China’s central bank tweaks liquidity operations


BEIJING: China’s central bank says it will start conducting temporary bond repurchase agreements or reverse repos to make open market operations (OMOs) more efficient and keep banking system liquidity ample.

Market participants and analysts believe the move paves the way for a new interest rate corridor, with the seven-day reverse repo rate serving as a central guide, giving the bank more leeway to manage cash conditions and interest rates amid hot demand for bonds.

That also comes after the central bank’s governor said the seven-day rate “basically fulfils the function” as the main policy rate.

The temporary repos and reverse repos will be loans with overnight tenors and will be conducted depending on market conditions.

The interest rates of the temporary and reverse repos will be 20 basis points below and 50 basis points above the seven-day reverse repurchase operations, or 1.6% and 2.3%, respectively.

“From now on, the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) will conduct temporary repos or temporary reverse repo operations depending on conditions,” the central bank said in an online statement yesterday.

Reverse repo operations should allow the central bank to inject cash into the banking system, whereas the repos could withdraw funds.

“If OMO repos were to be conducted, then the OMO repo rate could serve as the floor as this would be the rate the PBoC pays to absorb excess liquidity from the market,” said Frances Cheung, rates strategist at OCBC Bank.

“Being conducted regularly, daily OMOs can be effective in guiding market interest rates within a range,” she said.

PBoC governor Pan Gongsheng said last month the seven-day reverse repo rate fulfilled the function as the main policy rate, noting the cost of monetary policy instruments with other tenors diminished their roles as policy rates.

“For market participants, this temporary repo or reverse repo rate is punitive in nature, and it is not ruled out that it will become a formal policy tool in the future,” said Xing Zhaopeng, senior China strategist at ANZ.

Xing expects 1.6% to 2.3% could become the range of future interest rate corridor.

“The central bank’s move has added an intraday liquidity management tool, which helps stabilise market liquidity,” said Ming Ming, chief economist at Citic Securities.

“The PBoC will not conduct overnight reverse repos too frequently, and may operate in the middle, end of the month, or end of the quarter.” — Reuters

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PBOC , interest rate , repo

   

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