China surges on effects of stimulus package
Jane Macartney in Beijing
China’s main stock index extended recent gains, closing up 3.23 per cent today at a five-month high amid optimism that a stimulus package was taking effect and could be expanded to the property sector.
The Shanghai Composite Index rose in late afternoon trade to 2,370.79 points, bringing its increase so far this year to 27 per cent.
Rumours that property could soon be another recipient of the huge stimulus packages already announced for several industrial sectors was a significant factor.
Hopes are rising that an economic recovery could take hold within the next few months after a steep surge in January bank lending.
New loans more than doubled in January as banks heeded a government call to extend more credit to support hard-hit sectors of the economy.
Banks extended a whopping 1.62 trillion yuan (£160 billion) in new loans in January, almost a third as much as they lent in all of 2008, the People's Bank of China said.
The month's total was up sharply from 771.8 billion yuan in December and 181.9 billion as recently as October.
Ting Lu, an economist at Merrill Lynch in Hong Kong, said that the precise type of loan was unimportant.
What was crucial for the economy was that money was flowing from banks to companies and households.
“From the macro perspective, it's very expansionary," he said. "China is the first economy to see real credit expansion at this point in time, during this trough of the global slowdown. That differentiates China from other economies."
Jane Macartney in Beijing
China’s main stock index extended recent gains, closing up 3.23 per cent today at a five-month high amid optimism that a stimulus package was taking effect and could be expanded to the property sector.
The Shanghai Composite Index rose in late afternoon trade to 2,370.79 points, bringing its increase so far this year to 27 per cent.
Rumours that property could soon be another recipient of the huge stimulus packages already announced for several industrial sectors was a significant factor.
Hopes are rising that an economic recovery could take hold within the next few months after a steep surge in January bank lending.
New loans more than doubled in January as banks heeded a government call to extend more credit to support hard-hit sectors of the economy.
Banks extended a whopping 1.62 trillion yuan (£160 billion) in new loans in January, almost a third as much as they lent in all of 2008, the People's Bank of China said.
The month's total was up sharply from 771.8 billion yuan in December and 181.9 billion as recently as October.
Ting Lu, an economist at Merrill Lynch in Hong Kong, said that the precise type of loan was unimportant.
What was crucial for the economy was that money was flowing from banks to companies and households.
“From the macro perspective, it's very expansionary," he said. "China is the first economy to see real credit expansion at this point in time, during this trough of the global slowdown. That differentiates China from other economies."
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