China leverage rising at
'alarming pace': central bank official
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[May 01, 2017]
SHANGHAI
(Reuters) - China's level of leverage is rising at an "alarming pace",
particularly in the finance sector, a senior central bank official said
in a commentary, amid growing concern by the country's senior leaders
over financial security.
The official Xinhua news agency on Monday cited Xu Zhong, head of the
People's Bank of China's (PBOC) research bureau, as saying the country
needed to deleverage at a "proper pace" to reduce financial sector debt
and avoid systemic financial risk.
"China's overall leverage level is reasonable but is rising at an
alarming pace, especially in the financial sector," Xu said. The
original commentary was published in business journal Caijing Magazine.
Xu said high levels of stimulus spending from government paired with
poor corporate management and financial supervision were key factors
causing rising levels of leverage, Xinhua said.
He added the government should stick to "prudent and neutral" monetary
policy, reduce emphasis on economic growth targets, and improve
corporate governance so authorities did not have to step in so
frequently to help companies out.
"Financial security is achieved via reforms, not bail-outs," Xinhua
reported Xu as saying.
Last week President Xi Jinping called for increased efforts to ward off
systemic risks and help maintain financial security. Analysts say
financial risk and asset bubbles pose a threat to the world's
second-largest economy if not handed well.
Former Chinese finance minister Lou Jiwei also said last month that high
leverage was the biggest risk facing China's economy because debt has
piled up despite government efforts to deleverage.
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Property buildings are seen against the dawn sky in Beijing, China,
April 25, 2017. REUTERS/Stringer
The
Bank for International Settlements warned last year that excessive credit growth
in China is signaling an increasing risk of a banking crisis in the next three
years.
China
watchers have generally expected another modest increase in short-term interest
rates by the central bank around June, following similar moves earlier this
year, but see no aggressive or politically sensitive tightening moves ahead of a
major leadership transition in the country later in the year.
Still, the People's Bank of China (PBOC) and other regulators have ramped up the
pressure on a number of fronts as they look to contain financial risks after
years of debt-fueled stimulus.
In particular, regulators are targeting riskier forms of financing which often
interconnect the official and shadow banking sectors and other financial firms
such as brokerages and trust companies.
Local governments have also rolled out a series of measures to cool heated
housing markets, with mixed results so far. But again, tapping the brakes too
hard risks a blow to economic growth.
(Reporting by Adam Jourdan; Editing by Kim Coghill)
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