PBOC leaves loan prime rates unchanged, as expected.
The one-year LPR serves as the primary benchmark for most lending in China, particularly corporate loans, short-term business financing, and some consumer credit. It effectively acts as the core pricing reference for credit in the real economy and is the key rate to watch when policymakers aim to support growth.
By contrast, the five-year LPR is mainly used as the benchmark for longer-term borrowing, especially residential mortgages. It plays a crucial role in the property sector, with adjustments aimed at supporting housing demand and stabilising real estate markets.
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China’s Loan Prime Rate (LPR) has traditionally served as the country’s main benchmark for lending, introduced in its current framework in August 2019 as part of broader rate liberalisation efforts. It is set each month based on quotes from a panel of commercial banks and is designed to reflect borrowing costs in the real economy, with the one-year LPR guiding corporate lending and the five-year LPR acting as the reference point for mortgages.
In recent years, however, the LPR has become less central within the People’s Bank of China’s policy framework, as the central bank has shifted toward a more market-driven approach anchored in short-term interest rates.
At the heart of this shift is the growing importance of the 7-day reverse repo rate, which is used in daily open market operations and directly shapes liquidity conditions in the interbank market. It now effectively sits at the core of China’s interest rate corridor.
This transition was clearly signalled in mid-2024, when PBOC Governor Pan Gongsheng indicated that the 7-day reverse repo rate would increasingly serve as the main policy rate, with tools such as the LPR and the medium-term lending facility playing more supporting roles.
The change reflects a push to improve policy transmission. The LPR, which is derived from bank submissions and influenced by earlier benchmarks like the MLF, operates more indirectly. By contrast, the 7-day reverse repo rate can be adjusted more frequently and with greater precision, giving policymakers tighter control over funding conditions. As a result, the LPR is now better seen as a transmission mechanism, while markets look primarily to short-term rates to assess the stance of Chinese monetary policy.
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.