China holds rates, adds more liquidity as recovery struggles
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[May 15, 2023] SHANGHAI/
SINGAPORE (Reuters) -China's central bank rolled over maturing
medium-term policy loans while keeping the interest rate unchanged on
Monday, as expected, but markets expect monetary easing may be
inevitable in the coming months to support the economic recovery.
The People's Bank of China (PBOC) said it was keeping the rate on 125
billion yuan ($18.08 billion) worth of one-year medium-term lending
facility (MLF) loans to some financial institutions unchanged at 2.75%
from the previous operation.
Monday's operation was meant to fully meet financial institutions' needs
and to "maintain reasonably ample banking system liquidity," the PBOC
said in an online statement.
In a Reuters poll of 30 market watchers conducted last week, 26
participants, or 86.7%, predicted no change to the MLF rate, while four
respondents expected a marginal rate cut.
The government lifted stringent pandemic measures in December that have
started to rekindle credit demand in the world's second-largest economy,
but there are growing concerns that momentum is slowing after the
initial bounce.
With evidence of subdued domestic demand and weak investor sentiment,
Beijing will likely have to ramp up its easing efforts to ensure the
economic recovery stays on track.
Some analysts said an imminent rate cut would add further pressure on
lenders' profitability after the country's largest banks recorded
shrinking margins in the first quarter.
"It may not be possible for banks to cut as their net interest margins
are close to the warning line of 180 basis points," Xing Zhaopeng,
senior China strategist at ANZ, said.
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Paramilitary police officers stand guard
in front of the headquarters of the People's Bank of China, the
central bank (PBOC), in Beijing, China September 30, 2022. REUTERS/Tingshu
Wang
"If loans rates are further lowered, that could trigger financial
risks," he said.
With 100 billion yuan worth of MLF loans set to expire this month,
the operation resulted in a net 25 billion yuan fresh fund injection
into the banking system.
The central bank also injected 2 billion yuan through seven-day
reverse repos while keeping borrowing costs unchanged at 2.00%, it
said in an online statement.
"We think disappointing credit data and rising deflation risks
increase the probability of more monetary policy easing in the form
of an interest rate cut," economists at Barclays said in a note
published last week.
"....a holistic approach and concerted policy efforts are needed to
stabilise the housing market and boost consumer and business
confidence if authorities are to break the disinflation/deflation
spiral."
They noted that the PBOC appeared to prefer adjusting banks' reserve
requirement ratio (RRR) and other structural tools, "but the
bottleneck is weak demand and the bank system is flush with
liquidity," they added.
($1 = 6.9121 Chinese yuan)
(Reporting by Winni Zhou in Shanghai and Tom Westbrook in Singapore;
Editing by Jacqueline Wong)
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