PBOC unveils targeted lending plan to aid economic growth

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Bloomberg

China’s central bank said it will reduce the amount of cash lenders must hold as reserves from next year, with the size of the cut linked to the flow of funding to parts of the economy where credit is scarce.
The targeted measures apply to all major banks, 90 percent of city commercial banks, and 95 percent of rural commercial lenders, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) said in a statement. Cuts will range from 0.5 percentage point to 1.5 percentage point depending on how much business banks do with small enterprises, agricultural borrowers and startups. Foreign banks will also be eligible for the cut should they meet the requirements.
Banks will enjoy 0.5 percentage point RRR cut if eligible lending exceeds 1.5% or more of their new lending in 2017 Deduction will be 1.5 percentage point if eligible lending reaches 10 percent or more of new lending in 2017, or if ‘inclusive finance’ loans take up 10% of total outstanding loans in 2017 Rural commercial banks who meet an earlier requirement that at least 10 percent of new lending is local can receive a
1 percentage point reduction.
The targeted reduction is a ‘structural adjustment’ and isn’t a shift in monetary policy, the central bank said in a separate Q&A statement. Policy makers, who have kept the benchmark lending rate unchanged for almost two years, also reiterated Saturday that they aim for “prudent and neutral” monetary policy.
The policy signals that the PBOC is, like the rest of the government apparatus, pulling multiple levers to keep economic growth from slowing too sharply in the second half, when the all-important 19th Party Congress takes place. While China is currently experiencing still-rapid credit growth despite an anti-leverage campaign, small- and medium-sized enterprises can still be starved of credit.
“The latest move is striking for the advance notice it gives the banks, apparently aimed at encouraging lending to SMEs ahead of the year-end so they can clear the threshold for lower reserve requirements,” Bloomberg Intelligence economists Tom Orlik and Fielding Chen wrote in a report. “It’s important to note that the PBOC has a range of policy instruments it can use to manage
liquidity and steer lending.”
The move will free up about 600 billion yuan ($90 billion) of funding, Ming Ming, head of fixed-income research at Citic Securities Co. in Beijing and a former PBOC official, wrote in a note. Lianxun Securities Co. analysts led by Li Qilin estimated that the cut will release about 700 billion yuan of liquidity, and called that total a conservative estimate. The reserve ratio requirement for large banks currently stands at 17%.
A targeted cut taking effect in three months means the central bank “doesn’t think there’s a big need to adjust monetary policy,” and that deleveraging remains crucial as the economy hasn’t shown any signs of deterioration, said Zhou Hao, an economist at Commerzbank AG in Singapore, said.
The central bank and the country’s top leaders have consistently used language pledging “prudent and neutral” monetary policy and vowed to control financial risk since President Xi Jinping convened with them at the Central Economic Work Conference in December. The push to prevent risk has intensified ahead of the twice-a-decade Party Congress set for October 18.
The PBOC’s broad policy stance will remain “roughly the same” through the end of 2017, according to 60 percent of economists in a Bloomberg survey conducted in August.
The PBOC also reiterated it will keep the yuan exchange rate “basically stable” at a reasonable, equilibrium level and maintain “basically stable” liquidity using various monetary policy tools, according to a statement on its recent third-quarter policy meeting led by Governor Zhou Xiaochuan.
They said the economy is “stabilizing and improving,” an upgraded assessment from three months earlier when officials said the economic and financial situation was generally stable.
Data released earlier kept with the theme of improvement. The official manufacturing purchasing managers index rose to a five-year high of 52.4 in September, signaling that efforts to clean up the financial sector and the environment aren’t damping economic growth yet.
“The central bank is reluctant to do a blanket cut, which sends easing signals and runs against financial deleveraging,” said Larry Hu, head of China economics at Macquarie Securities Ltd. in Hong Kong. “It intentionally kept the reduction ambiguous.”

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