China’s latest easing move signals that shoring up growth is the government’s top priority even when doing so further weakens the yuan or contributes to leverage that threatens the longer-term health from the world’s second-biggest economy.
‘Good progress,’ but few information on how to strengthen global economy as G20 summit concludes
Canada’s finance minister said G20 leaders ‘made good progress’ on the weekend but the actual text from the group’s communiqu offered few details of the agreement
Read more
The People’s Bank of China said Monday that it’s cutting the quantity of cash the nation’s lenders must lock away. The move marked the very first time in four months the central bank has utilized certainly one of its traditional monetary-easing tools, despite mounting signs of a weaker economy along with a stock market in near-freefall.
The action came days before Premier Li Keqiang is anticipated to set the bar lower for gross domestic product having a 2016 target expansion selection of 6.5 percent to 7 per cent, in contrast to last year’s objective of around 7 per cent. The renewed concentrate on growth might be at the cost of any effort to rein in ever-increasing debt: Chinese banks extended a record amount of new loans in January. Meantime, the yuan is down 3.6 percent against the dollar since October.
“This move suggests that, in the end, supporting growth takes priority over other considerations,” Louis Kuijs, chief Asia economist at Oxford Economics in Hong Kong, said inside a note. “Today’s move matters in terms of what it really signals about the policy direction,” said Kuijs, who formerly worked in the World Bank and International Monetary Fund.
PBOC Governor Zhou Xiaochuan highlighted scope for further action in front of a Group of 20 meeting in Shanghai a week ago, saying China had “multiple policy instruments” to address growth risks. The half percentage-point cut in the required reserve ratio will inject about 685 billion yuan (US$105 billion) in to the economic climate, Bloomberg Intelligence estimated.
Related
Forget China and oil, this global stock exchange rout has deeper causes, warns investing guruChina’s ‘new normal’ continues to be astonishing
Economic Impact
Whether that money actually stimulates the economy is yet another matter. Credit Suisse Group AG economist Tao Dong said the outcome depends on just how much banks are prepared to lend to home buyers.
Roberto Perli, an old Fed official who’s now someone at Cornerstone Macro LLC in Washington, said in a note that the action probably isn’t a “net monetary easing” since it replaces temporary cash injections. Or, as University of California at San Diego professor Victor Shih says, the move merely counteracts money outflows of recent months.
“It appears a little desperate,” said Alicia Garcia Herrero, chief Asia Pacific economist at Natixis SA in Hong Kong. “Zhou already said that he would use monetary policy as much as needed to support growth, which means this basically implies that growth is still not coming naturally with the already lax monetary conditions.”
China may not be done easing. The latest cut takes the ratio to 17 percent for the biggest banks, still one of the highest such levels on the planet.
The central bank said hello lowered the reserve ratio to guide stable and appropriate growth in credit.
“This is unlikely to become the final RRR cut,” said Tim Condon, head of Asian research at ING Groep NV in Singapore. “The question is, just how long does it take for these to follow up with an interest-rate cut.”
Stocks, Reserves
China is facing an abundance of difficulties in its economy and markets. The Shanghai Composite Index has declined 24 percent this season, the worst performer among 93 global equity indexes. Foreign-exchange reserves have plummeted US$762 billion since mid-2014 because the government attempted to defend a falling yuan.
Injecting stimulus by means of debt could make things worse over time. Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s investment management division has warned that China’s debt-to-GDP ratio increase is among the highest in the recent past. Debt will peak at 283 per cent of GDP in the future years, according to the median estimate of eight economists in a Bloomberg News survey published in February.
“The PBOC needs to walk an excellent line,” Oxford’s Kuijs said.
–With assistance from Xiaoqing Pi, Allen Wan, Tan Hwee Ann and Jeff Kearns.
Bloomberg News