New bank loans in China rose less than expected in May, totaling 620 billion yuan
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missing forecasts of 850 billion despite recent rate cuts and a temporary U.S.-China trade truce
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This follows a nine-month low in April
Year-on-year loan growth slowed to a record low of 7.1%, down from 7.2% in April.
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Household loans (mostly mortgages) grew slightly in May (+54bn) after a sharp contraction in April, but corporate loan demand weakened.
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Broad M2 money supply rose 7.9% y/y, also below expectations of 8.1%, and down from April’s 8.0%.
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Total social financing (TSF) growth remained steady at 8.7%, supported by increased government bond issuance.
Analysts cited persistent deflation pressures and elevated real borrowing costs as key factors dampening private credit demand, despite modest central bank easing:
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Reuters cite Capital Economics expecting further rate cuts of up to 40 basis points later this year to support growth.
Earlier:
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at www.forexlive.com.