Hong Kong • The case for the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) to cut the amount of cash lenders are required to hold is getting stronger.
Chinese banks racked up 2.93 trillion yuan (RM1.82 trillion) in medium-term loans extended by the PBoC scheduled for repayment during the rest of 2018. That has prompted some analysts to raise bets the PBoC may soon repeat a tactic used in April: Cutting the Reserve Requirement Ratio (RRR) to hand lenders liquidity so they can pay back the debt.
Even though the one-percentage-point cut in April has already eased part of that repayment burden, more than 80% of the original medium-term lending facility (MLF) funds are still outstanding — and other pressures make the matter urgent. Lenders also need to hoard cash for upcoming quarterly regulatory checks, pay back the 2.3 trillion yuan of short-term interbank debt that Bloomberg calculations show is due in June, and put aside cash for the tax season in July.
Such a move would help mitigate concerns of a cash crunch, which could disrupt China’s financial markets and even trigger systemic risks. In effect, a reduction would also boost banks’ ability to lend to smaller and private companies, which have seen a string of defaults of late as an official deleveraging drive squeezes out shadow financing.
At 16% for most banks, China has an unusually high RRR — stemming from the need to mop up years of capital inflows — and can there- fore release funds to the system by reducing it without endangering financial stability.
“The time will be ripe for China to cut RRR again in July,” said Ding Shuang, chief China economist at Standard Chartered plc (StanChart) in Hong Kong, who cited the tax repayment as a strong factor. “The policymakers need to ease banks’ pressures and also encourage them to extend loans to small and medium-sized firms.”
The PBoC will lower the RRR by as much as two percentage points in addition to the previous reduction by end-2018 to swap out maturing MLFs, UBS AG economists led by Ning Zhang wrote in a note this month. There is a big chance that the next cut would come in June or July, when onshore liquidity tightens for seasonal factors, said Qin Han, chief bond analyst at Guotai Junan Securities Co in Shanghai.
State-run media also backed up the argument for an imminent cut. The banking sector will see “a hole” in liquidity over the next two months, according to a front-page commentary in China Securities Journal this week.
Some traders are already buying bonds on bets the PBoC may cut the RRR in the near future, StanChart’s Ding said. China’s government bonds have rallied since mid-May, with the 10-year benchmark yield sliding 11 basis points from a peak this month to 3.61% yesterday. The sovereign notes had their best week in more than three years when the PBoC acted in April.
An RRR cut is more favourable than rolling over MLF loans, as the extra funding can go to smaller banks, which are more likely to lend to cash- strapped private firms, said Tommy Xie, an economist at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp (OCBC) in Singapore. MLF financing is only extended to bigger lenders, he said.
PBoC governor Yi Gang was the latest official to voice the need to sup- port smaller borrowers, saying in a meeting on Tuesday that China will “use all sorts of monetary tools in a flexible way” to make it easier and cheaper for such firms to get fund-
ing. For Dariusz Kowalczyk, senior emerging-market strategist at Credit Agricole SA, Yi’s remarks suggest the odds of an RRR cut in the coming weeks are on the rise.
To be sure, it’s unclear when the debt that banks used the funding released from the previous RRR cut to repay was originally planned to mature, so liquidity pressures can be smaller if the loans turn out to have been due in next few months. Also, weakness in the yuan, which sank to the lowest level in four months, could complicate officials’ decision as looser monetary conditions will likely result in further depreciation in the currency and trigger capital outflows.
“The policymakers’ primary considerations now are fund flows and liquidity conditions,” said OCBC’s Xie. “Considering the yuan could stabilise soon and cash supply could tighten again, the window for an RRR cut is opening in the third quarter.” — Bloomberg