KEY POINTS
  • President Donald Trump's comments that China and Europe are manipulating their currencies sounds like a salvo that could turn the trade war into a currency war, but strategists say it's too soon to tell whether nations will intentionally seek to weaken their currencies.
  • While Trump took aim at both China and Europe, strategists say the fact that China does not allow its currency to float makes the decline in the yuan look more intentional than the fall in the euro.
  • However, aside from a steep drop in the yuan fixing overnight that appeared intentional, strategists say China may be allowing its currency to fall with market forces that are driving its currency lower due to trade wars and its economy.

On the surface, the tit-for-tat trade war between the U.S. and China appears to be turning into a currency war.

President Donald Trump called out China and Europe Thursday and again on Friday for manipulating their currencies and keeping them low against the dollar. Hours after Trump's comments were first aired on CNBC Thursday, the People's Bank of China set the dollar's reference rate at 6.7671 yuan, steering the currency 0.9 percent lower and weakening it the most in two years.