China's central bank set to boost liquidity injection but keep key rate
unchanged
Send a link to a friend
[December 14, 2023] SHANGHAI/
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - China's central bank is expected to ramp up
liquidity injections while leaving the key interest rate unchanged when
it rolls over maturing medium-term policy loans on Friday, a Reuters
survey showed.
Among thirty-two market participants polled this week, 29 or 91%
expected the People's Bank of China (PBOC) to keep the borrowing cost of
one-year medium-term lending facility (MLF) loans unchanged, while the
remaining three projected a marginal interest rate cut.
The interest rate on the MLF loans currently stands at 2.5%.
Additionally, 26 or 81% of all respondents predicted that the central
bank would inject fresh funds to exceed the maturing 650 billion yuan
($91.11 billion) worth of the MLF loans on Friday.
"We look for an outsized MLF to buffer liquidity demand emanating from
bond sales and loans; if there is no outsized MLF, then a reserve
requirement ratio (RRR) cut is probably needed," said Frances Cheung,
rates strategist at OCBC Bank.
Over recent months, China has started to unleash fresh stimulus to shore
up the economy. In a surprise move, Beijing in late October approved 1
trillion yuan of sovereign bond issuance for this year - its first such
budget deficit expansion in a fiscal year in 23 years - and passed a
bill to allow local governments to frontload part of their 2024 bond
quotas.
The PBOC injected a net 600 billion yuan of cash via MLF loans into the
banking system in November, the biggest monthly increase since December
2016.
Expectations of an interest rate reduction has increased slightly as
China has been facing heightened deflationary pressure, with consumer
prices falling the fastest in three years in November while factory-gate
deflation deepened.
"The main barrier to PBOC rate reductions since the middle of this year
has been the strength of the dollar," said Julian Evans-Pritchard, head
of China economics at Capital Economics.
[to top of second column] |
A gardener works outside the headquarters of the central bank of the
People's Republic of China in Beijing October 8, 2008. External and
internal conditions are ripe for China to cut interest rates soon to
give the economy a lift, an official newspaper said in a front-page
commentary on Wednesday. REUTERS/Jason Lee/File photo
"However, U.S. yields have fallen and the renminbi has strengthened
recently. The currency has now returned to levels that the PBOC is
more comfortable with, which should open the door to a resumption of
rate cuts."
With China's economy sputtering and the U.S. dollar surging until
recently, the yuan has had a volatile year, having weakened 6.14% to
the dollar at one point before giving back some of the losses on
views that U.S. interest rates have peaked.
On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve took a decidedly dovish tilt by
flagging rate cuts were on the way next year.
The yuan strengthened 2.55% in November, its best month this year,
but it is still down about 3.3% year-to-date.
China will step up policy adjustments to support an economic
recovery in 2024, state media said, following the annual Central
Economic Work Conference held from Dec. 11-12, during which top
leaders set economic targets for next year.
"This signals that the Chinese leadership wants to put more weight
on the economy than it did earlier this year," said Tommy Wu, senior
China economist at Commerzbank.
"Monetary policy will continue to be about providing sufficient but
not excessive liquidity. This means any rate cuts and stimulus
measures will likely be modest."
($1 = 7.1341 Chinese yuan)
(Reporting by Wu Fang and Winni Zhou in Shanghai, Tom Westbrook in
Singapore; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)
[© 2023 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |