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China Sets 0.5% Floor on Bill Re-discount Rates to Curb Overzealous Buying

Chinese regulators have instructed commercial banks to stop re-discounting bills at rates below 0.5%, a move aimed at curbing aggressive market activity. The intervention follows a period where banks, desperate to meet lending quotas amid stagnant demand, pushed rates as low as 0.01% to park excess liquidity.

China Sets 0.5% Floor on Bill Re-discount Rates to Curb Overzealous Buying

The guidance marks a direct response to a practice that has effectively distorted credit growth signals. With the broader economy struggling under the weight of a prolonged property sector downturn, banks have increasingly turned to the bill market to mask weak loan demand. Traders reported that end-of-month rates had plummeted to near-zero levels as institutions scrambled to deploy capital into these instruments.

Regulators remain concerned that these extreme fluctuations in bill pricing are fueling market speculation regarding the actual health of China’s credit expansion. By imposing a hard floor, authorities intend to stabilize expectations and prevent banks from using the bill market as a convenient repository for unlent funds. This shift coincides with broader efforts by the central bank to pressure commercial lenders into increasing authentic lending, as recent data shows credit growth consistently underperforming expectations.

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