Analysis-China's RRReminder that economies remain fragile
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[July 10, 2021] By
Marc Jones and Tom Arnold
LONDON (Reuters) - China's decision on
Friday to give its economy a 1 trillion yuan ($154 billion) shot in the
arm has given investors a reminder that even the largest economies are
likely to the need the occasional pick-me-up while the coronavirus
pandemic lasts.
In one of its trademark Friday night moves, the People's Bank of China (PBOC)
cut its reserve requirement ratio (RRR) - the money banks have to park
at the central bank for safety - by 50 basis points (bps).
It is the first such step since April last year when COVID was rapidly
spreading around the world. Just as significantly, it ends nine months
of gradual policy tightening by authorities eager to prevent credit
growth getting out of control.
"We believe this marks a shift from countercyclical tightening to an
easing bias," analysts at Morgan Stanley said, "in view of the recent
growth hiccup amid Covid resurgence, supply chain disruptions, and
further moderation in domestic consumption."
UBS's head of emerging market strategy Manik Narain said the move was a
fine-tuning rather than a screeching U-turn by the PBOC. Around 400
billion yuan of the 1 trillion the RRR is estimated to be worth is
likely to be used to repay existing PBOC 'Medium-term Lending Facility'
funding, while 700-750 billion of tax payments are also due soon.
But, from a global perspective, it was a pointed reminder that reeling
in COVID support measures isn't going to be a smooth glide for anyone.
"China was first in, first out (with COVID policy support)" Narain said.
"So if you are thinking about the global significance, it is possible
that the message here is that the PBOC is showing that economies are
somewhat fragile and inflation is not likely to be too damaging over the
medium term."
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Headquarters of the People's Bank of China (PBOC), the central bank,
is pictured in Beijing, China September 28, 2018. REUTERS/Jason
Lee/File Photo
RESPONSE
The PBOC's move comes amid a rapid re-acceleration of global COVID cases.
At the same time, though, the U.S. Federal Reserve is weighing when to taper its
asset purchases and near-zero interest rates it put in place last year and
emerging market heavyweights like Brazil, Mexico and Russia are jacking their
interest rates up already to address spikes in inflation.
The bond market appears to be responding to the turn in China's rate cycle by
pricing in lower interest rates over the medium term. Even prior to the RRR
announcement, hints earlier this week that a cut was coming led China’s 10-year
government bond yield to post its biggest weekly decline this year.
Many China watchers believe pent-up COVID demand has now peaked and its growth
rates will now moderate, weighed down by weakening exports, surging producer
price inflation and Beijing's continued crackdown on the property market.
The economy is still expected to grow more than 8% this year, however, against
the government's modest growth target of over 6%, suggesting there is no big
pressure to step up easing.
"We expect fiscal policy to remain focused on specific sectors most affected by
the pandemic like small companies. We also expect macro prudential tightening on
the property market to remain in place," said Gustavo Medeiros, deputy head of
research at Ashmore Group.
UBS's Narain said another take away from of Friday's move was that other big
emerging markets were likely to see it as sign of things to come in their own
economies.
"If I am the head of the central bank of Mexico or Brazil and have already been
hiking rates, it is also telling me that the (interest rate) hiking cycle is
probably going to be shallow."
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