The galloping expansion of China's bank loans showed signs of being reined in
during September, with 120 billion yuan (15 billion U.S. dollar) less credit
issued year on year, indicating the government's macro control efforts are
taking effect, the central bank released October 13.
The outstanding
loans granted by China's banks reached 22.1 trillion yuan by the end of last
month, a 15.23 percent increase year on year, but 0.9 percentage points lower
than a month earlier, according to the latest report from the central
bank.
The Money supply or M2 increased 16.83 percent to 33.19 trillion
yuan, but the increase was also 1.11 percentage points lower than in
August.
The M2, which is a measure of demand of the whole of society and
an inflation indicator, posted a growth rate that was 1.09 percentage points
lower than a year earlier.
It temporarily removed concerns from the
market that another interest rate hike may be needed if credit continued to
surge in September despite the tightening efforts.
Galloping lending,
along with tightening land supply, has long been blamed for China's sizzling
fixed assets investment, which is likely to overheat the economy.
The
government has brought down a number of measures including rising interest
rates, lifting the central bank's capital requirement of reserve ratios, to curb
the lending from rocketing.
New bank loans in the first nine months this
year totaled 2.76 trillion yuan, overshooting the 2.5 trillion yuan target for
the whole year set by the central bank at the beginning of the
year.
Zhang Lisheng, a senior official with the central bank, warned
earlier this week of a possible rebound in lending.
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