* U.S. senators seek probe into yuan "manipulation"
* Dealers expect the yuan may move between 6.8250 and 6.8300
SHANGHAI, Nov 20 - The yuan was flat against the dollar on Friday as the central bank set a stable reference rate, showing its resolve not to allow the yuan to appreciate while two U.S. senators renewed efforts to probe China on its yuan peg.
Expressing frustration over the Obama administration's light touch on China's yuan exchange rate, Senator Charles Schumer, a New York Democrat, and Senator Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican, asked the Commerce Department on Thursday to investigate alleged Chinese currency "manipulation."
The Chinese central bank fixed the yuan's daily mid-point, or reference rate, at 6.8278 versus the dollar, compared with Thursday's level of 6.8274.
Spot yuan was flat, trading at 6.8282 at midday on Friday, barely changed from Thursday's close of 6.8284.
"China faces high international pressure for the yuan to appreciate," said a dealer at an Asian bank in Shanghai. "But now the central bank has no intention of letting the yuan rise. The mid-point point says it all."
Several dealers said they expected the yuan to move between 6.8250 and 6.8300 next week.
Offshore, benchmark one-year dollar/yuan non-deliverable forwards (NDFs) rose slightly to 6.6320 bid at midday on Friday compared with Thursday's close of 6.6300.
Twelve-month yuan appreciation implied by NDFs fell slightly to 2.95 percent measured from the Chinese central bank's daily mid-point, compared with 2.98 percent implied at Thursday's close.
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