SHANGHAI: China’s yuan firmed against the US dollar on Monday, mainly as the greenback took a breather from a broad-based rally on Friday following a strong US July job report.

The local currency’s uptick came despite the People’s Bank of China setting the yuan midpoint at 6.7228 per dollar on Monday, 96 pips, or 0.14 percent, weaker than the previous fix at 6.7132 per dollar.

That shift in the guidance was the biggest one-day weakening in percentage terms since July 4.

In the spot market, the yuan opened at 6.7283 per dollar and was changing hands at 6.7230 at midday, 65 pips firmer than the previous late session close but 2 pips weaker than the midpoint.

The CFETS publishes index figures on a weekly basis.

The Thomson Reuters/HKEX Global CNH index, which tracks the offshore yuan against a basket of currencies on a daily basis, stood at 93.97, firmer than the previous day’s 93.77.

The offshore yuan was trading 0.09 percent below the onshore spot at 6.7291 per dollar.

Offshore one-year non-deliverable forwards contracts (NDFs), considered the best available proxy for forward-looking market expectations of the yuan’s value, traded at 6.8605, 2.01 percent weaker than the midpoint.

One-year NDFs are settled against the midpoint, not the spot rate.

Some traders were liquidating their dollar positions in early trade on concerns corporate dollar sales would soon emerge, a Shanghai-based trader at a Chinese bank said.

Markets were also watching out data for China’s foreign exchange reserves data expected during the day. The reserves, the largest in the world, are expected to have edged up to a nine-month high in July as Beijing kept a tight grip on the yuan and capital outflows.

The dollar rallied on Friday after a solid US jobs report.

The global dollar index, a gauge that measures dollar strength against six other currencies, jumped to a high of 93.774 late Friday. It stood at 93.342 as of midday on Monday.—Reuters