Xi Jinping is done being subtle. In a newly published commentary, Chinaβs president made it crystal clear that he wants the renminbi to become a global reserve currency. The message was printed in Qiushi, the Communist Partyβs own ideology journal.
Jinping said China must create a βpowerful currencyβ thatβs used widely in international trade, investment, as well as forex markets and earning global reserve status.
Whatβs new here isnβt the ambition, Beijingβs wanted this for years but how direct Jinping was this time. The article was taken from a speech he gave in 2024 to regional officials, but itβs only being released now, in 2026, while global markets are already on edge.
The US dollar has fallen to its weakest level in four years, and 47th President Donald Trump said last week that the slide is βgreat.β With the Fed going through a leadership change and international tensions rising, central banks are starting to rethink their dollar exposure.
China pushes renminbi as dollar weakens under Trump
βChina senses the change of the global order more real than before,β said Kelvin Lam, senior China+ economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics. According to him, Jinpingβs push ties directly to the current cracks in the dollarβs dominance.
In the Qiushi commentary, Jinping said a strong currency needs strong backup. He called for a βpowerful central bankβ that can actually manage money well, plus financial institutions that can hold their own globally. He also wants cities like Shanghai and Shenzhen to become international financial hubs that βattract global capital and exert influence over global pricing.β
Pan Gongsheng, governor of the Peopleβs Bank of China, had said something like this last year. In a Shanghai meeting with officials and investors, he predicted a new currency order. He said the renminbi would compete in a βmulti-polar international monetary system,β sharing the space with the dollar, euro, and others.
Han Shen Lin from The Asia Group added that China doesnβt want to replace the dollar overnight, but they do want the yuan to become a βstrategic counterweightβ that limits U.S. leverage as the global order shifts.
Renminbi gains ground in trade but still weak in reserves
The yuan has already made some gains. Since Russiaβs full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, itβs become the second-most used currency for trade finance.
But in official reserves, it still trails far behind. As of Q3 2025, the dollar made up about 57% of global reserves, down from 71% in 2000. The euro sat at 20%. The renminbi? Just 1.93%, according to IMF data.
Experts say full convertibility and open capital accounts are key if China wants central banks to actually hold more renminbi. Right now, the lack of openness is a deal-breaker for many global investors.
Some of Chinaβs trade partners also want a stronger yuan. They claim itβs undervalued, which helps Chinese exports but messes with trade balances. Chinaβs trade surplus hit $1.2 trillion last year, and complaints about currency manipulation arenβt going away.
Even the IMF jumped in. Managing director Kristalina Georgieva said Chinaβs deflation had βresulted in significant real exchange rate depreciation,β and urged Beijing to fix βimbalancesβ in its economy.
At a conference last month, PBoC vice-governor Zou Lan denied that China was trying to weaken the currency for trade gains. Instead, he said their policy goal is βto keep the renminbi stable and preserve its role as a store of value.β
Chinaβs central planners seem open to letting the yuan rise slightly. Itβs already moved past Rmb7 against a weaker US dollar, though itβs still falling against the euro.
Zhang Jun, chief economist at China Galaxy Securities, said that as China focuses on domestic growth and tech innovation, the yuan could rise further over time.
Han from Asia Group added, βXiβs rhetoric wonβt flip global foreign exchange markets today but it cements a long-term tilt investors are already sniffing out.β
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