BEIJING: China’s central bank chief vowed to stabilise the supply of credit and boost the amount of money supporting smaller businesses and the real economy, after both credit and the economic growth slowed in July.
The People’s Bank of China (PBoC) will keep monetary policy stable with a good cross-cyclical design and will support high-quality economic expansion with “appropriate money growth,” according to a statement late Monday after a meeting with banks.
The meeting analysed monetary and credit conditions and was chaired by governor Yi Gang.
Yi reiterated the PBoC “will basically match the expansion of money supply and social financing to nominal economic growth” and enhance the structure of credit to encourage more funding to technological innovation, green development, and small businesses.
PBOC Gov Yi Gang
He called for efforts to push down real lending rates and financing costs for small companies. The meeting comes after new credit expanded in July at the slowest pace since February 2020, driven by a sharp slowdown in shadow banking, government bond issuance and tighter rules for property developers’ financing.
China’s economy decelerating more than expected in the same month, with the Delta variant hitting retail sales and Beijing’s curbs on pollution and property markets weighing on industrial production.
Similar meetings to discuss credit usually happened in November in past years and the fact that it was held now reflects concerns from the PBoC over weak credit demand in the past few months, Qin Han, chief bond analyst at Guotai Junan Securities Co Ltd said in a report yesterday.
“Increasing the amount of credit and strengthening the growth of total credit is almost certainly going to happen.”
China’s 10-year sovereign bond yields climbed for a third day to as high as 2.8825% in the morning trading session, the highest level in a week, on the heels of the meeting.
The PBoC also repeated the Politburo’s late July request to “coordinate macro policies for this year and next year.”
That means it will encourage banks’ lending to pick up slightly in the rest of 2021 and accelerate more significantly in early 2022, according to Bruce Pang, head of macro and strategy research at China Renaissance Securities Hong Kong.
This will support an expected speed-up in government bond issuance later this year and stimulate the economy when growth pressure is more acute next year, he said. — Bloomberg