Arab Times

China’s banks throw open spigots in January, lend record 3.23t yuan

Total social financing hit record highs

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BEIJING, Feb 16, (RTRS): China’s banks made the most new loans on record in January – totalling 3.23 trillion yuan ($477 billion) – as policymake­rs try to jumpstart sluggish investment and prevent a sharper slowdown in the world’s second-largest economy.

Chinese banks tend to front-load loans early in the year to get higher-quality customers and win market share. But they have also faced months of pressure from regulators to step up lending, particular­ly to cash-starved smaller firms.

Net new yuan lending last month was far more than expected, and eclipsed the last high of 2.9 trillion yuan in January 2018.

Analysts polled by Reuters had predicted new loans of 2.8 trillion yuan, more than double the level seen in December.

“While we wouldn’t pin too much on a single month’s data, the latest pick-up in credit could be a sign that credit growth is starting to bottom out in response to monetary policy easing,” Julian Evans-Pritchard, senior China economist at Capital Economics, said in a note.

“A recovery in lending, if sustained in coming months, would be consistent with our expectatio­n for growth to stabilise in the second half of this year,” he said, noting it usually took six to nine months before new loans translated into business activity.

Sources told Reuters last week that the central bank had urged banks to moderate lending in January to manage the amount of money flowing into the economy, spurring talk that the tally would be even more robust than first thought.

Demand for credit picked up sharply in the corporate sector, followed by the household sector, according to data released by the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) on Friday.

Corporate loans jumped to 2.58 trillion yuan from 473.3 billion yuan in December, while household loans rose to 989.8 billion yuan from 450.4 billion yuan, according to Reuters calculatio­ns based on the PBOC data.

Corporate loans accounted for 80 percent of new loans in January, up sharply from 44 percent in December.

That will be welcome news for policymake­rs, who have been struggling to get money to the private sector, which accounts for over half of China’s economic growth. The central bank has not opened the credit floodgate, and the record January lending showed monetary policy had become more effective, a central bank official said, in a bid to allay concerns about more debt build-up.

To free up more funds for lending, the central bank has cut the amount that banks need to set aside as reserves five times over the past year.

In the latest move, the PBOC slashed the reserve requiremen­t ratio (RRR) in January by 100 basis points (bps), and analysts expect at least another 150 bps of cuts by year-end.

Most analysts do not expect the central bank to cut benchmark interest rates soon, though some aren’t ruling out more aggressive easing if conditions continue to deteriorat­e or the China-US trade war escalates.

The PBOC has been guiding money market interest rates lower to reduce financing costs, but analysts at JP Morgan said in a recent note that banks have not

lowered average lending rates.

While the PBOC has been pushing ample funds into the financial system, the money has not been flowing smoothly into the economy and generating growth.

Banks have been wary of lending to smaller firms with higher credit risks, preferring state-backed customers, while businesses are reluctant to take on more debt when sales and profits are weakening. Several bankers told Reuters they were keen to avoid repeating excessive and riskier lending that followed a massive stimulus package during the global financial crisis. Banks’ non-performing loan ratio climbed to a 10-year high in 2018 and corporate bond defaults hit a record.

Still, strong credit expansion should help efforts to boost fixed asset investment. Regulators have been fast-tracking approvals for infrastruc­ture and are trying to streamline financing so projects roll out more smoothly.

Significan­t tax cuts are also expected this year to help ease strains on corporate balance sheets.

“January credit data are very positive as it shows all easing measures including monetary easing, fiscal easing and administra­tive easing are taking effect,” said Tommy Xie, China economist at OCBC Bank in Singapore.

Growth measures will take time to be felt, and many analysts believe business conditions will get worse before they get better. China grew 6.6 percent last year,

a 28-year low.

Data earlier on Friday showed factory-gate inflation slowed for a seventh straight month, raising concerns China may see the return of deflation as demand cools.

Several other key credit gauges also picked up modestly in January in response to the PBOC’s recent shift to policy easing.

Broad M2 money supply grew 8.4 percent on-year, also beating forecasts. Analysts had expected growth to inch up to 8.2 percent, after falling to a record low late last year.

Outstandin­g yuan loans grew 13.4 percent, above expectatio­ns of 13.1 percent but easing from December’s rise of 13.5 percent.

 ?? (AP) ?? Remain in the European Union supporters wear blindfolds as they take part in a protest event organised by the People’s Vote Campaign, which calls for a second referendum on Britain’s EU membership, in Parliament Square,London, Feb 14.
(AP) Remain in the European Union supporters wear blindfolds as they take part in a protest event organised by the People’s Vote Campaign, which calls for a second referendum on Britain’s EU membership, in Parliament Square,London, Feb 14.

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