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Key rate cut gives market major boost

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BEIJING: The latest reduction of a key benchmark lending rate in China on Friday significan­tly boosted market confidence, delivering a strong signal that the nation is determined to fully leverage multiple tools to safeguard economic stability, experts say.

The reduction in the over-five-year loan prime rate, a key reference for home mortgages, was greater than market expectatio­ns and the biggest on record, and will help reduce financial burdens on the real economy, stabilise the housing market and drive up growth in consumptio­n and investment, they said.

China’s over-five-year loan prime rate, a market-based benchmark lending rate also known as the LPR, dropped to 4.45% in May, down from 4.6% in April, the National Interbank Funding Centre said on Friday.

The 15-basis-point drop was the biggest record and the second this year following one in January. Meanwhile, the one-year LPR came in at 3.7% on Friday, remaining unchanged for the fourth consecutiv­e month, the centre said.

“The rate decrease showed that the country is beefing up financial support to alleviate difficulti­es in the real economy and bolster demand during the current critical period of time to stabilise the economy,” said Wen Bin, chief researcher at China Minsheng Bank.

The reduction in the over-five-year LPR, on which many lenders base their mortgage rates, will help reduce home purchase costs and household debt burdens, boost consumptio­n and unleash reasonable housing demand, Wen said.

The move will also markedly help lower the medium to long-term financing costs of enterprise­s, bolster their demand for longer-term loans and restore their optimism, he said.

The rate decrease was greeted by China’s stock market on Friday, with the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index going up 1.6% to close at 3146.57 points, its highest level in a month.

Market confidence recovered on the rate cut not only because of its inherent effects but due to its implicatio­n that policymake­rs have made concrete headway in rolling out new measures to shore up an economy, which is recovering from a recent Covid-19 surge, experts said.

Underlinin­g the room for policy manoeuvres in the face of new challenges, Premier Li Keqiang, at a symposium on Wednesday in Kunming, Yunnan province, called for efforts to come up with more measures before the end of this month to return the economy to a normal track.

Given that the Chinese government has the fiscal and monetary policy space to support growth, Kristalina Georgieva, managing director of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, told Reuters on Thursday that she was “actually not too worried” about China’s economy.

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