Statistics

China's Sept new yuan loans rose to 595.5b yuan

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2010-10-13 14:45
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BEIJING - China saw large increases in both new lending and foreign exchange reserves last month, triggering more concerns over rising inflationary pressures and "hot money" inflows, the country's central bank said in Beijing on Wednesday.

New yuan-denominated lending in September rose to 595.5 billion yuan ($89.28 billion), an increase of 9.2 percent from August, the People's Bank of China (PBOC), the central bank, said in a statement on its website.

China's Sept new yuan loans rose to 595.5b yuan

China's banks extended 6.3 trillion yuan from January to September, 2.36 trillion yuan, or 27.3 percent, less than the same period in 2009, it said.

Yuan loans outstanding at the end of September totaled 46.28 trillion yuan, 18.5 percent higher than a year earlier, said the statement.

Annual growth in the broad M2 measure of money supply, including cash in circulation and all deposits, was 19 percent in September, compared with 19.2 percent last month.

The country's narrow M1 measure of money supply, which covers cash in circulation plus current corporate deposits, increased by 20.9 percent in September year on year, one percentage point and 11.5 percentage points lower than that of this August and the end of last year.

Zhao Qingming, a senior researcher with China Construction Bank, said the expansion in new loans last month was "a little bit beyond the regulators' expectation," which also explained the central bank's recent move on liquidity control.

The PBOC on Tuesday temporarily raised the reserve requirement ratio of its four major state-owned lenders and two privately-owned banks, China Merchants Bank Co and Minsheng Banking Corp, by an extra 50 basis points, or 0.5 percentage points, in reserves.

Related readings:
China's Sept new yuan loans rose to 595.5b yuan China's August new lending expands to 545.2b yuan
China's Sept new yuan loans rose to 595.5b yuan Chinese banks' forex surplus hits $29.1b in Aug
China's Sept new yuan loans rose to 595.5b yuan Chinese banks' forex surplus tops $26.6 in July
China's Sept new yuan loans rose to 595.5b yuan Commercial banks' refinancing to exceed 200b yuan

It is the fourth time this year the reserve ratio for the six banks has been raised to rein in lending and combat inflation, lifting the four state-run banks' reserve ratio to 17.5 percent.

The Chinese government set the annual target for new loans of 2010 at 7.5 trillion yuan at the beginning of the year, after a record 9.59 trillion yuan of new lending in 2009 fueled asset bubbles and inflation fears.

Based on the latest loan figures, up to 84 percent of the planned annual lending was pumped into market in the first nine months of this year.

The Chinese government has been well aware of the inflationary pressures, with the country's July CPI up 3.3 percent year on year and expanding 3.5 percent from a year earlier in August, according to the National Bureau of Statistics. The September figure is yet to be issued.

New lending for the whole year is not likely to go much beyond the 7.5-trillion-yuan target, said Zhao.

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