JPMorgan Asset Management trims long yuan positions, shifts to higher yielding currencies

1 hour ago 13

JPMorgan closed its long positions in China’s offshore yuan on February 27, booking gains after a trade that ran since November 2025. The move came hours after the People’s Bank of China announced a policy change that spooked the currency’s near-term outlook.

What the PBOC actually did

The catalyst was a seemingly technical but hugely consequential move by China’s central bank. The PBOC slashed the FX forward risk reserve requirement from 20% to zero, effective March 2, 2026.

In English: this reserve requirement acted as a speed bump on dollar buying in the onshore market. By removing it entirely, the PBOC is essentially making it cheaper and easier for market participants to purchase US dollars against the yuan.

The market read that as a green light for yuan weakness. Within hours of the announcement, the offshore yuan (CNH) depreciated past 6.85 per dollar, shedding over 100 pips in the initial move.

For JPMorgan’s FX research analysts, the signal was clear enough. The yuan had already rallied approximately 7.5% year-to-date and gained about 4.2% since their November entry point.

The bigger rotation into yield

JPMorgan’s yuan exit isn’t happening in isolation. The bank’s broader asset management strategy has shifted emerging-market currencies to an overweight position, reflecting a global environment where monetary easing is creating yield differentials worth chasing.

Medium-term outlook and what it means for markets

Despite closing the position, JPMorgan’s analysts maintained what they described as a medium-term bullish view on the Chinese yuan. They hinted at re-entering long positions at more favorable rates, suggesting they see the PBOC’s move as creating a temporary dip rather than a trend reversal.

The bull case rests on continued foreign investment inflows into Chinese assets. If global investors keep allocating capital to Chinese equities and bonds, that creates structural demand for the yuan that should eventually reassert itself regardless of short-term policy adjustments.

The key variable to watch is whether JPMorgan follows through on re-entering yuan longs, and at what level. If they step back in around 7.00 per dollar, that would suggest they see limited downside from here.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Read Entire Article