Oman Daily Observer

China’s debt poses big headache for central bank

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Chinese banks lent more money in January alone than the annual GDP of South Africa, as borrowers rushed to take advantage of government policies intended to stimulate the economy with easy credit. But the free-for-all has had unintended consequenc­es, creating a tottering tower of unsustaina­ble debt, with Beijing now trying to tighten monetary policy and reduce access to credit without bringing the entire edifice crashing down.

Chinese debt exceeded 270 per cent of the country’s GDP by the end of 2016, stoked by multiple interest rate cuts as well as the growth of the unregulate­d “shadow finance” credit sector which involves lending to already indebted companies.

Thanks in part to the easy credit, China’s economy — a key driver of global growth — expanded by 6.7 per cent last year, with a constructi­on boom and increased public spending on infrastruc­ture.

But the world’s second largest economy is now saddled with an unwieldy debt load, Andrew Fennell of ratings agency Fitch said in a January 23 note, adding that “China’s stable growth reflects stimulus, not sustainabi­lity”.

Standard & Poor’s also warned that “reliance on credit-fuelled growth poses the downside risk of a hard landing for the economy.”

The People’s Bank of China (PBOC), the country’s central bank, helped stimulate the out of control lending with multiple interest rate cuts between the end of 2014 and 2016, lowering the cost of credit.

The abundance of cheap cash has had unexpected consequenc­es: the cost of garlic jumped 80 per cent last year on speculatio­n, investors poured money into bitcoin and real estate prices in some parts of the country have gone through the roof.

Last year the average price per square metre jumped 14 per cent in Beijing, 38 per cent in Nanjing and a staggering 49 per cent in the southern city of Shenzhen.

At the same time, empty apartment buildings have mushroomed across other cities where builders are struggling to find clients willing to invest in their speculativ­e ventures.

The “monetary policy has only inflated the real estate bubble,” economist Zhong Pengrong, CEO of Shiye, said. “If the market collapses, the risk is immense,” he added.

Although a dozen municipali­ties have recently tightened rules on apartment purchases, overheatin­g persists, with home loans accounting for a record one-third of bank lending in January.

Hamstrung by the need to prop up growth while also reining in speculatio­n, the PBOC has sent mixed signals on monetary policy.

It injected additional liquidity into the financial system before the Lunar New Year, when demand for cash is traditiona­lly strong.

Then in early February the bank raised short-term rates in the money market by 10 basis points for the first time in four years.

Societe Generale analyst Wei Yao said the bank was attempting a precarious balancing act.

“The high debt level and the previously hasty expansion of banks’ balance sheets make the financial system vulnerable to too abrupt a change,” she said.

“The tightening harsh.”

Authoritie­s are also worried about the intensifyi­ng risk of corporate defaults, particular­ly in the unregulate­d “shadow finance” sector that covers loans to heavily indebted manufactur­ers and property developers.

Social financing — a broad measure of credit including that cannot be too offered by non-bank entities — soared to 3.740 trillion yuan ($545 billion) in January, double that in December, according to the PBOC.

These unregulate­d schemes include company-to-company lending, which jumped 20 per cent in 2016 to $1.92 trillion, according to data firm CEIC.

Commercial banks have traditiona­lly been reluctant to loan money to small and medium-sized businesses, regardless of interest rate cuts, leaving owners with little choice but to turn to “shadow financiers” to quench their thirst for liquidity.

A jump in interest rates is unlikely to affect the demand for this kind of lending, meaning there is no immediate solution in sight.

Under these conditions, analysts say, it will likely take a long time to get China’s debt monster under control as the country attempts to re-balance its economy.

“China economy is a bit like a highspeed train,” Zhang Fayu, manager for assets management firm Million Tons Capital in Shanghai, said.

“It must slow down well in advance before turning,” he added.

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