The data announced by central bank, the People's Bank of China was basically in line with market expectations after an unexpected rise surprised investors in June.
China began to see a falling trend in its forex reserves in November 2015 due to concerns over a weak yuan and capital outflow, but the reserves returned to growth in March as fears eased amid signs of stabilising economic growth, state-run Xinhua news agency reported.
Forex reserves denominated in Special Drawing Rights (SDRs), an international reserve asset, rose to 2.297 trillion SDRs in July from 2.291 trillion in the previous month, the data showed.
China's official gold reserves stood at USD 78.89 billion in July, up from USD 77.43 billion in June, the data said.
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