The Pak Banker

China central bank conducts reverse repos to boost liquidity

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China's central bank on Saturday conducted 10 billion yuan (1.51 billion U.S. dollars) of reverse repos to maintain liquidity in the banking system.

The interest rate for the seven-day reverse repos was set at 2.1 percent, according to the People's Bank of China.

The move aims to keep liquidity in the banking system reasonably stable, the central bank said.

A reverse repo is a process in which the central bank purchases securities from commercial banks through bidding, with an agreement to sell them back in the future.

The Federal Reserve on Wednesday announced its biggest rate hike since 2000, with a half percentage point increase as it works to crush soaring US inflation.

With inflation at the highest rate in four decades, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell sent a message directly to the American people, expressing concern for the pain caused by rising prices, and pledging to use all available tools to bring them down.

But he told reporters he remains confident the economy is strong enough to withstand rate increases without tipping into a recession.

After a quarter-point hike in March, the US central bank's policysett­ing Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) pushed the benchmark interest rate above 0.75 percent as it works to cool the economy, and confirmed more increases "will be appropriat­e."

The hike will raise the costs of all types of borrowing, from mortgages to credit cards to car loans, cooling demand and business activity.

Inflation has become an overriding concern after the world's largest economy saw annual consumer prices surge 8.5 percent over the 12 months to March-the biggest jump since December 1981.

Policymake­rs continue to believe inflation will gradually return to the Fed's two-percent target as it raises borrowing costs, but in a statement following the conclusion of its twoday meeting, the FOMC said it will be "highly attentive to inflation risks."

In an unusual move, Powell opened his news conference speaking to the American people.

"Inflation is much too high. And we understand the hardship that is causing," he said, promising to use all tools available to bring it down "expeditiou­sly."

He acknowledg­ed that higher interest rates also bring their share of pain, but "everyone would be better off if we can get this job done. The sooner, the better."

To achieve that aim, he said "additional 50-basis point increases should be on the table at the next couple of meetings," however, a more aggressive three-quarter point hike is not under considerat­ion.

The Fed's goal is to engineer a "soft landing," reining in inflation while avoiding a contractio­n in economic activity, and Powell said that outcome is likely.

"It's a strong economy, and nothing about it suggested... that it's close to or vulnerable to a recession," he said.

But with China's pandemic lockdowns worsening global supply snarls and the war in Ukraine pushing commodity prices higher, analysts fear factors beyond the central bank's control could undermine that goal, and perhaps plunge the US economy into a recession.

The FOMC acknowledg­ed the "highly uncertain" impact of Russia's invasion of Ukraine and Western sanctions on Moscow, which are "creating additional upward pressure on inflation and are likely to weigh on economic activity."

In addition, Covid lockdowns in China "are likely to exacerbate supply chain disruption­s," the statement said.

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