China cuts reserve ratio as it boosts stimulus amid trade woes

The required reserve ratio for all banks will be lowered by 0.5 percentage points, taking effect on September 16

FILE PHOTO: A fluttering Chinese national flag casts its shadow on the headquarters of China's central bank, People's Bank of China (PBOC), in central Beijing, China November 24, 2014.    REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File Photo
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China’s central bank said it will cut the amount of cash banks must hold as reserves to the lowest level since 2007, injecting liquidity into an economy facing both a domestic slowdown and trade-war headwinds.

The required reserve ratio for all banks will be lowered by 0.5 percentage points, taking effect on September 16, the People’s Bank of China said on its website Friday. The PBOC also cut the reserve ratios by one percentage point for some city commercial banks, to take effect in two steps on October 15 and November 15.

The cuts will release 900 billion yuan ($126 billion) of liquidity, the PBOC said, helping to offset the tightening impact of upcoming tax payments. That is more than the previous cuts in January and May, which released 800 billion yuan and 280 billion yuan, respectively, the PBOC said at those times.

The shift is aimed at supporting demand by funneling credit to small firms and echoes the earlier cuts this year. While limited, it could also put pressure on the already weakening yuan which may antagonise President Donald Trump. PBOC officials indicated recently they are wary of larger-scale easing measures and have so far refrained from following the US Federal Reserve in cutting benchmark interest rates.

The cut “doesn’t reflect an aggressive easing,” said Zhou Hao, a senior emerging markets economist at Commerzbank in Singapore. “In fact, China has recently massively tightened property financing. Hence this is still a re-balancing -- to lower the funding costs for the manufacturing sector but tighten liquidity in the property sector due to asset bubble concerns.”

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index and S&P 500 futures extended gains after the announcement.

China’s economy softened again in August after poor results in July, and will likely deteriorate further in the remainder of the year. Trade tensions between China and the US expanded onto the financial front recently after China allowed the currency to decline below 7 a dollar, prompting the US to name it a currency manipulator.

The central bank emphasised that the policy change wasn’t a massive step up in easing. “The cut is not flooding the economy with stimulus and the stance of prudent policy has not changed,” it said in a separate statement. The RRR cut will offset the tax season in mid-September, and the overall liquidity in the banking system will stay basically stable, according to the PBOC.

‘The cuts don’t mean significant easing in monetary policy,” said Ding Shuang, chief China and North Asia economist at Standard Chartered Bank in Hong Kong. “Rather it is something they must do, a sort of marginal easing, in order to prevent tightening in monetary policy.”