Finance

China finance ministry voices support for central bank bond trading

China’s finance ministry has said it is in favor of the central bank resuming trading Treasury bonds, a move that would see the monetary authority dust off a rarely used tool in its policy kit.

China’s finance ministry has said it is in favor of the central bank resuming trading Treasury bonds, a move that would see the monetary authority dust off a rarely used tool in its policy kit.

Officials at the ministry said that they would support the People’s Bank of China gradually restarting to trade Treasury bonds in open-market operations as they look to better coordinate the country’s fiscal and monetary policies.

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Officials at the ministry said that they would support the People’s Bank of China gradually restarting to trade Treasury bonds in open-market operations as they look to better coordinate the country’s fiscal and monetary policies.

The remarks, published in the state-run People’s Daily on Tuesday, come after the publication of a months-old speech by President Xi Jinping sparked speculation about whether the central bank would resort to the measure to help boost liquidity in the still-fragile economy.

China’s central bank officials haven’t made any treasury bond trades since October last year and have mostly refrained from making bond-related comments recently.

Last week, the central bank cautioned against large-scale monetary easing after recent data pointed to a slowdown in bank lending. It reiterated a wary stance on injecting big amounts of liquidity into the economy, saying it isn’t a case of “the more, the better.” There was no specific mention of Treasury bonds.

For many economists, it seems unlikely that China’s central bank will launch U.S.-style quantitative easing, in which a central bank loads up on government bonds and other assets to push down yields. It still has room to ease monetary policy via more traditional means, and also needs to take into account tepid borrowing demand, narrowing profit margins at banks, a weak currency and the uncertain timeline of rate cuts by the Federal Reserve, economists say.

Earlier this month, PBOC-affiliated newspaper Financial News said the bank may revisit trading Treasury bonds to better manage liquidity, but an unnamed expert interviewed by the newspaper stressed that if this happens, it would be fundamentally different from the big-scale bond buying done by central banks in Europe and the U.S.

The ministry officials said in Tuesday’s article that they will look to increase the variety and scale of government bond issuances, pledging to better leverage the role of the government bond yield curve as a pricing benchmark, and improve the efficiency of capital allocation.

China’s finance ministry and central bank have a history of clashing over how to tackle the country’s economic issues. Recently, authorities have been stressing the need to improve fiscal and monetary policy coordination.

Write to Singapore Editors at singaporeeditors@dowjones.com

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