Grab the defibrillator, China’s going to need it

epa04899992 (FILE) A file photo dated 06 July 2011 showing an exterior view of the headquarters of the People's Bank of China (PBOC) in central Beijing, China. Chinese stocks rebounded from five days of decline on 27 August 2015, with the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index bouncing back above the symbolic 3,000-point mark. The index finished at 3,083.59, surging 5.34 per cent from Wednesday's 2,978.03 after a raft of stimulus measures. China's central bank on Thursday pumped a further 150 billion yuan (23.4 billion dollars) into the market, the Xinhua news agency reported. The People's Bank of China spent the money on seven-day reverse repurchase - repo - agreements, buying securities from banks and agreeing to sell them later for a higher price.  EPA/PETER TREBITSCH HUNGARY OUT

 

Among financial geeks, the repurchase market is seen as the lifeblood of a monetary system. Without it, banks can’t really operate.
China’s seized up, prompting the People’s Bank to perform an emergency cardiac massage. Other regulators in Beijing may want to look on closely, because they may be called upon to undertake a similar maneuver shortly.
To understand what happened in Asia’s largest economy, it’s important to know how banks operate. Every so many hours, institutions tally up how much cash is coming in the doors and how much is going out. Unlike in the textbooks, this never nets out at zero. Enter the repo market. Banks with excess cash lend it to those that are short at a friendly interest rate. The borrrowing bank also deposits some securities in treasury for the lending institution as a guarantee it will return the money tomorrow.
That kind of arrangement happens even when the central bank is the creditor. Remember when the U.S. Federal Reserve said Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. didn’t have collateral to be used for additional liquidity when
it let the investment bank
collapse back in 2008?
Bankers are a suspicious lot by nature, and they suspect each other more than anyone else. When a rare default happens, they start hoarding cash, even if they know they can get their money back by selling some of the securities that were pledged. That’s what’s happening now in China.
China’s central bank on Tuesday injected hundreds of billions of yuan into the financial system after some smaller lenders failed to make debt payments in the interbank market, people familiar with the matter said. The interest rate on overnight borrowings soared 78 basis points from a week ago to 3.28 percent, making the yield to borrow for a single day higher than the 3.14 percent five-year Chinese government bonds pay.
That should normalize after a few liquidity injections — after all, nothing’s more comforting than knowing the central bank has your back. This time, however, it may be more complicated, particularly if the missed payments are the start of a trend.
On Tuesday, it also transpired that the China Securities Depository and Clearing Corp., which oversees exchange-traded notes, plans to allow financial institutions to use only AAA-rated company securities as collateral for short-term loans. (In China, banks tend to be a bit more generous than their Western counterparts, which typically only accept their own government’s debt as collateral.)
One of the most recent times regulators tightened repo regulations was in December 2014, and the bond market pretty much froze. Then, banks were told they could only accept bonds rated AA or higher. That’s since become something of a moot point: Thanks to the financial discipline of Chinese borrowers, about 95 percent of corporate debentures can be used as a guarantee for interbank borrowings.
The new requirement means at least half of these securities will no longer qualify. Whether that played a part or not in this week’s interbank defaults isn’t clear. But you can bet it will in future.

— Bloomberg

Christopher Langner is a markets columnist for Bloomberg Gadfly. He previously covered corporate finance for Bloomberg News, and has written for Reuters/IFR, Forbes, the Wall Street
Journal and Mergermarket

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