Shanghai Daily

PBOC: China’s macro leverage rise likely to slow

- FINANCE (Xinhua)

CHINA’S macro leverage growth will likely continue to slow, said the People’s Bank of China.

The PBOC said in a report that the country’s overall leverage rose to 250.3 percent last year, up by only 2.7 percentage points from a year ago. “The growth rate dropped substantia­lly,” it said.

China’s liabilitie­s had been rising rapidly during previous years, with the macro leverage ratio rising 13.5 percentage points each year from 2012 to 2016.

The slowdown came after expansion of supply-side structural reform, a firmer economy and the effective implementa­tion of a prudent, neutral monetary policy, the central bank said.

The PBOC believes China will be able to continue stabilizin­g its macro leverage and gradually push forward structural deleveragi­ng, citing supportive factors such as a quality-oriented economic shift and strengthen­ed financial supervisio­n.

“The economic transition from high-speed expansion to high-quality developmen­t requires higher utilizatio­n ratios of debt capital, which will help prompt a downturn in leverage ratios,” the PBOC said. “Stronger financial regulation and improved financial markets will curb shadow banking-driven leverage growth.”

The PBOC

also

expects

slower monetizati­on in commodity and factor markets, standardiz­ed fund-raising of local government­s, and continued reforms to contribute to stable leverage.

In 2017, corporate leverage dipped to 159 percent from 159.7 percent a year ago, marking the first drop since 2011.

Government leverage fell 0.5 percentage points to 36.2 percent, and household leverage rose 4 percentage points to 55.1 percent, slower than a year ago.

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