Off the wire
Fiji, New Zealand to strengthen defense ties  • Interview: China committed to reforms at home, to shine abroad: Raffarin  • Tokyo stocks edge down in morning as yen climbs, oil prices drop  • 34 countries reports Zika virus: WHO official  • Commentary: Imbalance of U.S. rebalancing toward Asia-Pacific  • Aussie researchers say fast food lunch will take hours to burn off  • Aussie researchers suggest lead leads to life of crime  • Xinhua China news advisory -- Feb. 17  • One in ten NZ farmers under financial pressure with depressed dairy prices  • China Hushen 300 index futures open mixed Wednesday  
You are here:   Home

Record credit demand not long-term trend: UBS

Xinhua, February 17, 2016 Adjust font size:

Record new yuan loans in January were a result of an unusual combination of factors, and the trend of Chinese taking on more debt is unlikely to last, financial services company UBS has predicted.

January's new yuan-denominated lending jumped 71 percent year on year to 2.51 trillion yuan (385 billion U.S. dollars).

UBS said in a report that this was down to credit demand ahead of the Chinese Lunar New Year, rising yuan borrowing to offset maturing or repaid foreign exchange liabilities, and pent-up demand from banks for unusually loose new annual bank loan quotas.

The report also pointed to the central bank's continued guidance on "prudent credit expansion" as another reason the trend will not last.

Meanwhile, the data proved the central bank was successful in ensuring sufficient liquidity at home despite pressure from yuan depreciation and capital outflows, UBS said.

The company does not expect significant yuan depreciation and it forecasted the country's foreign exchange reserves would stay above 2.8 trillion U.S. dollars this year.

Two more additional benchmark interest rate cuts and multiple reserve requirement ratio cuts this year will counter the economic slowdown as well as deflationary pressures, UBS said. Endi