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March 11, 2019

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Calls to ramp up credit growth as bank loans dive

New bank loans in China fell sharply in February from a record the previous month, but the drop was likely due to seasonal factors, while policy-makers continue to press lenders to help cash-strapped companies.

Analysts say China needs to revive weak credit growth to help head off an economic slowdown this year, but investors are worried about a further jump in corporate debt and the risk to banks as they relax their lending standards.

Chinese banks made 885.8 billion yuan (US$131.79 billion) in net new yuan loans in February, according to data released by the People’s Bank of China yesterday.

That was down sharply from a record 3.23 trillion yuan in January, when several other key credit gauges also picked up modestly in response to the central bank’s policy easing.

But February’s tally was still 5.5 percent higher than the 839.3 billion yuan a year earlier.

Analysts had predicted new yuan loans of 975 billion yuan in February.

A pull-back in February’s tally had been widely expected as Chinese banks tend to front-load loans at the beginning of the year to get higher-quality customers and win market share.

Broad M2 money supply grew 8.0 percent in February from a year earlier, missing forecasts, the central bank data showed. Analysts had expected an 8.4 percent rise in M2 — unchanged from January.

Outstanding yuan loans grew 13.4 percent from a year earlier, matching expectations and unchanged from January’s rise.

China’s central bank is widely expected to ease policy further this year to spur lending and lower borrowing costs, especially for small and private firms vital for growth and job creation.

But policy-makers have repeatedly vowed not to open the credit floodgates in an economy already saddled with piles of debt — a legacy of massive stimulus during the global financial crisis in 2008-09 and subsequent downturns.

Corporate bond defaults hit a record last year, while banks’ non-performing loan ratio hit a 10-year high.

Premier Li Keqiang said on Tuesday that China will step up targeted cuts in the reserve requirement ratio for smaller and medium-sized banks with an aim to boost lending to small companies by large banks by more than 30 percent.

He also said monetary policy would be “neither too tight nor too loose.” Li also pledged to push for market-based reforms to lower real interest rates.

The central bank has already cut RRR — the amount that banks need to set aside as reserves — five times over the past year, most recently in January. Further cuts are widely expected.

Growth of outstanding total social financing, a broad measure of credit and liquidity in the economy, slowed to 10.1 percent in February from January’s 10.4 percent, versus a record low of 9.8 percent in December.

TSF includes off-balance sheet forms of financing that exist outside the conventional bank lending system, such as initial public offerings, loans from trust companies and bond sales.

In February, TSF fell to 703 billion yuan from 4.64 trillion yuan in January.

Analysts note there is a time lag before a jump in lending will translate into growth, suggesting business conditions may get worse before they get better.




 

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