previous day´s close, foreign exchange supply and demand and the rates of major currencies.The yuan is restricted to trading up or down two percent from the daily rate, although the State Council, the cabinet, has signalled it does intend to broaden the trading band.
China is currently bidding to join the International Monetary Fund´s basket of reserve currencies, but the Washington-based lender has said more reforms are needed for membership.
Beijing is "killing two birds with one stone: it can release depreciation pressure to help the economy grow and meet the IMF´s requirement of letting the yuan be more market-oriented", Zhang Ning, a Hong Kong-based economist for UBS, told AFP.
The yuan devaluation has also been seen as a means for authorities to help the slowing economy by boosting exports -- a key driver of China´s extraordinary rise in the past three decades.
For the Henry Parts company in the eastern city of Ningbo, the devaluation means more orders from foreign customers for its machinery components.
"The devaluation will increase our revenue and we can get the orders we couldn´t get before," manager He Zhanyong told AFP.
China´s economy expanded 7.4 percent last year, its weakest since 1990, and has slowed to 7.0 percent in each of the first two quarters. The government wants growth of around 7.0 percent for all of 2015.
Still, there are worries the move could set off a "currency war" as regional neighbours and other emerging market countries face pressure to devalue to stay competitive."To some extent, the PBoC has served as an anchor in the region and the move now allows other currencies to weaken further," Societe Generale Group said in a research report.
Asia-Pacific currencies this week suffered their biggest two-day selloff since 1998, during the Asian financial crisis, while Russia´s ruble slid to a six-month low.
A disorderly devaluation could hamper Beijing´s push for greater global stature for the yuan and the government´s pursuit of a bigger say in world finance, typified by its role setting up two new multilateral banks for Asia and the BRICS nations, which also include Brazil, Russia, India and South Africa.
Argentina has nearly $34 billion in foreign exchange reserves but about a quarter are denominated in yuan and their value declined after the Chinese devaluation, Bloomberg News reported.
Chinese central bank officials have denied a currency war was the intention, but have been more cagey about the timetable for further reforms to the yuan.
Asked if China was on track to open its capital account to investment flows this year, as previously pledged, one official said the process would be orderly.
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