Chart Of The Day: Yuan Bottoming Amid Rising U.S. Yields, Diplomatic Crisis

 | Mar 25, 2021 09:42

Of late, currency analysts in China have become vehemently bearish on the US dollar, citing America's rising debt load, in particular the recent, massive, Biden administration fiscal aid package and chances of higher inflation because of the pandemic and related spending. That's rather ironic since any gains the Chinese yuan may have made against the greenback in 2021 have now been erased as the renminbi weakens.

Of course, this increasingly negative attitude on the global reserve currency by Communist party stalwarts could have much to do with the diplomatic crisis now brewing between the two countries. It started when President Joseph Biden and his administration sanctioned China for the crackdown in Hong Kong.

That was followed last week at the Alaska summit between the two countries by US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken reprimanding China for "violating international norms through their crackdown on Uyghurs and other minorities in Xinjiang, cyber attacks against the U.S. and economic coercion." Yesterday, the US's regulatory agency, the SEC announced it was adopting measures to delist foreign companies from American stock exchanges "if they do not comply with U.S. auditing standards."

Chinese tech giants traded in the US, such as Tencent (OTC:TCEHY) and Alibaba (NYSE:BABA) plummeted during Wednesday's Wall Street session as well as this morning in Asian trading.

Amid rising Treasury yields it appears the yuan is developing a bottom. Technicals are providing some nuanced confirmation.