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REPEAT: MNI Survey: PBOC Injections Cheer China Traders

Repeats Story Initially Transmitted at 05:45 GMT Oct 23/01:45 EST Oct 23
     BEIJING (MNI) - The People's Bank of China gave the country's interbank
market plenty to cheer about this month as it offered lashings of liquidity to
keep monetary conditions and interest rates stable in the run-up to a key
meeting of the ruling Communist Party that opened on Oct. 18.
     Sentiment continued to recover from a gloomy summer as the central bank
pumped money into the financial system even as it warned markets that there
would be no let-up in its determination to force the financial sector to
deleverage after announcing a cut in banks' reserve requirement ratio on Sept.
30 that would become effective on Jan. 1, 2018.
     The Communist Party's obsession with stability, especially ahead of
important national meetings, meant that financial regulators, government
ministries, and local government were all under orders to ensure not the
slightest tremor of volatility or stress before and during the 19th Party
Congress. Congresses are held every five years and this year's gathering was Xi
Jinping's opportunity to consolidate his power as general secretary of the party
and install his allies in key party positions.
     As a result, the PBOC was in the mood to be generous, to an extent that
exceeded the expectations of a market primed for bad news. The latest Market
News International monthly interbank survey showed a record number of traders -
89.5% percent of respondents - reporting improved liquidity conditions. The
number surged from 26.3% in September, the biggest jump since the survey began
in May 2014, and was up from zero in both July and August. No traders said
liquidity conditions were worse for the first time since February 2016, down
from 42% in September's survey and 95% in August.
     The MNI survey gauged the opinions of 19 traders with financial
institutions operating in the interbank market, the country's main platform for
trading money-market, bond and currency instruments, and the main funding source
for financial institutions. Interviews were conducted from October 16 to 18.
     "Liquidity conditions have eased up a lot, something I haven't seen for a
long time," said a Shanghai-based trader with a small regional bank. "Not only
have we had the PBOC injecting money, you can see that demand is really going
down as the deleveraging campaign has started to bite."
     Data from financial regulators show that outstanding interbank assets and
liabilities fell at the end of June from the start of the year and have
continued to shrink. Growth in wealth management products (WMP) has also slowed,
with the balance of interbank WMP falling by CNY2.2 trillion from January to
August 2017.
     Traditionally, the first month of a new quarter is a time of tightening
liquidity. The PBOC sucks out money injected the previous month to tide markets
over what can sometimes be a rocky period when banks, the main providers of
funding to the interbank market, hoard cash to meet quarter-end regulatory
requirements.
     In the two weeks since financial markets reopened after a nine-day public
holiday that ended on Oct. 9, including Monday, the PBOC has made a total net
injection of CNY480 billion through open-market operations and a net CNY58.5
billion addition via loans to selected banks through its Medium-term Lending
Facility (MLF). 
     "The liquidity environment has been very comfortable recently, particularly
for short-term funds," said a Beijing-based trader with a state-owned bank. "The
PBOC has been injecting funds and the big banks have been generous in providing
liquidity too."
     But traders recognize that the central bank's generosity is linked with the
Party Congress.
     "It's all to do with maintaining stability for the 19th Party Congress,'
said the Beijing-based trader. "I don't think this situation is going to last
much longer."
     Referring to the PBOC by its nickname, another trader with a small bank in
eastern China said, "Central bank mother just wants us to relax and watch the
19th Party Congress. Things are going to change when it's over."
     The Party Congress is due to end on Tuesday, Oct. 24. 
     Along with a return to tighter liquidity conditions, traders in the MNI
survey are expecting money to become more expensive as the deleveraging campaign
continues. The PBOC has pushed interest rates in the interbank market higher
this year to make it more costly for financial institutions to borrow cheaper
short-term money and shift it into higher-yielding longer-term investments.
     The benchmark seven-day deposit repo rate, which reflects the cost of
borrowing for banks, has crept up from 2.3% at the beginning of the year,
spiking to over 3.1% before the October public holiday and is currently trading
between 2.8% and 2.9%. Over the same period, the seven-day repo rate, which
reflects the cost of borrowing for all financial institutions and is much more
volatile, has risen from 2.4% and was last trading at around 3.2%, although it
has jumped above 4% several times during the year.
     Almost three quarters of the traders in the MNI survey said they see
seven-day repo rates moving higher over the next two weeks, the highest
percentage since March. For the first time since the December 2016 survey, no
traders said they expect rates to decline.
     "Liquidity is going to get tighter after the congress," said a trader with
a city commercial bank in eastern China. "Rates on seven-day and 14-day repos
are rising, which indicates institutions are starting to hoard capital because
they expect tighter liquidity in the latter part of the month."
     Traders are more optimistic about the economy than they've been since
April, with 13 of the 19 respondents saying economic conditions have improved,
and only one trader saying conditions are worse, the lowest since March. The
improved sentiment helped give a shot in the arm to government bond yields.
     PBOC Governor Zhou Xiaochuan jolted financial markets last week with
comments made in Washington that the country's economy could grow by as much as
7% in the second half of the year, defying expectations for a marginal slowdown
from the 6.9% year-on-year pace seen in the first half of the year. Zhou's
positive outlook raised the specter of higher interest rates and pushed the
yield on 10-year government bonds above 3.7% for the first time since April
2015. The yield on the most-actively traded 10-year CGB jumped as high as
3.7450% on Wednesday, the day before the release of third-quarter GDP data.
     In the event, Zhou was slightly optimistic, with third quarter growth
coming in bang in line with the market consensus for 6.8%. Nevertheless, markets
continue to expect higher interest rates - survey respondents who see 10-year
CGB yields rising have outnumbered those who predict a decline since November
last year.
     "The rising yields on 10-year government bonds indicate that the market is
optimistic about the economic situation," said the Shanghai-based trader with
the small regional bank, who predicted yields could rise to around 4.1%.
     "I am quite positive about the economy - consumption and trade aren't bad,
prices are rising due to supply-side reform, and industrial profits are
increasing," said the trader with a city commercial bank in eastern China.
"Although property and infrastructure investment growth is weaker, that's due to
government policy and is under the control of the government."
     But there are contrarians. "Downward pressure on the economy is still
significant," said the trader with a small bank in eastern China. "The data has
been manipulated, but it's having a big influence on the market. There's a tug
of war going on between market expectations and the economic data and I think
that's going to make the bond market more volatile."
--MNI Beijing Bureau; +86 (10) 8532 5998; email: marissa.wang@marketnews.com
--MNI Beijing Bureau; +44 203-586-2244; email: nerys.avery@marketnews.com
--MNI BEIJING Bureau; +1 202-371-2121; email: john.carter@mni-news.com

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