China, Singapore to direct trade currencies
Updated: 2013-10-22 21:30
By Wu Yiyao (chinadaily.com.cn)
|
||||||||
The Monetary Authority of Singapore announced on Tuesday that China and Singapore will introduce direct trading of their currencies, a move that will entrench Singapore's position as Asia's largest center for foreign exchange trading.
More details on the direct trading of the currencies of China and Singapore will be released later, the MAS said on Tuesday.
China will extend its Renminbi Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor program to Singapore, with an aggregate quota of 50 billion yuan ($8.2 billion), according to a statement from the MAS.
China has been internationalizing the use of the yuan. The country will also extend the RQFII program to London and give investors there the right to buy up to 80 billion yuan of Chinese securities, Xinhua reported.
- Apple unveils new Macs, iPad ahead of holidays
- Smart cities to aid urbanization
- In control & breaking the mold
- Higher retirement age may help solve pension problem
- Northeast remains shrouded in smog for third straight day
- Beijing Opera troupe perform in Brazil
- Nature's masterpieces
- Riot police off to Libya peacekeeping mission
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Bribery claims feed milk scandal |
The fish that didn't get away |
Stranded in heavy snow at Qomolangma |
Riding the wave of big bargain buy-ups |
US Sinophile traces the evolution of Chinese words |
The dirt on tomb raiders |
Today's Top News
NASA: Chinese scientists are now welcome
Yingli uses US baseball stars in campaign
Top officials promote new relations
China's US Treasury holdings hit six-month low
Graduate looks at kung fu-hip hop connection
Apple unveils new Macs, iPad
San Francisco train service restarts after strike
China, Russia reach big oil deal
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |