By Kevin Yao
BEIJING (Reuters) – China’s central bank is expected to deploy its most aggressive monetary tactics in a decade this year as it tries to stimulate the economy and soften the blow of impending U.S. tariff hikes, but in doing so it risks quickly exhausting its firepower.
Friday’s announcement by the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) that it has suspended treasury bond purchases due to the asset’s scarcity highlights the limitations of its resources as it confronts an increasingly challenging economic environment.
Policy implementation is complicated by various factors, analysts say. There is the risk of currency and capital outflows, weak domestic credit demand and diminishing room to cut interest rates and inject liquidity by reducing reserve requirement ratios (RRR) – the amount of cash banks need to hold for rainy days.
These constraints are all interconnected. Further bond purchases, rate cuts or liquidity injections could exert depreciation pressure on the yuan, potentially causing funds needed for domestic growth to flow overseas.
Constraints were evident even before the bond buying suspension.
PBOC Governor Pan Gongsheng, in rare forward-looking remarks, flagged in September the possibility of another RRR cut by year-end, depending on market conditions but the cut has not occurred, despite the looser policy stance.
More monetary easing could support the economy in the near-term, but feed asset bubbles in the long term.
The PBOC has repeatedly warned that the bond rally that has pushed yields to record lows could undermine financial stability when markets turn.
“Short versus long term , internal versus external, and exchange rate versus interest rates – these are multiple conflicts,” said Xing Zhaopeng, ANZ’s senior China strategist
Faced with deflationary pressures and mounting headwinds to already stuttering growth, China’s top leaders in December ditched their 14-year-old “prudent” monetary policy stance for a “moderately loose” posture.
But the space to cut interest rates and bank reserve requirements is smaller than the scale of easing deployed during the “prudent” era, implying that the PBOC may in practice have to be more careful than before, analysts say.
The PBOC’s seven-day reverse repo rate, its new benchmark policy rate since last year, stands at 1.5% after a total of 30 basis point (bps) cuts in 2024. It is 203 bps lower than in May 2012, the first data point publicly available.
“Theoretically, the lower limit of interest rates is zero, as seen in the U.S. and Japan. However, I don’t think China’s rates will drop to zero,” said Larry Hu, chief China economist at Macquarie.