China Daily (Hong Kong)

Money supply slows as deleveragi­ng gains ground

- By CHEN JIA chenjia@chinadaily.com.cn

Slower growth in China’s money supply will become common as the country continues its deleveragi­ng efforts under tighter regulation­s, experts said.

By the end of last year, the M2, a broad measure of the money supply that covers cash in circulatio­n and all deposits, rose 8.2 percent to 167.68 trillion yuan ($26 trillion), this was the slowest pace since 1994 when it was calculated the first time in China, according to data from the People’s Bank of China, the central bank.

M2 growth dropped from 11.3 percent

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at the end of 2016, ending the double-digit rates seen in the previous 20-plus years.

The lower-than-expected figure came mainly because of a squeezing of money holdings in the financial sector, which dragged down about 0.7 percentage points of the M2 growth rate, said Xie Yaxuan, an economist at China Merchants Securities.

According to the central bank, the M2 growth rate for the financial sector was 7.2 percent last year, and the relatively slower pace could indicate capital shortage for banks’ liabilitie­s after the financial regulator issued a series of new rules to tighten supervisio­n on shadow banking business, said Xie.

Ruan Jianhong, head of the central bank’s survey and statistics division, said at a news briefing last week that current monetary conditions and sound economic performanc­e provided good timing for further deleveragi­ng.

“In the future, slower M2 growth than before will become the ‘new normal,’ as the country’s deleveragi­ng process deepens and the financial sector gets back to the function of serving the economy,” Ruan said.

Ming Ming, an analyst with CITIC Securities, said that this year, the M2 is expected to stay between 8 and 10 percent, considerin­g the new financial regulation­s, especially those on overseeing the asset and wealth management products (a main source of shadow banking financing), may constrain liquidity in the financial sector.

In November last year, Chinese regulators released draft guidelines that will unify rules covering asset management products issued by all types of financial institutio­ns to curb financial risks and reduce the leverage ratio.

The guidelines require financial institutio­ns to set leverage ceilings on asset management products.

Amid the deleveragi­ng process and tougher financial regulation­s, the slower growth indicated that capital usage by commercial banks has become better regulated with less funds circulatin­g inside the financial sector and less derivative deposits, according to the PBOC official Ruan.

She also said that factors affecting money supply had become more complicate­d than before due to market developmen­ts and financial innovation­s. Hence, the M2 figure is now less predictabl­e, less controllab­le and less relevant to the economy.

Ruan Jianhong,

Xinhua contribute­d to the story.

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