
and also allowing investors to devote offshore holdings of the currency in
domestic capital markets.
In December, global payments in yuan -- whose
exchange rate is set by China’s central bank -- increased by 20.3 percent while
growth for payments across all currencies was 14.9 percent during the same
period, according to SWIFT.
Yuan payments grew by 102 percent over the
last year, compared to an overall annual growth of 4.4 percent for all
currencies, Reuters reported, adding that China is expected to approach the
International Monetary Fund later this year for the yuan's inclusion to the
IMF’s in-house currency basket.
“The yuan has a very
high chance of being chosen as a reserve currency in the next IMF review,”
Nathan Chow, an economist at DBS Group Holdings in Hong Kong, told Bloomberg. “The yuan could even
surpass the yen in the rankings this year.”
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