Chinese Cash Injection Fails To Soothe Markets
A rise in China's interbank interest rates on Friday showed that markets remain uneasy despite a cash injection by China's central bank, said dealers.
The rates, which serve as the funding costs for pricing and investment, have been trending higher in recent weeks as the People's Bank of China (PBoC) had recently refrained from injecting further liquidity before Thursday's move.
On Friday the seven-day repurchase rate -- a benchmark for interbank borrowing costs -- rose to 7.75 percent from Thursday's close at 7.06 percent, said Dow Jones Newswires.
That came despite the People's Bank of China (PBoC) announcing before market close that it had "appropriately injected" an unspecified amount of cash into the market.
The measure followed a spike in the seven-day rate to 9.8 percent earlier in the day, the highest since a cash crunch in June that unnerved global markets.
Before Thursday's intervention, the central bank had for the past two weeks suspended a routine move to release liquidity -- owing to fears about a growth of bad debt that could weigh on the economy.
But that sent jitters across the market, with big banks scrambling to increase their cash reserves as they struggled to meet regulatory requirements on capital by year's end, sending up interest rates that lenders charge to lend to each other, analysts said.
This prompted the central bank to step in on Thursday by conducting short-term liquidity operations (SLOs) to inject cash.
"If necessary... (authorities) will continue to provide liquidity support to qualified financial institutions via SLO," it said on its account on Sina Weibo, a Chinese equivalent of Twitter.
Analysts said the move showed that the central bank intended to soothe market fears about a recurrence of the liquidity crunch in June, which sparked worries over China's slowing economic growth as lenders cut loans to companies.
"The PBoC learned the lesson in June and it will surely avoid playing with fire again," Lu Ting and Zhi Xiaojia, Bank of America Merrill Lynch's economists in Hong Kong, said.
ANZ economists Liu Ligang and Zhou Hao called for further measures to lower the market interest rate and restore confidence.
"We believe the central bank's intervention is necessary and timely," they said.