PBOC move to further curb lending   (Xinhua)  Updated: 2006-06-20 14:02  
The People's Bank of China (PBOC) on Monday ordered commercial banks to 
further cut back on lending, following last Friday's move that requires them to 
keep more reserves at the central bank.  
The central bank needed to tighten up the banking system's liquidity 
management, further curb the excessive growth of money and credit, and continue 
to guide commercial banks on controlling the size of medium- and long-term 
loans, said the bank directive.  
The PBOC raised China's benchmark lending rates by 27 basis points in late 
April, but the economy has shown no signs of slowing from its 10.3 percent 
growth rate in the first quarter, according to the May economic data.  
Chinese banks extended 209.4 billion yuan (26.1 billion U.S. dollars) worth 
of local currency loans in May alone, nearly double that of the same month last 
year, the PBOC said.  
The PBOC on Friday announced it was increasing the reserve ratio for 
commercial banks by 0.5 percentage points from July 5.  
The move will bring the reserves that most banks are required to keep on 
deposit with the central bank to 8 percent, taking about 150 billion yuan in 
funds out of circulation.  
The PBOC directive, issued after a quarterly meeting held by the bank's 
monetary committee, said macro-policies should be coordinated in an effort to 
"actively expand consumer spending, optimize the investment structure and rein 
in the already fast growth of investment".   (For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)  
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