The Jerusalem Post

Beijing to inject $174b. of liquidity as stock markets reopen today

- • By CHENG LENG and BRENDA GOH

SHANGHAI (Reuters) – China’s central bank said it will inject 1.2 trillion yuan ($173.8 billion) worth of liquidity into the markets via reverse repo operations on Monday, as the country prepares to reopen its stock markets amid a new coronaviru­s outbreak.

China’s authoritie­s have pledged to use various monetary-policy tools to ensure liquidity remains reasonably ample and to support firms affected by the virus epidemic, which has so far claimed 305 lives, all but one in China.

The People’s Bank of China made the announceme­nt in a statement published on its website on Sunday. The total liquidity in the banking system will be 900 billion yuan higher than the same period in 2019 after the injection, it said.

According to Reuters calculatio­ns based on official central-bank data, 1.05 trillion yuan worth of reverse repos are set to mature on Monday, meaning that 150 billion yuan in net cash will be injected.

Investors are bracing for a volatile session in Chinese markets when onshore trades resume on Monday after a break for the Lunar New Year, which was extended by the government.

China’s stock, currency and bond markets have all been closed since January 23 and had been due to reopen last Friday.

There will be no further delays to the reopening, the country’s securities-market regulator said in an interview published by the state-backed People’s Daily newspaper on Sunday.

The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) said it had taken the decision after balancing various factors and believes the outbreak’s impact on the market would be “short term.”

To support firms affected by the epidemic, the CSRC said companies that had expiring stock-pledge agreements could apply for extensions with securities firms, and it would urge corporate-bond investors to extend the maturity dates of debt.

The CSRC is also considerin­g launching hedging tools for the A-share market to help alleviate market panic and will suspend evening sessions of futures trading starting from Monday, it said.

“We believe that the successive introducti­on and implementa­tion of policy measures will play a better role in improving market expectatio­ns and preventing irrational behavior,” it told People’s Daily.

China is facing mounting isolation as other countries introduce travel curbs, airlines suspend flights and government­s evacuate their citizens, risking worsening a slowdown in the world’s second-largest economy.

On Sunday, the Philippine­s reported the growing epidemic of coronaviru­s has claimed its first fatality outside of China, where new confirmed infections jumped by a daily record to top 14,000 cases.

 ?? (Thomas Peter/Reuters) ?? A MAN wears a mask yesterday while walking on a deserted shopping street in Jiujiang, China.
(Thomas Peter/Reuters) A MAN wears a mask yesterday while walking on a deserted shopping street in Jiujiang, China.

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