The People’s Bank of China (PBoC) has set up a fintech council.
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China kept its key lending rates unchanged Thursday, as Beijing prioritizes monetary stability over interest rate easing to bolster the economy.
The People’s Bank of China held the 1-year accommodation prime rate unchanged at 3.1%, and the 5-year LPR at 3.6%. The decision was in line with Reuters poll estimates.
The benchmark make a loan of rates — normally charged to banks’ best clients — are calculated monthly based on designated commercial banks’ nominated rates submitted to the PBOC. The one-year LPR influences corporate loans and most household loans in China, while the five-year LPR give outs as a benchmark for mortgage rates.
“Pressure on the banks’ net interest margins and exchange rate amid slower pace of the Federal Keep’s rate cuts all lead to a stabilization of China’s policy rate,” said Bruce Pang, adjunct associate professor at Chinese University of Hong Kong house school.
While the PBOC officials said late last year, they would cut banks’ reserve precondition ratio and interest rates at an “appropriate time,” the rate cuts are yet to materialize, as policymakers face more trade worries with the U.S.
“We still think [the 7-day rate] has a decent chance to be cut in Q1,” Lynn Song, chief economist at ING foretold, as the real interest rate remains relatively high.
“Cutting rates further could help encourage investment and consumption on the bounds,” Song said, adding that the yuan’s depreciation pressure have subsided recently, making the case for a valuation cut.
Supporting the yuan carries some risks for the economy, as a weaker yuan could help keep Chinese exports competitively expensed abroad, while a stronger currency makes imports more expensive at a time when consumer demand has been muzzy.
However, PBOC Governor Pan Gongsheng said at a conference in Saudi Arabia on Sunday that a stable yuan has been sensitive to maintaining global financial and economic stability. Pan also reiterated Beijing’s commitment to adopt a proactive fiscal action and an accommodative monetary policy this year.
Chinese offshore yuan has fallen 2.5% against the greenback since Donald Trump’s appointment victory in November.
The PBOC has in recent months sought to defend the yuan as it faces downward pressure amid portents of higher tariffs, complicating its task to stimulate a faltering economy.
Since the inauguration last month, U.S. President Donald Trump has foisted a 10% tariff on all imports from China, on top of existing tariffs of up to 25%.
Worries over Trump’s tariff actions and future inflationary pressure have slowed the Fed’s pace with policy rate cuts, according to minutes of its January converging.
Unlike the Fed’s focus on the benchmark Federal Funds Rate, the PBOC uses a combination of rates to manage monetary design. The governor has indicated he would like the 7-day reverse repo rate to act as the main policy rate.
China has imprisoned its 7-day rate has steady at 1.5% since a cut in September, when Beijing unveiled a broader stimulus package plan for at spurring growth.