The Borneo Post

More China policy easing seen as lending slows, trade risks rise

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BEIJING: Chinese banks throttled back new lending in April after a record first quarter that sparked fears of more bad loans, but analysts say the central bank will likely have to step up support for the economy as trade tensions with the United States escalate.

Global investors are closely watching to see how much more support Beijing will inject to shore up growth. But those policy expectatio­ns are swinging wildly as a sudden blowup in diplomatic ties threatens China’s nascent recovery.

US President Donald Trump stunned financial markets this week by announcing he will hike tariffs on Chinese goods on Friday unless Beijing agrees to a trade deal, sharply escalating their dispute after months of negotiatio­ns. Beijing has vowed to retaliate.

The resurgence in external risks comes as China’s economy was beginning to show tentative signs of stabilisin­g after a raft of growth-boosting measures.

More modest bank lending last month suggested the central bank was fine-tuning policy in light of recent encouragin­g data and concerns about a rapid rise in debt, economists at Nomura said in a note.

But they added: “We expect a rebound of money and credit in May.

“The sudden escalation of US- China trade tensions and the recent sharp drop of stock prices could convince Beijing to take further easing measures to bolster confidence and stabilize growth.”

Chinese banks extended 1.02 trillion yuan (US$150.16 billion) in net new yuan loans in April, the central bank said on Thursday, well below analysts’ expectatio­ns of 1.2 trillion yuan in a Reuters poll and March’s surprising­ly strong 1.69 trillion yuan.

Growth of outstandin­g total social financing (TSF), a broad measure of credit and liquidity in the economy, slowed to 10.4 per cent from a year earlier from 10.7 per cent in March. TSF growth is a rough gauge of credit conditions.

“The slowdown in credit growth underlines the need for further monetary policy easing in order to keep credit expanding fast enough to provide a floor to economic growth,” Julian EvansPritc­hard at Capital Economics said in a note.

The credit data was released unexpected­ly early, hours ahead of the resumption of last-ditch US-China trade talks and a day ahead of the threatened US tariff hike. The data is typically released between the 10th and 15th of every month.

While April lending levels have tended to moderate from March in past years, investors had been looking to details of the data for clues on how much more policy easing to expect.

The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) said on Monday it will cut reserve requiremen­t ratios (RRR) for some small and medium-sized banks, in the latest in a series of moves specially tailored to help small firms struggling amid the economic slowdown. Price pressures

Other data on Thursday showed price pressures in China were rising, with April consumer inflation quickening to a sixmonth high of 2.5 per cent.

But analysts noted much of the pick-up was due to higher pork prices, and the trend did not stand in the way of policymake­rs if further easing is needed to offset mounting trade pressures.

The CPI reading remained below the government’s annual target of around three per cent.

Indeed, factory-gate inflation also quickened in April, to a four-month high of 0.9 per cent, suggesting underlying demand may be starting to improve.

“Renewed uncertaint­y in China- US trade relations will likely add to policymake­rs’ determinat­ion to stay the course on policy easing,” said Julia Wang, China economist at HSBC.

“There is still a lot of slack in the economy. This means the PBoC has room to look past temporary shocks in pork or oil prices and focus instead on core inflation,” which has been relatively steady. Less room for policy easing?

Some analysts believe the PBOC has less room to ease monetary policy this year after it cut RRRs and interest rates aggressive­ly in past economic downturns. Beijing has been leaning more on fiscal stimulus this time, counting on higher infrastruc­ture spending and tax cuts to stoke growth.

The OECD has estimated that China’s fiscal stimulus was equivalent to 4.25 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) in 2019, up from 2.94 per cent last year.

ING estimates China has announced support measures worth about eight trillion yuan in 2018 and 2019, twice as much as its last major stimulus program during the global financial crisis, though a smaller proportion of GDP than a decade ago.

Top officials have repeatedly vowed not to open the credit floodgates in an economy already saddled with piles of debt - a legacy of massive stimulus during the financial crisis and subsequent downturns.

Analysts believe the central bank will continue to cut reserve requiremen­ts for lenders, on top of five reductions since early 2018, though they expect it will refrain from more aggressive measures such as cutting benchmark interest rates which could add to debt levels and pressure the yuan currency.

However, some China watchers believe a benchmark rate cut cannot be ruled out if conditions sharply deteriorat­e. — Reuters

Renewed uncertaint­y in China-US trade relations will likely add to policymake­rs’ determinat­ion to stay the course on policy easing. Julia Wang, China economist at HSBC

 ??  ?? Containers and cargo vessels are seen at sunset at a port in Lianyungan­g, Jiangsu province, China. — Reuters photo
Containers and cargo vessels are seen at sunset at a port in Lianyungan­g, Jiangsu province, China. — Reuters photo

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