Well! I'm sure many of you had a huge scare on Wednesday as markets tanked that night, wondering whether will it be the start of the correction? DOW rose again yesterday night as banks, pharmas rose. Banks defended their reason to give out big bonuses to their employees last night. Tonight will be US jobs data, so the market make or break will depend on tonight and Fri's Job report.
Some extra news report*
China Accelerated Stimulus Exit Signals Higher Rates
By Bloomberg News
Jan. 13 (Bloomberg) -- An unexpected shift by China’s
central bank to restrain lending may foreshadow higher interest
rates and a relaxation in the nation’s currency peg against the
dollar.
The People’s Bank of China yesterday raised the proportion
of deposits that banks must set aside as reserves by 50 basis
points starting Jan. 18. Economists hadn’t anticipated the move
until at least April, the median of 11 forecasts in a Bloomberg
News survey showed last week.
Policy makers may follow up by raising their benchmark rate
in coming months, rather than waiting until the second half of
the year as most economists in the survey had projected. By
moving ahead of the Federal Reserve, which plans to keep rates
near zero for an “extended” period, pressure will rise to
allow the yuan to appreciate for the first time since mid-2008.
“Higher benchmark lending rates and a stronger yuan will
also need to be part of the package,” Brian Jackson, senior
emerging markets strategist at RBC Capital Markets in Hong Kong,
said after yesterday’s decision. “Early action now” is “more
likely to prevent the need for very sharp tightening further
down the road,” he said.
Impact on Stocks
Stocks fell after the announcement late yesterday, with the
MSCI Asia Pacific Index losing 0.4 percent to 125.94 as of 8:37
a.m. in Hong Kong. Japan’s 225 Stock Average dropped 0.3 percent,
and the Standard & Poor’s 500 Stock Index closed down 0.9
percent in New York.
“Authorities had reason for concern because the banks in
China clearly had not gotten the message to clamp down on
lending,” Eswar Prasad, a senior fellow at the Brookings
Institution in Washington, said in an interview on Bloomberg
television from Hong Kong.
Banks lent about 100 billion yuan ($14.6 billion) each day
last week, the official China Securities Journal reported this
week. That compares with 294.8 billion yuan for all of November.
Along with the reserve ratio, the PBOC has increased rates
at bill auctions in the past week. The bank guided three-month
bill yields higher for the first time in 19 weeks a Jan. 7
auction and followed with a similar step at a sale of one-year
bills yesterday. The central bank has kept the benchmark one-
year lending rate unchanged at 5.31 percent since late 2008.
‘Pre-empt’ Bubbles
“This series of moves by the central bank provides a clear
sign that policy makers are following through on their pledge to
guide credit in order to pre-empt rising inflation and avoid
asset price bubbles,” said Jing Ulrich, chairwoman of China
equities and commodities at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in Hong Kong.
Along with further reserve-ratio increases and lifting the
benchmark rate, officials may let the yuan climb by 3 percent to
5 percent this year, Zhu Jianfang, chief economist at Citic
Securities Co. said in an e-mailed note. Jackson at RBC
forecasts the currency will strengthen about 5 percent, to 6.5
per dollar.
Authorities have kept the yuan at about 6.83 per dollar
since July 2008 after letting it appreciate 21 percent over
three years. Bets that the exchange rate will strengthen have
contributed to inflows of money from abroad -- China’s foreign
exchange reserves, the world’s largest, surpassed $2 trillion
last year.
‘Hot Money’
Part of that currency build-up may be speculative capital
or “hot money,” Fan Gang, the academic member of the central
bank’s monetary policy committee, said on Dec. 28. Such inflows
“will cause asset bubbles,” he said. Zhang Xiaoqiang, deputy
head of the National Development and Reform Commission, said on
Jan. 5 that the nation may see “huge” inflows of hot money as
foreign investors step up bets on yuan gains.
The existing reserve-ratio level for big banks is 15.5
percent, and 13.5 percent for smaller banks. China began
reducing banks’ reserve requirements in September 2008 from a
high of 17.5 percent as the global financial crisis deepened,
part of a monetary loosening that included the biggest single
interest-rate cut since the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis.
In November 2008, the central bank named Industrial &
Commercial Bank of China Ltd., Agricultural Bank of China, Bank
of China Ltd., China Construction Bank Corp. and Bank of
Communication Co. as among those classed as bigger lenders for
reserve requirements.
Wen’s Pledge
The decision indicates increasing concern in Premier Wen
Jiabao’s government that a continuation of the record 9.21
trillion yuan of loans in the first 11 months of 2009 will
create a bubble in property and stock prices. Wen pledged Dec.
27 to curb excessive property-price gains in some parts of China
after the biggest nationwide increase in 16 months in November.
China’s large amount of maturing bills, along with its
stimulus measures, mean it has more liquidity than other nations,
a People’s Bank of China official said on condition of anonymity
yesterday. Policy makers are stepping up measures to address
financial risks, the official said.
Yesterday’s decision will help remove about 300 billion
yuan of liquidity, according to estimates by Xing Ziqiang, an
economist in Beijing at China International Capital Corp., the
top-ranked China local brokerage by Asiamoney magazine last year.
It will help ease the risk of a flood of cash into the economy
when about 1 trillion yuan of PBOC bills mature from mid-January
to mid-February, Xing said.
Inflation Outlook
Inflation risks are rising in China as the economy picks up
speed. Exports rose for the first time in 14 months in December,
trade data showed on Jan. 10. A government report this month is
forecast to show gross domestic product increased 10.5 percent
in the fourth quarter from a year before, the most since
January-to-March 2008, a Bloomberg News survey indicates.
Economists are ratcheting up 2010 inflation forecasts for
China. Citic Securities Co., the nation’s biggest listed
brokerage, raised its estimate to 3.2 percent from 2.6 percent
in a report dated yesterday. Bank of America Merrill Lynch last
week increased its forecast to 3.1 percent from 2.5 percent.
Yesterday’s announcement “sends a pretty strong signal
that a more substantive tightening is probably coming,” said
Mark Williams, senior China economist at Capital Economics Ltd.
in London, who worked at the U.K. Treasury as an adviser on
China from 2005-07. “It warns banks and it warns firms that
they’re going to face higher interest rates down the road.”
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