Central bank plans more market moves By Zhang Dingmin (China Daily) Updated: 2005-02-01 03:06
The Peoples's Bank of China (PBOC) unveiled further steps it is planning to
promote the liberalization of its interest rate regime yesterday.
Analysts say the steps demonstrate a firm commitment to pressing ahead
reforms will help banks adopt to a market economy environment but cause
short-term difficulties among weaker lenders.
The central bank listed the moves in the pipeline yesterday in a report
published on its website. The bank said it will unify interest rate policies of
all financial institutions, revise related rules and regulations, and help banks
improve their skills in pricing loans.
The steps would also promote the development of financial markets and enhance
the PBOC's own ability in guiding interest rates and supervising the market.
The bank has been loosening controls on interest rates in recent years. Such
controls have distorted the price of money, reduced the efficiency of the
financial sector and have blunted Chinese banks' sensitivity to market risks,
analysts say.
After setting free interest rates in the interbank market and those on
large-sum foreign currency deposits, the central bank removed the upper limit on
lending rates by commercial banks late last year. It allowed them to lower rates
on deposits, but kept the ban on raising deposit rates.
The PBOC said it will promote the liberalization of deposit rates by
loosening threshold requirements on large deposit agreements. Interest rates on
these are typically negotiated between the banks and institutional depositors.
As for foreign currency-denominated deposits, the central bank currently
dictates rates for deposits smaller than US$3 million in a few major currencies,
such as the US dollar and the euro.
The PBOC said yesterday it will further liberalize such rates by simplifying
the administration of rates it continues to manage and allowing the rates on
certain types of deposits smaller than US$3 million to float freely.
The bank said there was a need for banks to enhance their ability to price
loans according to risk factors and costs, so as to prevent price
undercutting.
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