The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

China keeps bank’s rate steady

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SHANGHAI: China’s base rate for new corporate loans stayed unchanged in October, defying expectatio­ns of a reduction as the economy sees its slowest pace of growth since the early 1990s.

The one-year loan prime rate was kept at 4.2%, according to a statement from the People’s Bank of China yesterday. That compares to the 4.15% median estimate compiled by Bloomberg. The five-year tenor was also kept unchanged at 4.85%.

The LPR is a revamped market indicator of the price that lenders charge clients for new loans, and is linked to the rate at which the central bank will lend financial institutio­ns cash for a year. It’s made up of submission­s from a panel of 18 banks, though Beijing has a role in setting the level. The rate is released monthly.

A static one-year rate shows China “may be trying to balance the shrinking margins of banks with support to the real economy,” said Zhou Hao, a senior emerging-markets economist at Commerzban­k AG. “The PBOC remains restrained on policy easing.”

Financial shares were among the biggest winners on the MSCI China Index on Monday as lenders including China Citic Bank Corp and Bank of Communicat­ions Co rose at least 1%.

The nation’s government bonds dropped while money-market rates climbed, amid bets that the policy makers are not in a rush to loosen monetary policy. The yield on 10-year sovereign notes rose three basis points to 3.22%, the highest since July 1, as of 12:02 pm in Shanghai. The costs on 12-month interest-rate swaps advanced to the highest level since late May.

October’s rate comes as China continues to offer credit support to the economy, including a surprising Us$28bil injection of one-year cash into the financial system last week.

Gross domestic product rose 6% in the Julyseptem­ber period from a year ago as investment slowed, missing a consensus forecast of 6.1%.

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