What Happens to WTI Crude Oil (FRED) When China Devalues the Yuan?
What happens when China devalues its currency? Global deflation export, emerging market contagion, commodity impact, and US equity market reactions.
How WTI Crude Oil (FRED) Responds
Scenario Background
When China devalues the yuan (CNY weakens against the dollar), it is effectively exporting deflation to the rest of the world. Chinese goods become cheaper for foreign buyers, undercutting competitors in other exporting nations and putting downward pressure on global prices. For the US specifically, cheaper Chinese imports reduce consumer prices but also threaten domestic manufacturers who compete with Chinese producers.
Read full scenario analysis →Historical Context
China's August 2015 devaluation (a sudden 3% move) triggered a global equity selloff with the S&P 500 falling 11% in days and the VIX spiking to 40. Global markets panicked because investors feared China's economy was weaker than official data suggested and that competitive devaluations would spread across Asia. The 2018-2019 yuan weakening during the trade war was more gradual but still contributed to EM outflows and commodity weakness. In 2023-2024, the yuan weakened to 7.30+ against the dolla...
What to Watch For
- •PBOC setting daily fix weaker than market expectations, deliberate policy signal
- •Chinese property sector data deteriorating further, increasing pressure to devalue
- •Other Asian currencies weakening in sympathy, competitive devaluation contagion
- •US Treasury Secretary commenting on currency manipulation, political escalation
- •Capital outflow data from China accelerating, self-reinforcing devaluation cycle
Other Assets When China Devalues the Yuan
Other Scenarios Affecting WTI Crude Oil (FRED)
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