Analysis: PBOC’s Liquidity Pause Points to Cash Glut, Not Policy Tightening
Listen to the full version

The People’s Bank of China has halted daily short-term liquidity injections for two straight sessions, a technical move analysts say reflects ample cash in the banking system rather than a shift toward monetary tightening.
The central bank conducted no seven-day reverse repurchase operations on Wednesday and Thursday, after cutting the size of such operations to 11 billion yuan ($1.6 billion) on Monday and just 200 million yuan on Tuesday. As earlier operations matured, the reductions resulted in net daily liquidity withdrawals of 247 billion yuan, 248.8 billion yuan, 177.6 billion yuan and 101.3 billion yuan over the four trading days.
Unlock exclusive discounts with a Caixin group subscription — ideal for teams and organizations.
Save an extra $50. Introductory offer for new readers. Subscribe now.
- DIGEST HUB
- PBOC halted daily short-term liquidity injections for two consecutive sessions, causing net withdrawals of up to 248.8 billion yuan in one day.
- Market rates like DR007 fell to 1.3%, below the 1.4% policy rate, indicating ample bank liquidity from weak credit demand and slower bond issuance.
- Longer-tenor tools also drained 300 billion yuan net in June, but analysts say this aims to smooth fluctuations, not signal monetary tightening.
- Orient Golden Credit Rating
- According to the article, Orient Golden Credit Rating noted that commercial banks' borrowing appeal from the central bank weakened as market funding costs fell, due to moderate government bond issuance and sluggish credit growth. It also stated that liquidity withdrawals aim to smooth market fluctuations, not signal a policy pivot.
- MOST POPULAR





