While the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) stressed that the reverse repo rate (RRR) cut did not imply a change in its monetary policy stance, the central bank has previously avoided altering benchmark rates or the RRR due to their strong signalling effect. Therefore, this RRR rate should, on face value, be considered a precautionary move given recent weaker economic data, rising trade tensions and a slowdown in inflation. Meanwhile the repo and medium-term lending facility (MLF) rate hikes continue to signal the central bank’s desire to forestall capital outflows and encourage continued deleveraging.
How will this impact treasury investors?
Market driven bond and Shibor yields (Figure 1) all moved lower following the RRR announcement and yield curves have also steepened as short dated yields have declined faster than longer dated yields. Meanwhile repo rates remained relatively high due to tight wholesale funding costs and longer maturity bond markets and equity markets both rallied on the dovish signal by the central bank.
For treasury investors the initial effect of the PBoC’s actions will be limited, however the secondary implications could be substantial. While elevated repo rates may cushion the short term impact, it is likely that yields on fixed income investments will decline further. A further complication is the reported easing of informal interest rate policy guidance by commercial banks that could lead to higher deposit and lending rates. Nevertheless, high quality renminbi (RMB) money market funds should continue to offer attractive yields by extending duration, maintaining high cash balances by investing in repo and ensuring good security by diversification.
Outlook
This action by the PBoC is an important additional step on the path towards a market based monetary policy regime. Historically the high RRR rate made commercial banks insensitive to changes in policy rates; however as the RRR is gradually reduced to a more suitable level for its role as a safety net rather than a monetary policy tool, the ability of the PBoC to adopt the 7-day repo rate as its operational target becomes more achievable.
Finally, with economic growth slowing and future regulatory changes expected to tighten monetary conditions, it is likely the PBoC will continue to use targeted policy and quasi-policy rates to adjust the quantity and cost of liquidity to achieve its multiple, and, sometimes conflicting, goals.
The article was first published by Treasury Today in May 2018.