Since Bloomberg quit quoting “Shibor” this is the only view of opaque Chinese rates that I am aware of: the China Interbank Repo Rate (click on 1m or 1y):
http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/RP07:IND
fact: This is China’s seven-day repo rate, a money-market benchmark.
opinion: The effects of reverse repos in providing money for China’s banking system is similar to cuts in the banks’ reserve ratio, and repos as a tool are supposed to be more flexible.
(The Yuan isn’t freely traded, so I don’t have a good currency measure to watch (which is why we watch aussie kiwi etc as proxy).
[If this view is too ignorant, please help by posting better, more.]
On a related note: “China’s softening yuan could block rate cuts”
China could find itself in a bit of a bind if the yuan continues to weaken… the trend could prevent the PBOC from lowering interest rates to boost the slowing economy… according to Moody's. Any rate cut could prompt further capital outflows - which hit a net $71.4B in Q2 - and so hurt efforts to speed growth.
The central bank has recently been propping up the yuan in the market by selling forex reserves.
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/chinas ... 2012-08-17