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China approves Standard Bank, ICBC for Africa yuan clearing

China approves Standard Bank, ICBC for Africa yuan clearing
China approves Standard Bank, ICBC for Africa yuan clearing

China's central banks has authorized the Standard Bank and Industrial and Commercial Bank of China to clear Renminbi in Africa as Beijing steps up its efforts to promote global use of its currency. This enables businesses and financial institutions to gain direct access to China’s onshore financial system, including capital markets, liquidity infrastructure and streamlining trade and investment. China's People's Bank of China is taking a number of steps to internationalize the yuan, and reduce its dependence on the U.S. dollar-dominated global payment system. PBOC Governor Pan Gongsheng, announced last week at the annual Lujiazui Forum, in Shanghai, measures to promote offshore yuan businesses, including allowing six state banks in the free trade zone of the 'city to conduct offshore yuan transaction. Standard Bank and ICBC are partnering to operate as the "Renminbi clearing bank of?Africa" with a capacity to clear RMB across 19 African countries. Standard Bank announced this in a Friday statement.

China-Africa trade grew by nearly 18% in the past year, according Chinese customs data. Beijing also removed all tariffs for imports from 53 African countries on May 1. Standard Bank's head of corporate and investment banking, Richard de Roos said that China is 'Africa's biggest export market'. With clearing status added to CIPS membership, Standard Bank will be even better positioned to support Africa's 'trade with China'. Standard Bank became the first African institution to join China's Cross-Border Interbank Payment System (CBIPS) in November 2025. The bank processed $500 million during its first four-month period, mainly driven by physical trade.

Standard Bank's Africa Trade Barometer shows that Asian countries have become the preferred trading partners for 35% of companies across 10?African market, up from just 24% in 2024. 67% of respondents cite China as their top source of inputs. (Reporting and Editing by Bate Fletcher and Philippa Gletcher.)

(source: Reuters)