人民币年底为什么一直涨?
Sou Hu Cai Jing·2025-12-19 11:39

Group 1 - The core viewpoint is that the Chinese yuan has entered a "surge" mode by the end of 2025, strengthening against major currencies, with the onshore yuan approaching the 7.04 mark, appreciating over 700 basis points since November, marking a 14-month high since October 2024 [1][2] Group 2 - The recent appreciation of the yuan is attributed to the weakening of the US dollar index and a shift towards a more accommodative global monetary policy environment, with market expectations for a 25 basis point rate cut by the Federal Reserve reaching 87% by mid-December [2] - China's assets are showing strong attractiveness in 2025, with the A-share Shanghai Composite Index breaking a nearly 10-year high and significant foreign capital inflows into Hong Kong stocks, with over 30 billion yuan net inflow in October [3] - The GDP growth in Q3 2025 was 5.3%, exceeding market expectations, and the manufacturing PMI returned to the expansion zone at 50.2 in October, indicating a positive economic recovery [4] - International investment banks are raising their ratings on Chinese assets, correcting previous pessimistic expectations about the domestic economy, which provides solid fundamental support for the yuan's exchange rate [5] - China's exports have shown unexpected resilience, with a trade surplus of 51 billion USD in September, the highest monthly figure since 2020, enhancing the stability of the foreign exchange market and providing endogenous appreciation momentum for the yuan [5] - Domestic policies aimed at reducing "involution" are driving corporate value reassessment, alongside narratives from AI and technology sectors, making yuan-denominated assets more competitive globally [6] - Increased preference for yuan assets by overseas investors is further driving the exchange rate up, creating a positive cycle of asset appreciation, capital inflow, and currency strengthening [7] - The fourth quarter is traditionally a peak period for foreign trade enterprises to settle foreign exchange, as they convert accumulated foreign exchange income into yuan to lock in profits [8] - Additionally, overseas workers tend to remit their wages back to China before the Spring Festival, increasing demand for yuan, with historical data showing that the surplus from bank foreign exchange settlements is typically highest before the Spring Festival [9]