Asian Markets Mixed After Surprise China Interest Rate Increase
20 October 2011
Chinese investors monitor their stock prices at a security firm in Hefei, east China's Anhui province, 14 Oct. 2010
Chinese borrowers will now have to pay at least 0.25 percentage points more interest on their loans. China's central bank increased the cost of borrowing late Tuesday, ahead of releasing inflation figures for September.
Higher inflation rate
Market analysts expect the inflation rate to be higher than the 3.5 percent recorded in August – already the fastest pace in nearly two years. They think China hopes higher rates will cool price increases.
Jan Lambregts, global head of financial markets research at Rabobank, says the central bank is also trying to slow lending.
"Chinese policy makers are very unhappy about bank lending and they want to curb that more…. It's really a warning shot, to those banks – 'curb your bank lending, we're serious,'" Lambregts said.
Credit boom
For the first nine months of the year, bank lending reached $948 billion – just 19 percent shy of the government's target for the year. The credit boom has sparked a surge in property prices nationwide.
Last week, the central bank asked six major banks to raise the ratio of deposits they hold as reserves, which reduces the amount available for lending.
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