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obverse
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PCGS

10 Yuan – People's Republic of China

China
Context
Year: 2025
Country: China Country flag
Period:
(since 1949)
Currency:
(since 1955)
Total mintage: 2,000,000
Material
Diameter: 38 mm
Weight: 31.1 g
Silver weight: 31.07 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 99.9% Silver
Standard: Silver ounce
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
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Reverse
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References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard2908
Numista: #464067
Value
Exchange value: 10 CNY = $1.46
Bullion value: $87.17

Obverse

Description:
A massive ancient Chinese fortification.
Inscription:
中华人民共和国

2025
Translation:
People's Republic of China

2025
Script: Chinese
Language: Chinese

Reverse

Description:
A dragon slithering across clouds.
Inscription:
31.104g Ag .999

10 元
Translation:
31.104g Silver .999 Fine
10 Yuan
Scripts: Chinese, Latin
Languages: Chinese, English

Edge

Reeded

Mints

NameMark
Shenzhen Mint

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
20252,000,000

Historical background

In 2025, the currency situation of the People's Republic of China is defined by a strategic balancing act between domestic stability, internationalization ambitions, and external pressures. The primary focus of the People's Bank of China (PBOC) remains on managing the onshore yuan (CNY) within a stable, managed float against a basket of currencies, prioritizing control over volatility to underpin economic planning and financial security. This "managed" approach involves careful interventions and macro-prudential tools to counteract speculative flows, ensuring the currency acts as a shock absorber rather than a source of instability amid property market adjustments and targeted fiscal stimulus. Domestically, the digital yuan (e-CNY) has seen accelerated integration into the retail and wholesale payment ecosystems, further solidifying state oversight over the monetary base while enhancing financial inclusion.

Internationally, the yuan's role continues to grow incrementally, driven by its weight in IMF's Special Drawing Rights (SDR), expanded bilateral swap lines, and its use in settling a growing share of China's commodity and trade transactions, particularly with Global South partners and within regional blocs like the BRICS payment infrastructure initiatives. However, full convertibility remains deliberately constrained, with the capital account carefully gated to prevent destabilizing outflows. The offshore yuan (CNH) market in Hong Kong and other hubs remains a critical pressure valve and testing ground for international demand, though its valuation continues to be anchored by the mainland's central parity rate setting mechanism.

External factors present significant headwinds. The currency faces persistent downward pressure from the interest rate differential with major Western economies, particularly if the U.S. Federal Reserve maintains relatively high policy rates. Geopolitical tensions and "de-risking" strategies by Western nations also create volatility in cross-border investment flows. Consequently, Chinese authorities in 2025 are navigating a narrow path: allowing sufficient yuan flexibility to reflect economic fundamentals and maintain export competitiveness, while rigorously defending against any self-reinforcing cycles of depreciation that could trigger capital flight or imported inflation, all within the overarching framework of state-led financial governance.
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