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China Expected to Keep Benchmark Lending Rates Steady after Strong GDP Data

SHANGHAI, April 17 (Reuters) - China is expected to leave benchmark lending rates unchanged for an 11th consecutive month in April, a Reuters survey showed, as robust ​first-quarter growth and a pick-up in inflation have weakened the ‌case for additional monetary stimulus.

This week, China's economy logged 5.0% growth, picking up from 4.5% in the previous quarter, and at the top of its full-year target range.

Even before ​the GDP figures were released, it was evident that the world's ​No. 2 economy was weathering the Iran war better than ⁠others, prompting major investment banks to walk back calls for rate cuts. ​They now expect China to keep official interest rates steady this year.

The loan ​prime rate (LPR), normally charged to banks' best clients, is calculated each month after 20 designated commercial banks submit proposed rates to the People's Bank of China (PBOC).

In a Reuters survey ​of 20 market participants this week, all respondents predicted that at the ​next review on Monday, the one-year and five-year LPRs would remain steady at 3.00% ‌and ⁠3.50% respectively.

In addition to the upbeat GDP figures, China's factory-gate prices in March turned positive for the first time in more than three years, pointing to rising import cost pressures linked to the Middle East crisis.

"Stronger-than-expected first-quarter GDP ​data, combined with the ​recent reflationary trends, ⁠may keep the PBOC on hold until conditions warrant monetary policy support," Lynn Song, ING's chief economist for ​Greater China, said in a note.

Raymond Yeung, chief economist ​for Greater ⁠China at ANZ, noted that keeping rates steady would be "consistent with the PBOC's preference to manage conditions via structural tools rather than rate cuts while growth ⁠remains ​near target."

China's central bank has said it will ​maintain an "appropriately loose" monetary stance this year, deploying tools including cuts to reserve requirements and ​interest rates to keep liquidity ample.

Reporting by Shanghai Newsroom; Editing by Edwina Gibbs

Source: Reuters


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