BEIJING, May 11 (Xinhua) -- China's bank credits fell considerably in April
after staying above 1 trillion yuan for three straight months, with
yuan-denominated new loans standing at 591.8 billion yuan (about 86.65 billion
U.S. dollars), the People's Bank of China (PBOC) said here Monday.
It brings outstanding loans in financial institutions up 29.72 percent to
35.55 trillion yuan by the end of April.
The loan increase in April was less drastic than in the first quarter,
which was largely in line with market forecasts.
The country has pumped 4.58 trillion yuan (670 billion U.S. dollars) of new
loans into the economy in the first quarter to stimulate growth.
The figure is already nearing 5 trillion yuan of new loans targeted for the
whole year. In March alone, new loans increased by a record 1.89 trillion yuan.
The reminbi deposit increased by 1.03 trillion yuan in April, making the
outstanding deposit 53.29 trillion yuan, up 26.21 percent.
In the first-quarter monetary policy report released earlier this month,
the central bank said it would continue to instruct financial institutions to
extend new loans, despite the earlier surge.
Ding Zhijie, deputy director of the Finance Institute of the University of
International Business and Economics, estimated that loan increases would
further slow down in the second quarter, but the liquidity would remain
abundant.
In the upcoming months, new bank loans should keep growing by 400 to 500
billion yuan per month, estimated Liu Yuhui, an economist with Chinese Academy
of Social Sciences (CASS).
The new loans this year would reach about 9 trillion yuan, said Liu.
The broad money supply, M2, gained 25.95 percent to 54.05 trillion yuan at
April end from a year earlier, said the bank.
M1, the narrowest measure of money supply that includes cash in circulation
plus corporate current deposits, reached 17.82 trillion yuan, up 17.48 percent.
The lasting growth in M1 showed more loans are entering real economy,
making the economy more active, experts said.
But the gap between M1 and M2 remained high, suggesting that a considerable
amount of savings was still locked up in fixed deposits, instead of flowing into
the economy.
China's new loan growth may decline in
April
BEIJING, May 5 (Xinhua) -- Credit extended by China's
banks in April may have dropped to above 600 billion yuan (about 87.85 billion
U.S. dollars) after staying at above 1 trillion yuan for three straight months,
industry insiders said.
Despite the sharp month-on-month decline, the scale and
growth of the April new loans was "more reasonable" than that in the first three
months this year, said Tuesday's China Securities Journal, citing unidentified
sources with banks. Full story
Banking regulator says government new
loans not limited to 5 trillion yuan
BOAO, Hainan, April 18 (Xinhua) -- China's banking
regulator said Saturday the government's target of new loans this year is not
limited to 5 trillion yuan (735.3 billion U.S. dollars), and all funds should
help keep the sustainable and rapid development of the economy.
Liu Mingkang, chairman of the China Banking Regulatory
Commission, made the remarks at a panel discussion of the Boao Forum for Asia
(BFA). Full story
China's new yuan loans
surge
BEIJING, April 17 -- The explosive credit growth over the
past few months has propped up the sagging economy, but it may also plant the
seed for an asset price bubble and inflation, according to experts.
"The positive news for the first quarter is the strong
loan growth," Wang Tao, head of China Economic Research with UBS Securities,
said at a forum on Wednesday. "It is a sign that China's growth relies more on
credit rather than fiscal stimulus." Full story
China's new yuan loans hit 1.3 trln
yuan in March
BEIJING, April 3 -- China's new yuan loans amounted to 1.3
trillion yuan in March as the country continued to pump in massive liquidity
into the economy to battle impacts of the global financial crisis, a source
close to the matter told China Daily.
A report by Caijing magazine on Tuesday said new yuan
loans extended by the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, China
Construction Bank, Bank of China and the Bank of Communications exceeded 800
billion yuan in March. Full story
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