What comes after a more flexible yuan?

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Rise or fall?

"It is widely perceived that the yuan-dollar rate is very close to its equilibrium level," said Lu, adding that neither trend appreciation nor trend depreciation will appear in the near term.

Wang Tao, chief China economist at UBS, agreed with Lu, saying China's current account surplus-GDP ratio is below two percent, already lower than a widely-recognized standard that says a currency is at equilibrium when the ratio is between 2.5 and 3.5 percent.

"In this perspective, the yuan is to some extent overvalued, rather than undervalued," Wang said.

J.P. Morgan's Zhu said although the band widening gives the yuan more room to fall, the currency is not shifting toward a depreciation trend due to China's stable current account surplus, the efforts in yuan internationalization and political pressure from major trading partners.

"We forecast that the yuan-dollar rate will remain stable in the near term, or experience small appreciations," Zhu said.

Whether the yuan rises or falls, analysts believe further band widening is highly possible as China has put financial reform on its priority agenda.

In addition to discussions about how a more flexible yuan will influence the Chinese economy, Lu advised China to reconsider ways to set the daily central parity rate.

As an intermediate step toward a market-based regime, China could peg the yuan to a basket of currencies weighed by the importance of its trading partners, he said.

Reform toward a real managed float requires a group of more confident and pragmatic political leaders who are truly believers in markets, Lu said.

"The current Chinese leaders are market-oriented," he said.

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