Thursday, November 24, 2011

China Expands Bailout Measures, Reduces Reserve Requirements for Select Financial Firms

China’s government selectively lowered reserve requirements as part of credit boosting measures (euphemism for bailouts)

From Bloomberg, (bold emphasis mine)

China widened efforts to support cash-strapped companies in Zhejiang and rural areas hit by a credit squeeze that’s slowing the second-largest economy just as Europe’s debt crisis saps export demand.

The People’s Bank of China cut the reserve ratio for more than 20 rural credit cooperatives nationwide by half a percentage point, according to an announcement from its Hangzhou branch in Zhejiang, where small businesses have complained about lack of access to credit. Bank of America Merrill Lynch predicts officials will lower the ratio for large commercial banks early in 2012.

Evidence is mounting that growth has moderated in the economy that’s led the global expansion, with home sales falling 25 percent last month and a report yesterday signaling manufacturing may shrink the most in almost three years. Premier Wen Jiabao has pledged to “fine tune” policy as needed.

“The unexpectedly sharp drop in China’s flash PMI for November, if corroborated by other indicators, is likely to push policy makers to go beyond policy ‘fine-tuning’ to outright easing,” said Mark Williams, a London-based Asia economist at Capital Economics Ltd. “Confirmation that the People’s Bank has lowered reserve requirements for some banks is likely to be only the start.”…

The Chinese central bank’s move yesterday reduces the percentage of deposits the cooperatives are required to park with the central bank to 16 percent, a “normalization” after an increase a year ago, the Hangzhou branch said in its statement yesterday. The extra 0.5 percentage point requirement had penalized lenders that failed to meet lending targets in rural areas, and was imposed after a check carried out each November, it said.

In another sign of China’s shift, the central bank on Nov. 11 said local-currency lending was 586.8 billion yuan ($92 billion) in October, exceeding September’s 470 billion yuan and higher than the 500 billion yuan median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey.

Injecting Liquidity

The PBOC has also injected greater liquidity into the market for loans between banks, through open market operations that have depressed interbank rates, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. economists wrote in a note to clients last week. Further tools will include a slower pace of currency appreciation and looser fiscal policy, Goldman analysts said.

Under the incumbent fiat currency regime, the policy of bailouts has become a widespread practice, which China has not been exempt. Nonetheless, these political actions will intensify China’s domestic boom bust cycle dynamics.

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