The Chinese economy is not experiencing a credit crunch, as the government and central bank "clearly intend to" maintain a relatively supportive credit environment to help bolster the economy, an economist said.
When July loan and total social financing (TSF) data surprised sharply to the downside, investors were worried about a sudden credit crunch.
However, the data published by the People's Bank of China (PBOC) on Friday showed that August's new RMB loans reached 703 billion yuan (about 114.6 billion U.S. dollars), much higher than in July.
The sudden rush of bank lending toward the end of August is evidence that the government and central bank are working to maintain a supportive credit environment, said Tao Wang, an analyst with Switzerland's largest bank, UBS, in a research paper.
New lending from the big four Chinese banks was weak right up until the very end of the month, with short-term lending such as bill discounts seeing a notable increase in August, Wang said.
"Both suggest that there may have been pressure from the government for banks to step up lending. Indeed, August's new RMB bank lending rose to 703 billion yuan from July's mere 385 billion yuan," the economist added.
Wang also said that "the weakness in TSF overstates the weakness of China's overall credit conditions."
The 627-billion-yuan drop in new TSF compared to August 2013 was led by a 417-billion-yuan decline in bill acceptances, a 172-billion-yuan fall in trust loans and a 119-billion-yuan decline in entrusted loans, she added.
"We also suspect that tougher regulations have led to more shadow banking activities being hidden in new ways not fully tracked by TSF," Wang said.
"That said, we do believe that overall credit growth is slowing only gradually, in line with a softening of nominal GDP growth and credit demand," Wang said.
China‘s August new yuan loans nearly double from July
2014-09-12PBOC moves to avert severe credit crunch
2013-09-27Weak property developers face credit crunch: S&P
2013-08-02Credit crunch crimps money market funds' assets
2013-07-04Credit crunch hits smaller firms
2013-07-03China can curb credit crunch: ADB official
2013-06-27Copyright ©1999-2018
Chinanews.com. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.