
Iris Ouyang
Foreign Exchange Market and Rates Reporter at Bloomberg News
fx & rates reporter @ Bloomberg News. #ChinaEconomy #ChinaMarkets #bonds Views are my own.
Articles
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2 weeks ago |
bloomberg.com | Iris Ouyang
Traders are rapidly pricing in faster easing in China as trade tensions with the US escalated, pushing down a key gauge for such bets to drop the most in five years and inch closer to the lowest since 2008. Five-year interest rate swaps in China, a popular hedging tool sensitive to rate expectations, fell by the most since 2020 this week. That’s around six basis points away from touching the lowest level since 2008, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
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1 month ago |
bloomberg.com | Iris Ouyang
Bloomberg Connecting decision makers to a dynamic network of information, people and ideas, Bloomberg quickly and accurately delivers business and financial information, news and insight around the world For Customers Bloomberg Anywhere Remote Login Software Updates Manage Products and Account Information Support Americas+1 212 318 2000 EMEA+44 20 7330 7500 Asia Pacific+65 6212 1000 Company About Careers Diversity and Inclusion Tech At Bloomberg Philanthropy Sustainability Bloomberg London...
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1 month ago |
ca.finance.yahoo.com | Iris Ouyang
(Bloomberg) -- Doubts over US exceptionalism are giving China a much needed break from strongly defending its currency, as the yuan’s strength allows it to dial back support via its daily reference rate.
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1 month ago |
bloomberg.com | Iris Ouyang |Shulun Huang
The People’s Bank of China’s support for the yuan is expected to keep banks’ funding pressure elevated in the next few weeks, as a liquidity crunch pushed a key gauge of their short-term borrowing to the highest level since June. The yield of one-year AAA-rated negotiable certificates of deposit, funding instruments issued by banks, surpassed 2% this week, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That’s a level widely watched by traders, and an eight-month high.
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1 month ago |
financialpost.com | Ruth Carson |Winnie Hsu |Iris Ouyang
(Bloomberg) — The latest US tariff threats have spurred investors to game out how China might respond, with moves like fresh stimulus and looser monetary policy seen to be on the table. The catalyst came from US President Donald Trump’s comments that another 10% tax is slated on imports from China, along with 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico, on track to be enacted March 4.
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#Bond traders have snapped up Chinese #sovereign notes despite negative carry. Is this sustainable? Where is #China's bond frenzy heading to? #ChinaMarkets #FixedIncomev #rates #ChinaEconomy #PBOC #liquidity #yuan https://t.co/NamTNcSgyd

In China's market #reopening, #PBOC kept support for #yuan. Easing for growth or #FX stability? A weaker currency to offset the impact of Trade War 2.0? We will see. https://t.co/YOjXDMFBdt #ChinaMarkets #TradeWar #currencies #rates #AsianFX #ChinaEconomy #tariffs

Here comes another trade spat. Tomorrow's yuan fixing is under the spotlight after #China announced retaliatory measures in response to US #tariffs on Chinese goods. https://t.co/itx1d3Adz4 #TradeWar #ChinaMarkets #ChinaEconomy #Trump #FX #Yuan #Currencies #trade