Interventions paving way for yuan reforms
The yuan has depreciated in recent times. In the short term, interventions will prevail, but in the longer term, the Chinese currency will stabilize. In the last quarter of 2016, the yuan declined 4 percent, significantly faster than anticipated, because of rising tensions in foreign exchange markets over China's rising debt and bubbling property market .
China has managed to stabilize growth, but not without capital controls, hefty lending and interventions.
Only days ago, the yuan soared against the US dollar. By encouraging Chinese banks to withhold funds from other banks, the People's Bank of China might have tightened liquidity in Hong Kong, which led the overnight lending market to surge from 17 percent to 61 percent in two days, which in turn caused the yuan to soar in the offshore market.