BEIJING (Reuters) - France intends to set up a
currency swap line with China to make Paris a major offshore yuan
trading hub in Europe, competing against London, the China Daily on
Saturday cited Bank of France Governor Christian Noyer as saying.
Yuan
deposits in Paris amount to 10 billion yuan ($1.6 billion), making it
the second largest pool for the Chinese currency in Europe after
London. Almost 10 percent of Sino-French trade is settled in yuan, also
called the renminbi or RMB, according to French data cited by the
official newspaper.
The yuan's internationalization and bilateral financial cooperation could be among the main topics during French President Francois Hollande's visit to China in late April, the paper said.
French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius paid a two-day visit to Beijing this week.
It followed a similar step by the Bank of England to set up a reciprocal three-year yuan-sterling swap line with China.
Britain, always anxious to maintain London's status as Europe's biggest financial center, launched an offshore yuan currency and bond market to great fanfare last year.
Noyer said Paris has been committed to strengthening its position in corporate bonds and short-term negotiable debt securities markets as well as the associated trading infrastructure, to promote wider use of the yuan.
In 2011 and 2012, the total value of offshore yuan-denominated bonds issued by French corporates was nearly 7 billion yuan, twice the value of bonds issued by their British counterparts, according to a report by Paris Europlace, an association that supports the French financial industry and promotes Paris as an international financial center.
A survey by the association, the China Daily reported, also showed that 50 percent of French companies have used yuan-denominated products and services.
European and U.S. officials have for years been pressing China to do more to open up the yuan to international markets, saying its artificial weakness was one of the key imbalances of the global economy.
However, the Obama administration again stopped short of labeling the world's No 2 economy as a currency manipulator in its latest semi-annual report.
Beijing
is gradually allowing a degree of flexibility in the yuan's value,
though it still keeps a tight rein on gains in the currency for fear it
will weaken its export-powerhouse economy, which has been the biggest
engine of global growth for a decade.
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