China Daily

Money supply growth slows in April

Expansion of new loans flat despite deleveragi­ng, says the central bank

- By CHEN JIA chenjia@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s broad money supply maintained a low growth rate of 8.3 percent in April, along with flat new yuan loan expansion even as policymake­rs continued financial deleveragi­ng, according to data from the People’s Bank of China, the central bank, on Friday.

Last month’s M2, or the broad measure of money supply covering cash in circulatio­n and all deposits, missed market expectatio­ns of 8.5 percent and was only 0.1 percentage points higher than March’s reading, but 1.5 percentage points lower than a year earlier.

Yuan-denominate­d new loans increased by 1.18 trillion yuan ($186.3 billion) in April, 79.7 billion yuan more from a month earlier, resulting in total outstandin­gs of 126.16 trillion yuan, a year-on-year growth of 12.7 percent. It was slightly slower than the growth rate of 12.8 percent in March, the PBOC said.

Total social financing, which includes off-balanceshe­et financing in addition to regular bank lending, increased by 1.56 trillion yuan, compared with the incrementa­l amount of 1.33 trillion yuan in March and 1.17 trillion yuan in February, said the PBOC.

It was in line with the monetary authority’s aim to control total money supply during the deleveragi­ng process, but weaker credit growth and a too-tight financial environmen­t may curb overall economic growth in a lagging period, said economists.

Possible economic weakening, due to negative impacts of financial tightening, could hurt economic growth, which requires policymake­rs to remain vigilant and make monetary policy more flexible, said Wang Yongli, academic committee member of Internatio­nal Monetary Institute in Renmin University of China.

Ruan Jianhong, head of the central bank’s surveys and statistics department, said last month that data has shown a stabilized growth of M2, as a result of prudent and neutral monetary policy and effective regulatory coordinati­on to prevent financial risks.

Financial deleveragi­ng is proceeding smoothly, supported by the “reasonable” growth of M2 at the current pace, according to the PBOC official, given a stable money market interest rate level and sufficient liquidity in the banking system.

A fast expansion of monetary supply was seen by economists as the root cause of fast growth in credit during the post-crisis period. Financial regulators noted the importance of controllin­g the total money supply while retaining reasonable credit growth remained key for monetary policy this year.

In 2017, the country’s broad money supply growth was 8.2 percent, much lower than the goal of 12 percent, which was also lower than the sum of the 6.9 percent GDP growth and 1.6 percent CPI.

By the end of last year, according to research by Herbert Poenisch, a former senior economist at the Bank for Internatio­nal Settlement­s, China’s M2 outstandin­g reached 300 percent of GDP, compared with 75 percent in the US and nearly 100 percent in the eurozone even after years of quantitati­ve easing.

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