Investors shouldn’t fret over Chinese yuan volatility

by | March 3, 2014

Originally published at CNBC | March 3, 2014

By letting the yuan drop sharply against the U.S. dollar, Chinese authorities deterred excess inflows in recent days and proved the yuan not a constant one-way bet. But that doesn’t mean China will stop the yuan from strengthening over an extended horizon. Thus, investors must avoid panicking and keep the currency’s positive longer-term outlook in mind.

China knows that over the long term the direction of the yuan‘s value against the U.S. dollar is one way: up. China has repressed the yuan’s rise for two decades, during which it has swelled into the world’s second-largest economy and has managed to remain fast-growing, albeit at a more moderate rate. Pent-up demand for Chinese currency is overwhelming.

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Filed Under: Economics

About the Author

Alex is the co-founder of Jackson Hole Economics, a non-profit research organization which provides analysis of key topics in the political economy, and develops actionable ideas for how sustainable growth can be achieved

Alex is also the co-founder and Chief Executive Officer of Novata, a mission-driven and technology-powered public benefit corporation designed to improve the process of Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) diligence in the private markets. Backed by a unique consortium, which includes the Ford Foundation, S&P Global, Hamilton Lane and Omidyar Network, Novata has created an independent, unbiased and flexible platform for the private markets to more consistently measure, analyze and report on relevant ESG data.

With two decades of experience in the financial and non-profit spaces, Alex has led a number of sustainable growth and transformation efforts. He is a former CEO of GAM Holdings and Chief Investment Officer of UBS, and also served as the Chief Financial Officer of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, where he created the foundation's strategic investment fund.

Alex was a White House Fellow and an assistant to the Secretary of Defense. He is a member of the Board of Directors of Franklin Resources, Inc. (Franklin Templeton), a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, Chair of the Advisory Board of Project Syndicate and a board member of the American Alpine Club. Alex also writes regularly for various news outlets and is the author of Babu's Bindi and The Big Thing: Brave Bea, both children's books.

Alex holds a JD from Columbia Law School, where he was a Harlan Fiske Stone Scholar, an MBA from Columbia Business School, and a BA from Princeton University.

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