Kuwait Times

China releases $56 billion to banks in virus response

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BEIJING: China’s central bank said Friday it would cut the reserve requiremen­ts for smaller banks to release around 400 billion yuan ($56.3 billion) in liquidity, a move to counter the coronaviru­s impact on enterprise­s. The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) said in a statement it will also slash the interest it pays on financial institutio­ns’ excess reserves for the first time in 12 years, to encourage them to use the cash rather than store it with the central bank.

The moves are the latest in a series of fund injections to help the world’s second-largest economy through the fallout from the COVID-19 crisis. The reserve requiremen­t ratio (RRR) for small and medium-sized banks will be cut by 100 basis points over two tranches, on April 15 and May 15 respective­ly, said the PBOC.

This reduces the amount of cash the banks must hold and is aimed at boosting support for small, medium and micro enterprise­s, the PBOC added. The cuts target rural financial institutio­ns and city commercial banks that operate only at the provincial level. While China’s larger enterprise­s have mostly resumed near-regular operations as the country eased restrictio­ns aimed at curbing the coronaviru­s spread, smaller firms have been lagging behind.

The aim is to “effectivel­y increase stable funding sources” and help reduce the interest rates that enterprise­s are subject to, said a PBOC spokesman Friday. The measure is also expected to benefit around 4,000 smaller banks, which make up the vast majority of institutio­ns in the banking system. The PBOC said Friday it will also be reducing the interest rate on banks’ excess deposits from April 7, from 0.72 percent to 0.35 percent. It pays interest on banks’ excess reserves, and the last time it adjusted the rate was in 2008.

ING chief economist for Greater China Iris Pang said: “The cut suggests that damages from the coronaviru­s outbreak globally could linger at least until May.” But she added the effectiven­ess of the RRR cuts remains questionab­le as the reserve ratio for smaller banks is already low, and that banks have been reluctant to lend to troubled SMEs in the pandemic. On Tuesday, China had said it would increase the financing quotas of small- and medium-sized banks by one trillion yuan, with authoritie­s intending to guide smaller banks to lend all the funds they receive at preferenti­al rates.

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