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China announces details of targeted RRR cuts
Last Updated: 2014-06-10 00:10 | Xinhua
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Scope of targeted RRR cut stirs market

Policy to release liquidity of $5.28 billion to market

More lenders make RRR cuts

Experts: Rate cuts won't aid realty sector

China's central bank announced on Monday that it will cut the reserve requirement ratio (RRR) by 0.5 percentage points for banks engaged in proportionate lending to agricultural and small firms.

The cut will take effect from June 16, said a statement released by the People's Bank of China (PBoC), the central bank.

The statement provided the details following a cabinet decision late last month to launch narrow-based RRR cuts for banks engaged in lending to agriculture-related businesses and small and micro-sized companies, in efforts to enhance financial support to the real economy.

Banks eligible for the cut include those whose new loans to agriculture-related entities accounted for at least half of their total new lending in the last fiscal year; banks whose outstanding loans to agriculture-related entities accounted for at least 30 percent of their total outstanding loans in the last fiscal year will also be qualified for the cut, the statement said. The same rule applies to banks engaged in lending to small and micro-sized companies, according to the central bank.

"According to the standard, the targeted RRR cut will cover around two-thirds of city commercial banks, 80 percent of rural commercial banks above county level as well as 90 percent of rural cooperative banks above county level," said the statement.

Meanwhile, the central bank will cut the RRR for finance companies, financial leasing firms, and automobile finance enterprises by 0.5 percentage points. The cut is aimed to improve the capital use efficiency of these companies and boost consumption, the statement said.

The central bank noted that the cut will not apply to county-level rural commercial banks and rural cooperative banks, who had their RRR reduced on April 25.

Zhang Zhiwei, an economist with Nomura Securities, said in a research note that the cut is estimated to inject 95 billion yuan (15.45 billion U.S. dollars) of liquidity to the economy.

"Combining this measure and other liquidity injection actions through the re-lending facility and the RRR cut on April 25, we estimate the PBoC will inject 545 billion yuan of liquidity into the economy by the end of June," Zhang said.

Even though the announcement marks the second targeted RRR cut within two months, the central bank said this did not mean a change to the country's fundamental monetary policy.

"The PBoC will continue to implement a prudent monetary policy, maintain reasonable liquidity, as well as reasonable growth in both monetary credit and social financing," the central bank statement said.

It added that the directive RRR cut could boost credit structure, and such a monetary policy tool will also help with the nation's economic restructuring efforts.

Chinese economy should stabilize in the next six months

On June 16 2014, the People's Bank of China (PBOC) formally lowered the reserve requirement ratio for qualified commercial banks by 0.5 percent. On April 25 2014, the PBOC had lowered the reserve requirement ratio of county-level rural commercial banks and county-level rural cooperative banks. This was therefore the second time that the PBOC had used this monetary measure.

In the past two months, China's decision-makers have sent positive signals to the market by moving forward with "microstimulation" policies, which have not only addressed the liquidity problem in the short term, but also laid a foundation for stabilizing the economy in a long term. >>>More

China's central bank clarifies sectors targeted for support

China's central bank on Tuesday outlined areas it will target in providing financial support and implementing reform measures, following its latest move to cut reserve requirements for banks engaged in lending to the agriculture sector and small firms.

To boost the real economy, the People's Bank of China (PBoC) announced on Monday that it will cut the reserve requirement ratio (RRR) by 0.5 percentage points for banks engaged in proportionate lending to the farming sector or small- and micro-sized enterprises. >>>More

Monetary tools used for structural change

China's central bank announced Monday that it will cut the reserve requirement ratio (RRR) for banks with a certain proportion of lending to the agricultural sector and small firms, in a move to help boost liquidity and support those sectors.

The RRR, or the amount of deposits that banks need to hold at the central bank, will be cut by 0.5 percentage points for banks whose lending is geared toward the agricultural sector and small and micro-sized firms. This will be effective from June 16, the central bank said in a statement.

The policy will apply to banks whose new loans to the agricultural sector or to small firms exceeded 50 percent of their total new loans in 2013, and whose outstanding loans to the agricultural sector or to small firms exceeded 30 percent of their total outstanding loans. >>>More

China's targeted RRR cuts boost economic restructuring

The Chinese cabinet's decision to carry out targeted reserve requirement ratio (RRR) cuts in more banks is in line with its pledge to deepen financial reform and better serve the real economy, which analysts say will ultimately boost economic restructuring.

The State Council, China's cabinet, announced last week that the country will lower the RRR for banks engaged in proportionate lending to the agriculture sector and small and micro-sized enterprises (SMEs). Details of when and how much the cuts will be have not yet been announced. >>>More

China to cut reserve ratio to tackle slowdown

The central government will not shift its policy direction amid the economic slowdown, but will intensify targeted financial easing in coming months, the State Council said in a statement on Friday.

The statement, which followed an executive meeting of the council, said the government will strengthen the "targeted reduction" of the reserve requirement ratio - the amount of money banks have to set aside as reserves. >>>More

RRR cut unlikely: economists

A fully-fledged cut of the reserve requirement ratio (RRR) for banks is unlikely, as the central bank prefers targeted monetary tools, economists have said, as speculation mounts about such a dramatic move to heat China's lukewarm economy.

Faced with an economic slowdown, the People's Bank of China (PBOC) has been treading cautiously in its monetary policy shift. Instead of an RRR or interest rate cut, the central bank has resorted to measures such as "targeted" RRR cuts for rural banks and re-lending. >>>More

China cuts RRR for rural financial institutions

China's central bank announced Tuesday it will cut the reserve requirement ratio (RRR) for county-level rural commercial banks by 2 percentage points and that of rural credit cooperative unions by 0.5 percentage points beginning Friday.

The adjustment will help enhance financial support for rural development and guide credit flow to the rural areas, the People's Bank of China said in an online statement.

"In the context of prudent monetary policy, the decision will not affect the overall liquidity in the banking system," said the central bank, adding it will continue to achieve reasonable growth in credit and social financing with a focus on improving the financing structure.>>>More

Change in banks' cash reserves aimed at boosting agriculture

China will reduce the amount of cash that villa ge commercial banks keep at the central bank to increase financial support for the agricultural sector, the State Council decided at a Cabinet meeting on Wednesday.

The reserve requirement ratio will be reduced for qualified rural commercial banks and cooperative banks in counties, as part of the packaged policies that Premier Li Keqiang endorsed at the meeting.

Li did not state when and by how much the reserve requirement ratio would be lowered for lenders, saying only that an appropriate reduction would be made for qualifying banks. >>>More

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