Chinese banks are paying more to hold your dollars. At least five institutions, spanning both state-owned giants and joint-stock banks, have raised interest rates on US dollar deposits in a coordinated effort to slow the yuan’s appreciation against the greenback.
The yuan has gained over 3% against the dollar so far in 2026, and Chinese authorities are clearly not thrilled about the pace. The fix they’ve landed on is elegant in its simplicity: make it more attractive for companies to keep their dollars as dollars, rather than converting them into yuan and adding more upward pressure on the currency.
The rate mechanics and why they matter
Corporate dollar deposit rates at these banks have climbed to approximately match or exceed the US Secured Overnight Financing Rate, which currently sits at 3.61%. That’s a meaningful number, because it essentially tells Chinese exporters: you can earn a competitive return just by parking your dollars in a domestic bank account.
Back in 2023, dollar deposit rates were capped at 2.8% for stretches of time. The People’s Bank of China was actively pressing banks to lower what they offered on dollar deposits, because the problem then was the opposite: the yuan was weakening, and authorities wanted to discourage dollar hoarding.
In early 2025, the PBOC mandated additional rate cuts affecting dollar deposits, doubling down on the same approach. The logic was straightforward. If holding dollars pays poorly, companies will convert them to yuan, which supports the currency.
Now the pendulum has swung entirely the other way. The yuan is too strong, too fast, and the playbook has flipped.
What’s driving the yuan’s strength
The appreciation is largely tied to robust export activity. Chinese companies have been generating significant dollar inflows from overseas sales, and when those dollars get converted to yuan on the domestic market, it pushes the currency higher.
The PBOC has not publicly confirmed the policy shift. This isn’t a sweeping monetary policy announcement. It’s a targeted, behind-the-scenes adjustment. Banks raise the rates, companies respond to the incentive, and the currency pressure eases, all without a single press conference.
What this means for investors
The reversal from 2023’s 2.8% cap to rates now matching or exceeding 3.61% in the span of roughly three years illustrates just how reactive Chinese monetary policy can be. The through-line isn’t consistency. It’s pragmatism.
When Chinese companies are incentivized to hold dollars domestically rather than converting them, it changes the flow of capital in ways that can eventually affect liquidity conditions across markets. A strong yuan historically correlates with periods of reduced capital flight from China, which in previous cycles has been associated with lower demand for Bitcoin and other crypto assets as hedging instruments.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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