China Credit Seen Weak After Rare Lending Contraction
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China’s credit growth is expected to remain weak in May after a rare contraction in new lending the previous month, as subdued household borrowing and weak investment demand continue to weigh on financing.
A Caixin survey of 12 institutions showed economists’ average forecast for new yuan loans at about 504 billion yuan ($74 billion), down nearly 1.2 trillion yuan from a year earlier.
April lending contracted, driven by weak household credit, while corporate borrowing was largely supported by bill financing.
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- New yuan loans forecast at 504 billion yuan in May, down nearly 1.2 trillion yuan year-on-year.
- Weak household borrowing and soft corporate investment keep credit demand subdued, with reliance on bill financing.
- Total social financing expected to slow to 1.81 trillion yuan; M2 money supply steady at 8.6%.
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