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Bundles of 100 yuan (14.6 USD) notes at a bank in Shanghai.JOHANNES EISELE/AFP/Getty Images

China’s yuan drifted lower on Friday, set for its worst month since the country’s currency reform in 1994, because of trade tensions with the United States and a slowdown in the domestic economy.

At the end of domestic trading, on-shore spot yuan finished at 7.1452 to the dollar as of 8:30 a.m. GMT, 22 pips weaker than the previous late session close of 7.1430.

If the spot yuan finishes the late-night trade at the domestic closing price, it would have lost 3.7 per cent to the dollar in August, booking itself the biggest monthly decline since China unified official and market exchange rates in 1994.

On Thursday, spot yuan snapped a 10-day losing streak, the longest since December, 2015, as Beijing and Washington gave signs they discussed a coming round of face-to-face negotiations in September, raising hopes to end the costly trade war.

China’s Foreign Ministry said on Friday at a daily news briefing in Beijing that Chinese and U.S. trade negotiating teams are maintaining effective communication.

The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) set Friday’s official yuan midpoint at its weakest in 11 1/2 years, although for a fourth straight day it was much stronger than the market expected, signalling the central bank’s intention to slow the currency’s decline.

The PBOC set the midpoint at 7.0879 to the dollar, 21 pips weaker than Thursday’s fix of 7.0858 and the weakest since March 14, 2008.

Friday’s official guidance rate was 318 pips or 0.45 per cent stronger than Reuters’s estimate of 7.1237 to the dollar.

At the start of August, U.S. President Donald Trump threatened to slap fresh tariffs on Chinese goods. Days later, China let its currency slide past the key 7 to the dollar level for the first time since the global financial crisis, and Washington labelled it a currency manipulator.

Analysts and traders believe that during August, the central bank heavily used its countercyclical factor, a tool introduced to the midpoint fixing mechanism in May, 2017, to reduce price swings.

“An aggressive CNY depreciation is unlikely in the foreseeable future,” Hao Zhou, analyst at Commerzbank in Singapore, said in a note on Friday.

“Instead, a gradual and managed depreciation remains the baseline in our opinion as this is in line with China’s overall strategy. Needless to say, the capital controls in mainland China still remain in place, which also means that the authorities will still be able to control the pace of the currency depreciation to a larger extent if they deem this necessary.”

Traders said corporate demand for dollars remained heavy on Friday, dragging spot yuan lower.

“If there are no more new tariffs, the spot yuan is likely to consolidate at current levels,” said a chief trader at a Chinese bank in Shanghai, adding that it could strengthen if implementation of U.S. tariffs is delayed.

Becky Liu, head of China macro strategy at Standard Chartered Bank in Hong Kong, said in a note she expects Chinese authorities “to avoid heavy-handed intervention to maintain USD-CNY at or under any specific level.”

“The authorities will likely allow further depreciation in an orderly manner, while continuing to curb excessive sudden movements,” she added, revising her year-end forecast for the yuan to 7.23 to the dollar from 6.86 in July.

As of 8:30 a.m. GMT, the offshore yuan was trading at 7.1463 to the dollar.

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