China Stimulus Hopes Rise as PBOC Cuts Rate, Plans Briefing

(Bloomberg) -- China announced plans for a rare briefing on the economy by three top financial regulators just as it cut one of its short-term policy rates, fueling speculation officials are preparing to ramp up efforts to revive growth.

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Authorities announced Monday that central bank governor Pan Gongsheng will hold a press conference tomorrow on financial support for economic development, alongside two other officials. Minutes later, the People’s Bank of China lowered the 14-day reverse repurchase rate, catching up with reductions initiated in July.

Taken together the moves bolster expectations for the PBOC to lower rates, after the US Federal Reserve finally started cutting last week easing pressure on China’s need to defend its currency. A slew of disappointing data in August raised concerns that President Xi Jinping’s government could miss its annual growth target of around 5% without unleashing more support.

Traders appeared to be pricing in more stimulus, with the yield on China’s 10-year government bonds falling to a fresh low of 2.03% in the Monday morning session. The benchmark CSI 300 Index for onshore stocks marked their fourth straight day of increases, the longest streak in two months.

“I do expect the PBOC to cut the 7-day reverse repo rate as well as the reserve requirement ratio in the coming months,” said Zhiwei Zhang, president and chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management. The briefing will give regulators a chance to “shed light on their policy stance,” he added.

That event kicks off at 9 a.m. — 20 minutes before the PBOC’s daily announcement on its short-term policy loans and their costs, in contrast to more typical 10 a.m. start times.

Pan used a similar briefing in January to announce a cut to the amount of money banks must hold in reserve — the RRR — two weeks ahead of time, as authorities tried to halt a $6 trillion stock-market rout. The governor has displayed a more transparent approach to policy as he tries to boost confidence.

The central bank chief vowed to “enhance the intensity of monetary policy adjustment,” at an event in Macau on Monday, according to a statement posted on the PBOC’s website. The authority recently signaled it was preparing additional policies.

While the Fed’s bigger-than-expected half-percentage point slash has given central banks across Asia more room to move, not all are immediately following suit. Indonesia’s central bank unexpectedly reduced its main rate last week, but the Bank of Australia is set to hold on Tuesday, echoing last week’s decision by Japan’s monetary authority which is on a hiking path.