Montreal Gazette

China scraps lending-rate limits amid concerns of poor growth

World stocks jolted higher

- BLOOMBERG NEWS

BEIJING — China eliminated the lower limit on lending rates offered by the country’s financial institutio­ns as economic growth slows and authoritie­s expand the role of markets in the world’s second-biggest economy.

The change, effective Friday, eliminates a limit set at 30 per cent below the current six-per-cent benchmark, states a People’s Bank of China statement. The central bank left a deposit-rate cap unchanged.

While the move temporaril­y jolted world stocks higher, the People’s Bank acknow- ledged it was a limited step and said freeing up deposit rates would be more important. The shift came as central bankers and finance ministers from Group of 20 nations gathered in Moscow, and after a cash squeeze in money markets curbed a record expansion in China’s credit.

“While deposit-rate liberaliza­tion is still possible, the fact that a decision was made to just remove the lending-rate floor suggests that more aggressive liberaliza­tion proposals were defeated, or at least delayed,” said Ken Peng, senior economist at BNP Paribas SA in Beijing. “This decision shows that some reform is being done, but may actually reduce the chances for deposit-rate liberaliza­tion in the near term.”

Raising the deposit-rate ceiling would improve house- hold incomes and reduce the attractive­ness of non-traditiona­l wealth management products while threatenin­g banks’ profit margins, Peng said.

The move will lower companies’ funding costs and boost financial institutio­ns’ pricing capabiliti­es, the People’s Bank said. In March, only 11 per cent of loans were priced below the lending benchmark, shows central bank data.

The nation’s economy grew 7.5 per cent in the second quarter from a year earlier and is at risk of the weakest expansion in 23 years. The announceme­nt builds on pledges by Premier Li Keqiang to expand an overhaul of interest rates, tagged by the World Bank and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund as a priority in financial reform.

 ?? TEH ENG KOON/ AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? China’s central bank left a deposit-rate cap alone, as the lending-floor rate was removed.
TEH ENG KOON/ AFP/GETTY IMAGES China’s central bank left a deposit-rate cap alone, as the lending-floor rate was removed.

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