Summary:
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PBoC signals rate cuts and RRR reductions in 2026
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Monetary policy to remain “appropriately loose”
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Focus on boosting demand and stabilising growth
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December LPR left unchanged for seventh straight month
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Yuan stability remains a key policy constraint
China’s central bank has reinforced expectations for easier monetary policy in 2026, signalling that both interest-rate cuts and reductions in banks’ reserve requirements remain firmly on the table as policymakers seek to stabilise growth and maintain ample liquidity.
In a statement released after a 2026 work meeting, the People’s Bank of China said it will pursue an “appropriately loose” monetary stance this year, emphasising a more proactive use of policy tools to support domestic demand while guarding against financial risks. The bank said it will step up counter-cyclical and cross-cyclical adjustments, improve credit transmission and support a solid start to China’s new five-year economic plan.
The PBoC said it will make “flexible and efficient” use of multiple instruments, including reserve requirement ratio (RRR) cuts and interest-rate reductions, to ensure liquidity remains ample and overall financing conditions stay relatively accommodative. It also pledged to guide reasonable growth in total credit and promote a more balanced pace of loan issuance across the economy.
The message largely echoed guidance from top Chinese leaders at a key policy meeting in December, where officials signalled stronger macro support would be required to underpin growth amid weak domestic demand, ongoing property sector stress and subdued private investment sentiment.
Despite the dovish forward guidance, the central bank has so far remained cautious in its near-term actions. In December, it left benchmark Loan Prime Rate settings unchanged for a seventh consecutive month, in line with market expectations, reflecting a preference to preserve policy space and avoid excessive pressure on bank margins and the currency.
The PBoC also reiterated its commitment to keeping the yuan “basically stable at a reasonable and balanced level,” signalling continued sensitivity to capital flows and exchange-rate volatility even as policy easing progresses.
For markets, the guidance reinforces expectations that China will lean more heavily on monetary support in 2026, with further easing likely to be deployed gradually as growth and inflation dynamics evolve
