What Happens to China Large-Cap (FXI) When China Devalues the Yuan Sharply?
What happens when China devalues the yuan beyond 7.5? Global deflation impulse, emerging market stress, and US trade implications.
How China Large-Cap (FXI) Responds
Scenario Background
The Chinese yuan (CNY) is managed within a band set daily by the People's Bank of China (PBOC). A sharp devaluation past 7.5 per dollar would signal that the PBOC is willing to tolerate significant depreciation, typically in response to capital outflows, weak exports, or economic stress. China is the world's second largest economy and largest exporter, so yuan devaluation transmits deflationary pressure globally through cheaper Chinese goods.
Read full scenario analysis →Historical Context
USDCNY traded in a band of 6.0-6.3 from 2014 until August 2015's "surprise" devaluation to 6.40. It weakened further to 7.18 by 2020, strengthened to 6.3 in 2022, and re-weakened to 7.3 by 2024 amid China's property crisis and capital outflows. Major devaluation events produced global risk-off: August 2015 saw S&P 500 drop 11% in two weeks, and February 2016 saw continued pressure. The 2018 trade war saw yuan weaken from 6.3 to 6.9 amid tariffs.
What to Watch For
- •USDCNY above 7.3 and rising
- •CNH-CNY spread widening (offshore weaker than onshore)
- •Gold premium in Shanghai rising
- •Bitcoin volume on Chinese-linked exchanges spiking
- •PBOC reserve changes (capital outflow signal)
Other Assets When China Devalues the Yuan Sharply
Other Scenarios Affecting China Large-Cap (FXI)
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