China’s yuan may be going global faster than Western data suggests, analysts say
Analysts suggest that the global use of China's yuan may be greater than indicated by standard metrics like SWIFT data. This is because an increasing number of international transactions are processed through China's Cross-Border Interbank Payment System (CIPS) and other bilateral agreements, which are not fully captured by SWIFT.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedAnalysts suggest that the global use of China's yuan may be greater than indicated by standard metrics like SWIFT data. This is because an increasing number of international transactions are processed through China's Cross-Border Interbank Payment System (CIPS) and other bilateral agreements, which are not fully captured by SWIFT. Consequently, SWIFT data may underestimate the yuan's actual role in global payments. This discrepancy could explain the difference between China's claim that the yuan is the world's third-largest payment currency and SWIFT's data, which places it lower. The increasing use of alternative payment systems means SWIFT is becoming a less accurate reflection of international payments.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe yuan's share was 2.74 per cent of global payments by value in February, placing it sixth.
Swift's data showed the yuan ranking between fourth and sixth globally in 2025.
The yuan had already become the world’s third-largest payment currency.
Payments are increasingly routed through Beijing’s own cross-border payment system.
Mainstream metrics may understate the role of China’s currency in global payments.