China January new loans surge to record 2.9 trillion
yuan, blow past forecasts
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[February 12, 2018]
By Kevin Yao and Fang Cheng
BEIJING (Reuters) - China's banks extended
a record 2.9 trillion yuan ($458.3 billion) in new yuan loans in
January, blowing past expectations and nearly five times the previous
month as policymakers aim to sustain solid economic growth while reining
in debt risks.
While Chinese banks tend to front-load loans early in the year to get
higher-quality customers and win market share, the lofty figure was even
higher than the most bullish forecast by economists in a Reuters poll.
Net new loans surpassed the previous record of 2.51 trillion yuan in
January 2016, which is likely to support growth not only in China but
may underpin liquidity globally as major Western central banks begin to
withdraw stimulus.
Analysts polled by Reuters had predicted new yuan loans of 2 trillion
yuan, up sharply from December's 584.4 billion yuan.
A more detailed breakdown of the loan data on Monday showed sharp
pickups in demand for credit from both households and companies,
auguring well for consumption and investment.
"Banks hope to lend early to get early returns... private investment and
manufacturing investment are picking up due to firmer global demand
(and) household loans could be boosted by property demand," said Nie Wen,
economist at Hwabao Trust in Shanghai.
"This indicates the economy may slow in the first half but any slowdown
won't be sharp..."
Corporate loans surged to 1.78 trillion yuan from 243.2 billion yuan in
December, while household loans rose to 901.6 billion yuan in January
from 329.4 billion yuan in December, according to Reuters calculations
based on the central bank data.
Beijing is in the second year of a regulatory push to clamp down on
riskier financial activity that has been fueled by a rapid build-up in
debt.
But authorities are proceeding cautiously and keeping liquidity broadly
supportive to avoid any sharp drag on the world's second-largest economy
or excessive financial market volatility.
Broad M2 money supply also beat expectations, growing 8.6 percent in
January from a year earlier, central bank data showed on Monday.
Economists had expected the growth rate to edge up to 8.4 percent from
8.2 percent in December.
Other data last week had painted a somewhat mixed picture of the economy
at the start of the year, with inflationary pressures easing -- possibly
pointing to softening activity -- but better-than-expected import and
export growth.
Taken together, the stronger credit and trade data would appear to still
support the consensus view that China will see only a modest pullback in
GDP growth to around 6.5 percent this year, after a forecast-beating 6.9
percent in 2017.
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CREDIT STILL AMPLE
Outstanding yuan loans grew 13.2 percent in January from a year earlier, also
faster than an expected 12.5 percent rise and compared with an increase of 12.7
percent in December.
Last year China's total new loans hit a record 13.53 trillion yuan, 7 percent
more than the previous record in 2016.
The credit boom has been fueled by strong economic growth, a robust property
market and a crackdown on riskier shadow lending, which has forced banks to
shift some loans back onto their balance sheets.
Since the start of 2017, Chinese regulators have announced a slew of steps to
coax financial institutions to reduce riskier activity and leverage, targeting
everything from interbank lending levels to bond trading, negotiable
certificates of deposit and entrusted loans.
In addition, the PBOC has been gingerly nudging up money market interest rates,
most recently in December, but rates have also been slowly creeping higher on
their own as regulators look set to persist with the current "de-risking"
campaign much longer than policy crackdowns in the past.
Those efforts appear to be bearing fruit. The outstanding amount of banking
wealth management products (WMPs) grew just 1.7 percent last year, compared with
a near 24 percent rise in 2016. Many of these products had strong links with the
less-regulated shadow banking sector.
Analysts expect authorities to step up their efforts this year, focusing on
local government debt, rising corporate and household debt levels and dealing
with "zombie" companies.
On Monday, the state planner issued new rules for companies which are planning
to issue bonds to put more pressure on debt-laden local governments to get their
finances in order.
But analysts say more still needs to be done on structural reforms to rein in
ballooning corporate debt, which has reached levels that the IMF and others have
warned sharply raises the risks of a financial crisis.
China's total social financing (TSF), a broad measure of credit and liquidity in
the economy, surged to 3.06 trillion yuan in January from 1.14 trillion yuan in
December, additional data showed on Monday.
TSF includes off-balance sheet forms of financing that exist outside the
conventional bank lending system, such as initial public offerings, loans from
trust companies and bond sales.
That can provide hints on activity in China's vast and unregulated shadow
banking sector, which authorities have also been targeting in their campaign to
reduce systemic risks.
China: an economic snapshot - http://tmsnrt.rs/2lQ48De
(Reporting by Cheng Fang and Kevin Yao; Editing by Kim Coghill)
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