China’s Yuan eyes further gains against the dollar,market reports suggest
Yuan consolidates after year-long rally, with technical signals pointing to potential further strength against the dollar
Recently China's currency, the yuan, has been seen as strong against the US dollar as per the latest market reports.
The news comes as the yuan is taking a pause after strengthening against the dollar for a year, and technical analysis indicates that the Chinese currency can continue its gains once it catches its breath.
The yuan is currently in what technical analysts call a consolidation pattern, when prices hold relatively steady in a narrow range before picking a direction.
During a trending market—as the yuan has been in since April 2025--periods of consolidation are often followed by a resumption of the previous direction of travel.
The yuan went through a similar consolidation phase from late February until the end of March and then started strengthening again.
Foreign exchange charts of the Chinese currency are usually expressed in yuan per dollar. That means that the yuan strengthens as the price falls.
On April 14, the yuan hit 6.8062, its strongest level in more than three years, according to data supplied by LSEG. Since then it has traded in a range of 6.8062-6.8493—not gaining but not weakening very much either.
If the yuan price were to trade convincingly below 6.8062 and 6.8000, it would end the current consolidation period and signal a resumption of the Chinese currency's strengthening trend.
In that case, it would raise expectations in the market of a move toward 6.7000.
Prices such as 6.8000 and 6.7000 are what analysts refer to as psychological levels due to the tendency of markets to pause at big round numbers.
However, if the yuan were to retreat past 6.9050, market participants might see this as a potential change of direction.
What the yuan-dollar chart shows:
The yuan hit its strongest in more than three years on April 14
Since then it has been consolidating, neither gaining nor weakening very much
The yuan went through a similar period of consolidation that ended on March 31
-
Nvidia partners with Firmus Technologies to power AI-infrastructure
-
California lawsuit accuses gas stations of using AI to fix fuel prices
-
Why tech firms are blaming AI for the massive surge in device and console prices
-
Microsoft raises Xbox console prices as component costs soar
-
UN suspends ship escorts through Strait of Hormuz after vessel attack
-
Ryanair scraps 'mandatory' family seating fees after policy tweak
-
JPMorgan leadership shake-up: Marianne Lake exits, two executives take charge
-
Ferrari marketing chief steps down after controversial EV launch
-
Why airlines are still being told to avoid Iran’s airspace despite the new framework deal
-
UK business activity contracts as Sterling eases amid Keir Starmer succession uncertainty
-
Elon Musk’s SpaceX sees high volatility in first public week
-
SpaceX reaches major financial milestone as shares tumble from record high
