China’s central bank will inject 226 billion yuan ($31.5 billion) of liquidity into the banking system amid headwinds in the broader economy.
Reverse repo operations are a monetary policy tool consisting of borrowing cash, selling government bonds to commercial banks, and returning funds with interest.
Officials employ this measure to fuel inflation, soften liquidity pressures, or maintain control over short-term interest rates. The seven-day reverse repo rate is now China’s key interest rate.
This month, the central bank has conducted three other reverse repo operations: 98.5 billion yuan ($13.6 billion) on July 2, 57.2 billion yuan ($7.9 billion) on July 3, and 75.5 billion yuan ($10.5 billion) on July 9.
The People’s Bank of China has been pursuing a monetary policy strategy of providing a steady flow of liquidity to support financial stability. This comes at a time when the world’s second-largest economy is facing deflation risks and economic uncertainty.
In June, consumer prices fell 0.1 percent following a 0.2 percent drop in May. The headline annual inflation rate came in at 0.1 percent, the first positive reading since January.
Producer prices have also tanked this year, declining at a worse-than-expected rate of 3.6 percent year over year in June.
As for the wider economy, China’s ongoing stimulus efforts appear to be sustaining growth prospects.
The Chinese economy expanded at a better-than-expected pace of 5.4 percent year over year in the first quarter, the strongest annual growth rate in more than a year.
Upcoming figures suggest that economic conditions might have slowed in the April-to-July period amid trade tensions with the United States.
The second-quarter GDP growth rate will be released on July 15, and the consensus estimate suggests a 5.1 percent reading.
Bank lending has been robust.
This comes two months after the People’s Bank of China reduced the reserve requirement ratio—a percentage of deposits that financial institutions are mandated to hold in reserve and not lend out—by 0.5 percentage points, injecting more than $100 billion into the financial markets. Market watchers said that this signaled a more accommodative shift in the institution’s policy stance.
These changes, says ING economist Lynn Song, are aimed at restoring confidence in the marketplace.
In response to evolving domestic and global financial conditions, monetary policymakers have pledged to fasten their policy actions.
A tariff dispute with the United States has roiled China’s economy, with President Donald Trump adopting a stricter stance on Beijing over concerns surrounding the fentanyl crisis and America’s trade deficit.







