HONG KONG (Reuters) - China's yuan fell to the sixth place in April among most-used currencies for global payments by value with a market share of 1.82 percent, global transaction services organisation SWIFT said on Thursday.
The yuan jumped to the fourth place last August, but gradually lost growth momentum as the volatile foreign exchange rate and China's sluggish economy dampened foreign investors' appetite to use or hold the currency.
The "redback" is now after the U.S. dollar, the euro, the sterling, the Japanese yen and the Canadian dollar.
Overall, yuan payments value in April decreased by 7.73 percent from a month earlier, while in general all payment currencies decreased by 4.6 percent, SWIFT said.
SWIFT data also showed that India's use of yuan for payments with China/Hong Kong was on the rise, but the country still had one of the lowest yuan adoption rates among Asian countries, ranked 38th worldwide.
Also Read
In April, 3.8 percent of all payments made between India and China/Hong Kong were exchanged in the yuan, compared with 0.2 percent two years earlier. The yuan was the fourth most-active currency for payments between India and China/Hong Kong.
(Reporting by Michelle Chen; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu)