China's currency, the yuan, was set to trade at 6.9837 yuan
against the US dollar on Wednesday, a new high since the government
unpegged it from the dollar in 2005.
The yuan has risen almost 4.6 percent against the dollar
so far this year.
Market analysts attributed the rise to the continuing weakening
of the dollar, led by a fall in confidence in the US currency
and sell-off activity.
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China ended the currency's peg to the dollar in July 2005,
and since then the yuan's reference rate has been set against
a currency basket that also includes the euro, yen, won and
British pound.
The value of the Chinese currency stayed above eight to the
dollar for many years before the 2005 regime reform. The yuan
broke the 8-yuan threshold on May 15, 2006, and the 7-yuan
mark on April 10 this year.