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China Tells Banks not to re-Discount Bills below 0.5%

July 14 (Reuters) - Chinese regulators have issued guidance to some banks barring them from conducting bill re-discount ​operations at rates below 0.5%, sources said on ‌Tuesday, as regulators move to rein in aggressive bill buying amid weak loan demand.

The guidance came after bill re-discount rates plunged ​in recent months as banks — struggling to find ​willing borrowers in a sluggish economy — turned to the ⁠bill market to meet lending quotas and park ​excess liquidity. Traders have said rates as low as 0.01% ​were not uncommon at month-end.

One of the sources said the tighter oversight was triggered by bill rates falling too fast and too ​low when banks rushed to buy bills in bulk, ​undermining regulators' efforts to guide market expectations.

Another source said regulators may ‌be ⁠concerned that sharp swings in bill rates were being used by the market to speculate on the state of credit growth.

All sources declined to be named as they ​were not authorised ​to speak ⁠to media.

The Shanghai Commercial Paper Exchange did not immediately respond to a request for ​comment.

Reuters reported last month that China's central bank ​instructed some ⁠commercial banks to increase their lending, a sign that demand for credit remains weak.

China's new bank lending rose less than ⁠expected ​in May after contracting the previous ​month, as a prolonged property downturn continued to weigh on household borrowing.

Reporting ​by Reuters staff; Editing by Christian Schmollinger and Kevin Buckland

Source: Reuters


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