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/ Home / Editorial / Wealth Management / Business & Entrepreneurship /
Feature: Eastern Promise
Perilous Paths to China
Rebecca Fannin
09/01/2005

Values Revalued

Those looking to invest in China should consider how a revaluation of the yuan—also known as the renminbi or “people’s currency”—would affect returns. (The official listing for the currency is CNY, although RMB also is correct.) One sector likely to be an instant—albeit short-lived—beneficiary is the flashy, but capricious, property market. The prospect of a stronger renminbi has created a veritable feeding frenzy for swanky Shanghai apartments in developments with Manhattan-sounding names such as Sohu and Century Park.

The prices of luxury residences in Shanghai have risen by as much as 40 percent in each of the past three years. They stabilized briefly this year after the government, seeking to contain speculation before the market imploded, placed capital gains taxes of 5.5 percent on property held less than one year. It also boosted the requirement for down payments from 10 to 30 percent of purchase price. These measures might be able to temper the short-term gains of a stronger renminbi.
 
Currency specialists predict that Beijing could revalue the renminbi within the next two years. David Gilmore, a partner at Foreign Exchange Analytics in Essex, Conn., believes the first step would be giving the renminbi a new exchange rate, but one that is still pegged to the dollar, or perhaps even the yen or euro. It is likely to be years, he says, before the renminbi is available as a freely traded play in the currency markets. “That is a political move and will happen when it happens,” Gilmore says. Even a slightly stronger renminbi, though, would make Chinese exports pricier and thereby change the dynamics that support the economic boom. However, the best Chinese companies realized years ago that the weak-renminbi, export-led business model would not last, and have moved to provide products that have more added value.

Rebecca Fannin is a New York–based freelance writer who writes frequently about Asia and the global private equity industry.

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