China central bank to add tool to better manage short-term liquidity

SHANGHAI/BEIJING, June 25 (Reuters) – China’s central bank said it will debut overnight lending next week, offering reverse-repos to banks and brokers as it ​deepens control over what have been volatile short-term interest rates.
The People’s Bank ‌of China plans to inject cash into the banking system on June 29 and 30 – the month-end, when seasonal demand tends to spike – using the newly-created overnight reverse-repos in order to “better meet short-term ​liquidity needs”.
The tool’s debut follows an announcement last week by Governor Pan ​Gongsheng that the bank intended to introduce overnight repos to improve control ⁠over very short-dated rates.
The PBOC did not say if the overnight reverse repos would ​be used regularly but some analysts think the introduction signals that the overnight rate ​is growing in importance as a central bank target.
“This is a key step in China’s interest rate reform,” Guosheng Securities said in a note. The brokerage said the move could lower overnight market ​rates, and “is good for the bond market.”
Bonds rallied in response to Thursday’s news, with ​30-year treasury futures jumping 50 ticks to a 3-week high.
The PBOC had also announced measures last ‌week ⁠to narrow the range of short-term rates in a bid to reduce money market volatility, and Pan said it was studying a tool to support non-banking financial institutions in a crisis.
Ming Ming, chief economist at Citic Securities, said that adding the overnight tool at ​the end of June, ​when banks typically ⁠face seasonal liquidity pressure, reflects the PBOC’s desire to ensure market stability.
But the timing also shows overnight reverse repo is supplementary and may ​not be used on a regular basis, he said.
The PBOC ​said overnight ⁠reverse repos will be conducted through quantity bidding at fixed interest rates, in the same way seven-day counterparts are conducted.
Guosheng Securities expects the PBOC to set the overnight rate at ⁠1.3% in ​bidding, compared with 1.4% for the seven-day rate, ​which is currently the PBOC’s main policy rate in the money market.

Reporting by Samuel Shen in Shanghai, Tom ​Westbrook in Singapore and Beijing newsroom; Editing by Christopher Cushing, Kate Mayberry and Kevin Buckland.

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