China's yuan currency devalued for a second day

  • 23 minutes ago
  • From the section Business
China's Central Bank has again cut the guiding rate for the national currency, the yuan, a day after Tuesday's record 1.9% devaluation.
The move sent fresh shockwaves through Asian markets, but the bank has sought to calm fears, saying it was not the start of a sustained devaluation.
This is now the biggest two-day lowering of the yuan's rate against the dollar in more than two decades.
The commerce ministry said the lower rate would boost struggling exports.
Chinese exports fell more than 8% in July, adding to concerns the world's second largest economy is heading for a slowdown.
But the action on the yuan sparked fears of a global and destabilising "currency war". There has been criticism from the US, where markets fell sharply overnight.
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One-off?

On Wednesday, China's central bank fixed the "official midpoint" for the yuan down 1.6% to 6.3306 against the dollar.
The midpoint is a guiding rate, from which trade can rise or fall 2% during the day.