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China to cut reserve requirements for banks to boost economy
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Sept 6, 2019

China's central bank announced Friday it was cutting the reserve requirements for banks, freeing up about $126 billion to boost lending and bolster the slowing economy.

The People's Bank of China (PBoC) will cut the reserve requirement ratio (RRR) on September 16 by 50 basis points, it said in a statement, reducing the amount of cash banks must hold.

State news agency Xinhua described the decision as "the latest effort to bolster the economy", while the PBoC said it had cut the requirement "to support the development of real economy".

Lowering the RRR for banks frees up more money for lending to small businesses, and the latest cut follows a drop in May this year.

The move will release 900 billion yuan ($126 billion) in liquidity, the PBoC said.

China's State Council signalled that the move was being considered earlier this week, after a meeting Wednesday discussed policy tools including an increase in the use of local government bonds to finance infrastructure projects.

Ting Lu, chief China economist at Nomura investment bank, said in a note that an RRR cut is "a signal that Beijing is becoming increasingly worried about the worsening slowdown" and wants to stabilise growth.

China's economic growth has been slowing in recent years, and has been hit by the bruising trade war with the United States.

The reserve cut came a day after China confirmed it would resume trade talks in Washington in early October, raising hopes that fresh negotiations could help ease tensions between the world's two biggest economies.

Both sides imposed fresh tariffs on goods worth hundreds of billions of dollars on September 1.

rox/prw/mtp/kaf

BANK OF CHINA

NOMURA HOLDINGS


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Hong Kong stocks surge after extradition bill withdrawal reports
Hong Kong (AFP) Sept 4, 2019
Hong Kong's stock market soared Wednesday after local media reported that the city's embattled leader is planning to fully withdraw a loathed extradition bill, one of the main demands of pro-democracy protesters. The Hang Seng index leapt more than three percent in afternoon trade after the South China Morning Post and HK01 both published reports that the city's pro-Beijing chief executive Carrie Lam was planning to shelve the bill. The semi-autonomous city has been battered by three months of h ... read more

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