China's yuan finished the domestic session on Friday at its weakest since the global financial crisis, hit by capital outflow pressures as the economy struggles.
A growing yield gap with other major economies, particularly the United States, has also put fresh pressure on the yuan and a number of other emerging currencies.
The onshore yuan ended the domestic trading session at 7.3415 per dollar, its weakest close since Dec.26, 2007.
The yuan, one of region's worst performing currencies, has lost 1.0% against the dollar so far this week and depreciated roughly 6.1% so far this year as the dollar climbed and China's post-pandemic recovery quickly lost steam.
Analysts and traders expect the currency to face further selling pressure in the near term but expect losses will likely be measured.
On Friday, the central bank again looked to be shoring up the currency by setting guidance through its daily fixing that was stronger than Reuters estimate.
Prior to the market's opening, the People's Bank of China (PBOC) set the midpoint rate at 7.215 per U.S.
dollar, 164 pips weaker than the previous fix of 7.1986.
The fix was set weaker than prior days, implying that the PBOC could be allowing the yuan to gradually drift lower, Maybank analysts said in a note.
A widening services trade deficit from outbound tourism or overseas study, and reduced incentives for Chinese exporters to convert proceeds back to yuan due to a wide interest rate gap, may be downside factors in the near term, said Becky Liu, head of China macro strategy at Standard Chartered Bank.
But Liu did not expect a sharp move in the yuan soon «as the PBOC's stance to defend the currency around current levels remains very strong», Liu said.
«I think the PBOC will take a