MNI China Daily Summary: Tuesday, June 13

Jun-13 10:42By: Lewis Porylo
China

EXCLUSIVE: The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) will likely cut its medium-term lending facility rate this week, guiding the main reference lending rate down, in order to shore up the weak economy and boost credit demand, advisors and economists told MNI.

POLICY: China’s new loans rose in May, with lending to the household and business sectors increasing, PBOC data showed.

LIQUIDITY: The PBOC conducted CNY2 billion via 7-day reverse repos, with the rates changed to 1.900% from 2.00%. The operation aims to keep banking system liquidity reasonable and ample, the PBOC said on its website.

RATES: The seven-day weighted average interbank repo rate for depository institutions (DR007) increased to 1.8357% from 1.8060%, Wind Information showed. The overnight repo average increased to 1.6615% from 1.2880%.

YUAN: The currency weakened to 7.1536 against the dollar from 7.1426. The PBOC set the dollar-yuan central parity rate higher at 7.1498, compared with 7.1212 set on Monday.

BONDS: The yield on 10-year China Government Bonds was last at 2.6850%, down from Monday's close of 2.7400%, according to Wind Information.

STOCKS: The Shanghai Composite Index edged up 0.15% to 3,233.67, while the CSI300 rose 0.53% to 3,864.91. The Hang Seng Index was up 0.60% to 19,521.42.

FROM THE PRESS: China should speed up the issuance of local government special bonds in Q3 and Q4 to stabilise the macro economy, according to experts interviewed by Yicai. The news agency said the economy has began to show weakness and experts advised fiscal policy should be stepped up to improve efficiency and increase overall workload. Local governments will issue all CNY3.8 trillion of special bonds by the end of Q3, with major projects to receive funding, including municipal administration, industrial parks, transportation, and shantytown renovation, experts said. (Source: Yicai)

Policymakers should maintain a proactive fiscal-policy stance in H2 to boost the economy, which currently operates at 73% of utilisation capacity, according to Guan Tao, a former director at the State Administration of Foreign Exchange. Guan said leaders in Beijing should focus on repairing household balance sheets, in particular for lower income groups who had suffered the most from Covid-19 disruption. Guan noted household’s had not translated their Covid-era savings pool into consumption as hoped, because lower income families had depleted their savings during the pandemic era and higher income households had directed a large portion of "revenge" spending abroad. Banks saw an increase in deposit savings in Q1 as lower income groups re-establish their firewall savings.

Mainland and Hong Kong authorities will expand and deepen their cross-border connect programmes, according to the China Securities Regulatory Commission and the Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission. During a recent high-level meeting, both sides agreed to strengthen cross border wealth management connections and deepen cooperation in the derivatives and asset management industry. (Source: Yicai)