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PBOC’s Policy Flip-Flop Sows Confusion Over Timing of Rate Cuts
PBOC’s Policy Flip-Flop Sows Confusion Over Timing of Rate Cuts · Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) -- At a rare press briefing back in September, China’s central bank chief Pan Gongsheng unveiled a stimulus blitz that spurred optimism for one of the biggest policy shifts in a decade. But since then, market watchers wanting more support have been left scratching their heads.

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The People’s Bank of China hasn’t cut interest rates in nearly half a year despite its most pro-easing stance in 14 years. Officials have repeatedly hinted at lowering the amount of cash banks must hold in reserve but haven’t followed through. And an experiment in government bond-buying experiment has been halted, sharply tightening interbank liquidity.

The policy lull is depriving the economy of stimulus and delaying expectations for monetary easing in 2025. With Beijing’s priorities shifting in favor of the yuan, global banks like Citigroup Inc., Nomura Holdings Inc. and Standard Chartered Plc now see rate cuts in the second quarter instead of the first. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. also warns of a later reduction in banks’ reserve requirement ratio.

“The PBOC under Pan has signaled a lot of policies and it usually follows through on them — but not always,” said Christopher Beddor, deputy China research director at Gavekal Dragonomics in Hong Kong. “The danger is that markets might start to question his signaling in other areas, such as currency policy.”

The lack of monetary policy moves stands out as the government prepares to unveil plans during the annual legislative session in early March to sell more bonds to support an ambitious growth target. This could tighten market liquidity even further, increasing the need for the PBOC to step in with aid.

For investors, any open criticism of the PBOC’s flip-flop risks leading to a backlash from authorities. But the uncertainty has shown up in some notes from analysts, with Standard Chartered saying the recent decisions have sowed “confusion about the policy direction.”

With no clear explanation from Beijing, theories abound for the policy pivot. Economists at TS Lombard link it to Donald Trump’s trade war, suggesting the PBOC is prioritizing yuan stability over rate cuts, effectively making “interest rates hostage to tariffs” and blurring economic and currency objectives.