As anticipated, China maintains unchanged lending benchmark rates

As anticipated, China maintains unchanged lending benchmark rates

SHANGHAI/SINGAPORE, Nov 20 (Reuters) – China left benchmark lending‍ rates unchanged at a‌ monthly fixing on Monday,⁣ matching ‌expectations, as a weaker yuan continued to limit further⁤ monetary easing and policymakers waited to ​see‌ the‍ effects of previous stimulus on credit demand.

Recent data shows the recovery in the world’s​ second-largest economy‌ remains patchy with⁤ industrial⁣ output and ‍retail ​sales surprising on the ⁤upside but deflation gathering pace ​and few signs the ‍struggling ‌property market will bounce back any ⁢time soon.

While​ the economy still needs more policy stimulus, an escalation of monetary easing would add unwanted downside‌ pressure on the Chinese currency.

The one-year loan prime rate (LPR) was kept at‌ 3.45% and‌ the five-year LPR was ⁤unchanged​ at 4.20%.

Most new and ​outstanding ‍loans in⁢ China are based on the one-year‍ LPR, while the‍ five-year rate influences the pricing of mortgages.

In a poll of 26 market⁣ watchers ‌conducted ‌last​ week, all participants ⁢predicted no change to either the one-year or five-year LPR.

The steady⁢ fixings came ⁢after the central bank kept ‌its medium-term ⁢interbank liquidity ‍rate ‍unchanged last week. The one-year LPR is‍ loosely pegged off the medium-term lending facility (MLF)⁤ and market participants ⁢typically see changes in the MLF rate as a precursor ⁣to⁣ adjustments in the LPR.

The PBOC injected 1.45 trillion yuan worth of one-year MLF loans⁤ into the banking system last⁤ week but kept the ⁣rates on those loans unchanged.

The liquidity boost resulted in a net 600 billion yuan of cash injections into the banking⁢ system,⁢ the biggest monthly increase since December 2016.

“Policymakers may want more time ‍to access the impact of the recent repricing of existing mortgage contracts before ⁣they ⁤make further changes to the benchmark rate,” Julian Evans-Pritchard, head of China economics ⁣at Capital Economics, said in a note released​ before the LPR fixing.

“The big picture ⁤though ⁤is that, with‍ economic⁣ momentum weak⁢ and downward pressure on the renminbi reversing, we think​ rate reductions will come before ⁣long,” he said, expecting⁢ China to lower the⁢ lending benchmark ​by 20 basis points at the end of the first quarter​ next year.

China’s yuan has clawed back some‌ of its year-to-date losses after losing ⁣more than 6% against the dollar‌ at one point in September.

China remains an outlier among global⁢ central banks, having loosened ⁢monetary policy to shore up ⁢a faltering recovery but further rate‌ cuts would widen the yield gap with the United States,⁣ risking yuan ⁢depreciation and capital⁤ outflows.

The LPR, which ⁣banks normally charge their best clients, is set by 18 designated commercial banks who submit ⁤proposed rates to the central bank every month.

Reporting ‌by Winni⁣ Zhou​ and Tom⁤ Westbrook. Editing by Sam HolmesOur ‍Standards: ​The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Acquire ⁣Licensing Rights, opens new⁤ tab

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