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🇨🇳 CNY to 🇸🇸 SSPChinese Yuan (RMB) to South Sudanese Pound (SSP) Rate Today

Live indicative interbank rate. Last refreshed 25 Jun 2026 00:00:05 UTC.

Convert Chinese Yuan to South Sudanese Pound using the live indicative interbank rate and the converter below. Covers the cost of sending to South Sudan via the major mobile money apps.

LiveUpdated 2026-06-25
1 CNY = 758.49 SSP

CNY to SSP rate change

Rate tracking started 24 June 2026. Longer windows fill in as history grows.

1 day
+0.0%
1 week
1 month
1 year

Change in the CNY→SSP rate. + means the South Sudanese Pound weakened against the Chinese Yuan; − means it strengthened.

Currency converter

You convert
🇨🇳CNY
Receives
🇸🇸75,849.00SSP
1 CNY = 758.49 SSP · Updated 2026-06-25 00:00

CNY → SSP conversion table

CNYSSP
1758.49
53,792.45
107,584.90
2015,169.80
5037,924.50
10075,849.00
200151,698.00
500379,245.00
1,000758,490.00
2,0001,516,980.00
5,0003,792,450.00
10,0007,584,900.00

Table computed at the indicative rate of 1 CNY = 758.49 SSP. Real operator-side values include a 1%-4% spread.

Chinese Yuan to South Sudanese Pound exchange rate history

Current: 1 CNY = 758 SSP
Low: 758High: 758

What moves the South Sudanese Pound rate

The South Sudanese pound hangs almost entirely on oil, which makes up nearly all exports. Because the crude flows through pipelines that run across neighbouring Sudan, any disruption to those lines or interruption of flows strikes directly at foreign-currency earnings and the currency. The rate is thus hostage to exported crude volumes and the reliability of getting them to market. To anticipate the pound, attention belongs on oil output, the state of the pipelines and the arrangements that keep them open, since it is this single dependence on crude, more than any other variable, that dictates the pressure on the exchange rate.

Converting and sending the South Sudanese Pound: what to know

The South Sudanese pound trades far weaker on the street than the official rate, and that parallel-market gap is a defining daily reality rather than an occasional quirk. Institutions are fragile and foreign exchange is scarce, so obtaining hard currency can be difficult and the official quote is often not what you actually get. Senders and receivers should assume a meaningful divergence between published and real-world rates, plan for limited availability, and recognise that conditions can be volatile given how dependent the whole system is on uninterrupted oil flows.

About the Chinese Yuan

The Chinese Yuan (CNY, ¥) is the unit of the broader Renminbi currency system, issued by the People's Bank of China since 1948. The two names sometimes confuse newcomers: Renminbi (literally "people's currency") refers to the currency as a system, while yuan is the unit in which prices are quoted — both terms describe the same money. Two ISO codes circulate: CNY for the onshore mainland-traded yuan and CNH for the offshore yuan traded primarily in Hong Kong, which sometimes diverges modestly from the onshore rate. The PBOC operates a managed-float regime: a daily mid-point is set against the dollar and the market is permitted to trade within a roughly 2% band around it. For Africa, the yuan has become one of the most strategically important non-G3 currencies. China-Africa bilateral trade reached approximately $348 billion in 2025, up around 17% year-on-year, with Nigeria, South Africa, Angola, Egypt and Kenya as the largest counterparties. In April 2026, Ecobank confirmed negotiations with the Bank of China to launch direct local-currency-to-yuan settlement across its 35 African markets, signalling a structural move away from US-dollar intermediation for African importers paying Chinese suppliers. Note that the ¥ symbol is shared with the Japanese yen — context matters when reading a number.

About the South Sudanese Pound

The South Sudanese pound, issued by the Bank of South Sudan, was introduced in 2011 when the country gained independence and became the world's newest sovereign state, and it divides into 100 piasters. Its economy is overwhelmingly dependent on oil, leaving public finances and currency stability hostage to crude exports and the pipelines that carry them. The pound is widely traded on the street at levels far weaker than the official rate, a divergence that reflects scarce foreign exchange and fragile institutions. That parallel-market gap is a defining feature of daily commerce in the young nation.

Related pairs

FAQ

What is the CNY/SSP exchange rate today?
The indicative rate is 1 CNY = 758.49 SSP, updated 2026-06-25. This is an interbank mid-market reference; mobile money operators apply their own spread on top.
How much is 100 CNY in SSP?
100 CNY ≈ 75,849.00 SSP at the indicative rate. For 100 CNY: 75,849.00 SSP. Use the converter above to try other amounts.
What's the best way to send Chinese Yuan to South Sudan?
For CNY to South Sudan transfers, compare Sendwave, LemFi, WorldRemit, TapTap Send, Wise and traditional bank rails. The fee structure varies by amount and receiving method.
Is the South Sudanese Pound a stable currency?
The South Sudanese pound, issued by the Bank of South Sudan, was introduced in 2011 when the country gained independence and became the world's newest sovereign state, and it divides into 100 piasters. Its economy is overwhelmingly dependent on oil, leaving public finances and currency stability hostage to crude exports and the pipelines that carry them.
Why is the rate I see on my mobile money operator different?
The rate shown here is an indicative interbank mid-market reference. Operators (Sendwave, M-Pesa, MTN MoMo, LemFi, etc.) add a 1%-4% spread on top of this mid-market to cover their risk and operational cost. This is normal and consistent with market practice.

Rates shown on this page are indicative interbank reference rates updated daily. Operator send rates typically include a 1%-4% spread above this reference, which covers FX hedging cost, settlement risk and commercial margin. For exact send rates via M-Pesa, MTN MoMo, Sendwave, LemFi, WorldRemit, Wise or TapTap Send to South Sudan, see the inbound transfer comparison.