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Ukraine invasion: Swift ban, sanctions cut Russian economy from the world. Will China’s yuan payment system offer a lifeline?
- Sanctions on Moscow are likely to accelerate connection and transactions between Chinese and Russian payment systems
- But cooperation between China’s central bank and its Russian counterpart could threaten the Chinese economy, analysts warn
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China is unlikely to allow Russian banks banned from the Swift financial messaging system to use its own cross-border payment network to circumvent sanctions, as Beijing is cautious about provoking punitive action from the United States and European Union, analysts said.
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The US and its Western allies have decided to exclude selected Russian banks from Swift as part of a package of sanctions aimed at pressuring Moscow to abandon its invasion of Ukraine.
Banning Russia from the financial messaging system means Russian banks can no longer use it to arrange payments with foreign financial institutions.
As a result, analysts said China’s Cross-Border Interbank Payment System (CIPS) is likely to become more important for trade settlement between China and Russia.
Shares of leading Chinese companies involved in developing payment infrastructure jumped early this week on news Russian banks would be booted from the Swift system.
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