China leaves benchmark lending rates unchanged as expected in Feb
China has kept benchmark lending rates unchanged, focusing on financial and currency stability amid external trade tensions. January saw a significant increase in new yuan loans, but demand remains sluggish. The central bank hints at adjusting its...

WHY IT'S IMPORTANT
A weakening yuan and narrowing net interest margins at commercial banks limit Beijing's monetary easing scope at a time when China is facing renewed trade tensions with a new Donald Trump administration in the United States.
BY THE NUMBERS
The one-year loan prime rate (LPR) was kept at 3.10%, while the five-year LPR was unchanged at 3.60%.
In a Reuters poll of 30 market participants conducted this week, all of them expected no changes to either of the two rates.
Chinese banks extended 5.13 trillion yuan ($704.35 billion)in new yuan loans in January, more than quadrupling the December figure, beating analysts' forecasts. However, the pace of lending growth compared with a year earlier hit a record low, indicating credit demand remains sluggish amid economic uncertainties.
China's yuan has lost 2.4% against the dollar since Donald Trump's election win in November.
CONTEXT
China's central bank said last week that it would adjust its monetary policy at the appropriate time to support the economy, amid rising external headwinds, particularly led by the threat of an escalating trade war with the United States under President Donald Trump.
Trump has announced a 10% tariff on Chinese imports as part of a broad plan to improve the U.S. trade balance, triggering retaliation from Beijing.
KEY QUOTES
The authorities will likely guide deposit rates moderately lower and accelerate replenishment of bank capital to alleviate net interest margin pressure at commercial banks, said Wang Qing, chief macro analyst at Golden Credit Rating.
"Changes to the pace of interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve or yuan fluctuations in 2025 will not materially affect the implementation of the central bank's appropriately loose monetary policy," Wang said.
($1 = 7.2833 Chinese yuan renminbi)
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