Logo Title
obverse
reverse
PCGS

300 Yuan – People's Republic of China

Non-circulating coins
Commemoration: Panda
China
Context
Year: 2015
Country: China Country flag
Period:
(since 1949)
Currency:
(since 1955)
Total mintage: 20,000
Material
Diameter: 100 mm
Weight: 1000 g
Silver weight: 999.00 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 99.9% Silver
Standard: Silver kilo
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
References
Numista: #313230
Value
Exchange value: 300 CNY = $43.85
Bullion value: $2825.89
Inflation-adjusted value: 348.90 CNY

Obverse

Description:
Altar of Heaven
Inscription:
2015

Reverse

Description:
Panda eating bamboo.
Inscription:
300

Edge

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
201520,000Proof

Historical background

In 2015, the People's Republic of China faced a pivotal and complex currency situation centered on the management of the renminbi (RMB). The year was defined by the Chinese government's strategic goal of internationalizing its currency, which culminated in a landmark decision by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in November to include the RMB in its Special Drawing Rights (SDR) basket. This move, effective October 2016, was a major diplomatic and financial achievement, recognizing the RMB as a global reserve currency. To meet the IMF's "freely usable" criteria, the People's Bank of China (PBOC) had undertaken a series of reforms, including widening the RMB's daily trading band and moving toward a more market-oriented exchange rate mechanism.

However, this period of triumph was immediately followed by significant market turbulence. In August 2015, the PBOC surprised global markets by devaluing the RMB's daily reference rate by nearly 2% over three days, citing a new "market-maker" system to better reflect supply and demand. This move, interpreted by international investors as a deliberate devaluation to boost flagging exports amid slowing economic growth, triggered a wave of capital outflows and heightened fears about the stability of the Chinese economy. The subsequent depletion of China's substantial foreign exchange reserves—which fell by nearly $1 trillion from their 2014 peak—as the PBOC intervened to prop up the currency, revealed the underlying pressures of capital flight and diverging monetary policy with the United States.

The year concluded with the currency situation embodying a central contradiction: China's ambition for global financial integration versus its need for domestic economic control. The SDR inclusion validated its reform path, but the market volatility exposed the fragility of transitioning from a tightly managed peg to a more flexible system. The 2015 experience forced Chinese authorities to walk a fine line, implementing stricter capital controls to stem outflows while continuing to promise further liberalization, setting the stage for ongoing cautious and managed reforms in the years that followed.

Series: Panda Bullion

300 Yuan obverse
300 Yuan reverse
300 Yuan
2015
100 Yuan obverse
100 Yuan reverse
100 Yuan
2015
500 Yuan obverse
500 Yuan reverse
500 Yuan
2015
10000 Yuan obverse
10000 Yuan reverse
10000 Yuan
2015
10 Yuan obverse
10 Yuan reverse
10 Yuan
2015
20 Yuan obverse
20 Yuan reverse
20 Yuan
2015
50 Yuan obverse
50 Yuan reverse
50 Yuan
2015
Legendary