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Worried about its currency’s weakness, The People’s Bank of China has propped up the yuan even more than expected. Bloomberg News reports:

China stepped in to support the yuan for a third time this week, once again signaling a limit to its tolerance for weakness in the currency.

The Peopleโ€™s Bank of China set its daily reference rate for the managed currency at a stronger-than-expected level, as it did on Monday and Tuesday. The so-called fixing came in at 7.2208 per dollar, 311 pips stronger than the average estimate in a Bloomberg survey and the largest premium since November.

โ€œThe PBOC may need to show its intention of moderating the pace of a yuan depreciation with another stronger fixing today,โ€ after traders pushed the currency weaker despite the central bank signals earlier this week, said Kiyong Seong, a strategist at Societe Generale. โ€œSporadic stronger adjustment to the fixing will prevail for a while though.โ€

The yuan has come under increasing pressure against the dollar amid mounting evidence that Chinaโ€™s economic recovery will be slower than anticipated and any stimulus modest. The currency fell to its lowest since November this week and is down close to 5% this year.

Policy divergence between the PBOC and developed-market central banks has also weighed, something highlighted again by hawkish comments from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell onย Wednesday. On top of the fixing, a few state-owned banks have also been active earlier in the week, selling dollars just before the yuanโ€™s official close, according to traders.

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