PBOC seen anchoring yuan at 7.0709 as AUD steadies on sticky inflation; silver surges on supply squeeze
China’s central bank is expected to set a firm yuan fixing at 7.0709 per dollar, according to a Reuters estimate, keeping a steady hand on Asia FX as traders weigh stubborn Australian inflation, a sharp slide in UK services sentiment, and a supply-driven rally in silver.
Market snapshot
- Reuters estimates the PBOC will set the USD/CNY central parity at 7.0709, signaling continued yuan stabilization efforts.
- Australia’s Melbourne Institute inflation rose 0.3% m/m in November; annual rate edged up to 3.2%, above the RBA’s 2–3% target.
- Australian home prices rose 1% in November, with Sydney and Melbourne gains slowing as high rates and lending caps bite.
- UK services optimism slumped to –50, the steepest drop in three years, per the CBI; IoD sentiment remained deeply negative at –72.
- Silver rallied as Chinese inventories hit decade lows and supply tightness intensified, drawing fresh speculative interest.
- Global arms sales climbed 5.9% to $679 billion, with Europe up 13% and the U.S. rising 3.8%, underscoring defense-sector resilience.
Yuan fix in focus as China leans against FX volatility
China’s daily USD/CNY central parity is expected at 7.0709, a signal that authorities remain intent on curbing currency volatility through a firm fix and counter-cyclical adjustments. The PBOC’s fixing—published around 9:15 a.m. Beijing time—anchors onshore trading within a ±2% band and has been a key tool for stabilizing the yuan against broader dollar swings.
A steady fix typically subdues early-session swings across Asia FX and can dampen speculative pressure on the offshore yuan (CNH). Traders will watch the gap between the published fix and bank models—a proxy for policy bias—for clues on how aggressively Beijing intends to lean against depreciation pressures amid uneven domestic growth and cautious risk appetite.
Australia: sticky inflation, cooler capital-city housing
Australia’s Melbourne Institute inflation gauge rose 0.3% in November, keeping annual inflation at 3.2% and above the Reserve Bank of Australia’s target band. The persistence of services and housing-related price pressures complicates the RBA’s path to durable disinflation and could keep a mild tightening bias on the table longer than markets expect.
Housing data show a 1% nationwide price gain in November, but momentum in Sydney and Melbourne slowed as high mortgage rates and debt-to-income caps constrain the priciest segments. For FX, sticky inflation and resilient housing support the AUD on the margin, though gains may be capped if global growth jitters resurface or China’s recovery remains patchy.
UK services sentiment slides, clouding sterling outlook
UK services optimism fell to –50, the sharpest drop in three years, according to the Confederation of British Industry, while the Institute of Directors’ sentiment edged up only slightly to –72—still near historical lows. Executives flagged cost pressures and policy uncertainty, with Chancellor Rachel Reeves’ fiscal plans seen adding to operational burdens.
The deterioration keeps a lid on risk appetite in UK assets, posing headwinds to sterling if growth expectations soften further and the Bank of England’s restrictive stance weighs on activity. Gilts may see safe-haven support on growth worries, though any persistent inflation stickiness could complicate the duration trade.
Silver spikes on tight supply and thin inventories
Silver extended gains as Chinese stockpiles fell to around decade lows and supply constraints tightened the physical market. With industrial demand linked to solar and electrification still robust, the squeeze has amplified upside moves and drawn momentum participants. Volatility is likely to remain elevated, with positioning and liquidity conditions magnifying intraday swings. A sustained break higher would require follow-through from ETFs and industrial offtake, not just futures-led momentum.
Defense revenues rise as geopolitical demand endures
Global arms sales rose 5.9% to $679 billion, with European firms up 13% and U.S. peers 3.8%, highlighting durable end-market demand despite supply chain frictions. The trend supports defense equities and cash flows even as broader cyclicals face mixed macro signals. Watch for margin resilience as contractors manage labor, component lead times, and inflation pass-through.
What traders are watching next
- PBOC’s official USD/CNY fixing versus model-implied levels for signs of counter-cyclical force.
- Australia data flow and RBA commentary for any shift in near-term policy bias.
- UK business and labor readings for confirmation of a services slowdown and implications for the BoE path.
- Silver positioning, ETF flows, and refinery premiums to gauge the durability of the rally.
FAQ
Why does the PBOC’s daily USD/CNY fixing matter?
The fixing sets the midpoint for onshore yuan trading and anchors intraday ranges. A stronger-than-expected fix often signals the PBOC’s intent to stabilize the currency, influencing broader Asia FX sentiment and dampening speculative moves in the offshore yuan.
How could Australia’s inflation print affect the AUD and the RBA?
Persistent inflation above target keeps the RBA cautious about easing and can support the AUD by lifting Australia’s relative rate outlook. However, if global risk appetite weakens, that support may be offset by broader dollar strength.
What’s driving the rally in silver?
Decade-low inventories in China and ongoing supply tightness have squeezed the physical market. Strong industrial demand—from solar and electrification—adds a structural bid. The combination has attracted momentum buying, though volatility remains high.
What does the UK services sentiment slump imply for markets?
Weaker business optimism raises growth risks, which can weigh on sterling and support gilts. If cost pressures linger, the BoE faces a tough trade-off between inflation control and growth, complicating rate expectations.
Why are rising global arms sales relevant for investors?
Higher defense outlays underpin revenue visibility for contractors, supporting earnings and cash flows. The sector can act defensively during macro slowdowns, though supply chain and cost inflation remain key risks to margins.
This article was produced by BPayNews for informational purposes and does not constitute investment advice.
Last updated on December 1st, 2025 at 12:32 am






