China c.bank to buy bank loans to spur lending to small firms worth 1 trln yuan

Reuters

Published Jun 01, 2020 07:12AM ET

Updated Jun 01, 2020 10:05AM ET

BEIJING (Reuters) - China's central bank is to start buying bank loans made by local lenders to small firms this week to try to prod banks to lend as much as 1 trillion yuan ($140.18 billion) to small businesses amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Purchases of the loans, on a quarterly basis, from banks that qualify, such as city commercial banks, rural commercial banks, rural cooperatives and private banks, would hit 400 billion yuan under a special relending quota, the People's Bank of China (OTC:BACHY) (PBOC) said on its website.

The qualifying banks need to buy back the loans after a year and the PBOC would not bear the credit risks if the loans go sour, it added.

It expects the move to help spur new bank loans to small businesses worth about 1 trillion yuan.

The PBOC has long complained about the logjams in its monetary policy transmission mechanism that often sees funds flowing to the property and stock markets.

In a separate statement, the PBOC asked banks to shift their business focus from lending to property firms and local government financing vehicles that fund infrastructure projects to small businesses.

China's economy shrank 6.8% in the first quarter from a year earlier, the first contraction since quarterly records began. Analysts believe it will be months before broader activity returns to pre-crisis levels, even if a fresh wave of infections can be avoided.

In order to help banks extend loan payments for small firms, the PBOC also announced that it would provide 40 billion yuan in relending funds and conduct interest rate swaps with local banks through a special purpose vehicle (SPV).

The loan extension supporting tool would help banks extend loan principal for about 3.7 trillion yuan, it added.

Premier Li Keqiang said in his work report last month that the government is extending loan payments for small and micro-sized business until the end of March next year.