
China rolls out a slew of measures to lift economy
China rolls out a slew of measures to lift economy
People's Bank of China governor Pan Gongsheng said funding for factory upgrades and other innovations and to facilitate trading-in of consumer goods will be increased to 800 billion yuan. File photo: RTHK
National Administration of Financial Regulation director Li Yunze said a package of financing policies will soon be forthcoming to help stabilise the property market and support small and micro companies as well as private entities. File photo: RTHK
China Securities and Regulatory Commission chairman Wu Qing said Beijing plans to help facilitate the return of foreign-listed Chinese firms to mainland and Hong Kong stock markets. File photo: RTHK
Beijing announced on Wednesday a whole basket of new measures, including interest rate cuts and extra funding, to prop up the economy as it steps up efforts to offset the impact from sky-high US tariffs.
The measures came shortly after US and mainland officials said US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and chief trade negotiation Jamieson Greer will meet with China's top economic official He Lifeng in Switzerland this weekend for talks, paving the way for a potential de-escalation between the two sides.
Speaking in a press briefing in Beijing, People's Bank of China governor Pan Gongsheng said the central bank will lower the borrowing cost of its seven-day reverse repurchase rate, its benchmark interest rate, by 10 basis points, to 1.4 percent, effective on Thursday.
The central bank, he added, will also reduce the amount of cash that banks must hold in reserve, also known as the reserve requirement ratio (RRR), by 50 basis points from May 15, which will inject a trillion yuan in liquidity into the market.
Other measures include lowering the mortgage rate by 25 basis points, scrapping the RRR for auto financing firms, a new 500 billion yuan relending tool to support service consumption and elderly care, as well as increased funds for factory upgrades and other innovative projects.
"[For example,] relending funds for factory upgrades and other innovations currently involve a quota of 500 billion yuan," said Pan.
"So we will increase this by 300 billion yuan to a total of 800 billion yuan, to support our 'two new' policies of upgrading large-scale equipment and trading-in of consumer goods."
Separately, Li Yunze, director of the National Administration of Financial Regulation (NAFR), said authorities will soon introduce a package of financing policies to help stabilise the property market and support small and micro companies as well as private entities.
Li said there will be "tailor-made services" for business entities that are significantly affected by tariffs and that these will ensure all foreign trade enterprises are able to access financial support and necessary loans with increased capital support.
"Capital replenishment work for large commercial banks is being accelerated...," Li said in explaining about the increased funding work.
"Different regions are also replenishing capital for small and medium-sized financial institutions through multiple channels.
At the same event, China Securities and Regulatory Commission chairman Wu Qing said that despite pressure from US tariffs, markets have stabilised following intervention efforts by the authorities.
Wu also noted that Beijing would continue to support state-owned investment company, Central Huijin, to further stabilise the A-share market, which he said is "currently undervalued" and has room for gains.
He added the country planned to help facilitate the return of foreign-listed Chinese firms to mainland and Hong Kong stock markets.
Separately, Wu singled out US investor Warren Buffett, who is set to retire this year, for mention for his fundamental principles of long-term value investing and rational investing, noting that such principles and efforts to reward investors will not end with the retirement of the investment legend.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


RTHK
3 hours ago
- RTHK
Workers urged to report labour import violations
Workers urged to report labour import violations Chris Sun says workers can call a Labour Department hotline if they suspect they have been laid off illegally. Photo: RTHK Labour minister Chris Sun on Thursday said people who suspect they were laid off by their employer in order to be replaced by workers from outside the city should file official complaints. Sun said he is aware that some people have been making such claims recently, stressing that such moves by employers would be illegal. He added that by law, companies are required to employ two local people for every imported worker they have on their books. Sun said officials will investigate complaints made through the Labour Department's 2150 6363 hotline. The minister said more spot checks will also be conducted, especially in the catering sector. "If officials find and confirm any violation during the checks, we will consider imposing executive sanctions against the company," he told reporters after attending an event. "These include cancelling the labour import quota allocated to the firm, or that for a certain period of time going forward, we will refuse all their import applications." Sun stressed that local workers will always get priority when it comes to jobs. Meanwhile, the minister said around 100 former employees of King Parrot Group have sought help from the Labour Department over HK$9 million in unpaid wages and severance pay. The group, which owned a number of restaurants, informed staff earlier this week that it was ending its operations.


RTHK
4 hours ago
- RTHK
Tech losses lead Hang Seng Index to lower close
Tech losses lead Hang Seng Index to lower close The benchmark Hang Seng Index ended the day down 331.56 points, or 1.36 percent, to close at 24,035.38. File photo: RTHK Stocks in mainland China and Hong Kong ended mostly lower on Thursday, led by declines in the tech sector, as markets struggled to sustain the positive momentum from the Sino-US trade talks that lacked concrete details. In Hong Kong, the benchmark Hang Seng Index ended the day down 331.56 points, or 1.36 percent, to close at 24,035.38. The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index slid 1.53 percent to end at 8,729.96 while the Hang Seng Tech Index slumped 2.20 percent to 5,331.33. Mainland Chinese stocks ended up mixed, with the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index up 0.01 percent at 3,402.66 and the Shenzhen Component Index closed 0.11 percent down at 10,234.33 The ChiNext Index, tracking China's Nasdaq-style board of growth enterprises, gained 0.26 percent to close at 2,067.15. Among major losers, chipmaker SMIC fell 2 percent to a one-week low. Alibaba weakened 3.2 percent and EV maker Xpeng slid 6.7 percent. The CSI Rare Earth Index closed flat after slipping nearly 1 percent in the morning session and continued to hover near its seven-month high. A trade truce between the world's two biggest economies was back on track, US President Donald Trump said, a day after negotiators from Washington and Beijing agreed on a framework to ease bilateral retaliatory tariffs. Under the agreement, Beijing will lift export curbs on rare earth minerals and the United States will restore Chinese students' access to its universities, Trump said on Truth Social. Yet the terms remain subject to final approvals, with details notably absent. The 55 percent tariffs on Chinese imports will also stay, US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said. "We still don't know if what Trump says will actually happen. It's disappointing that the tariffs rates were not dialled down at all and tech curbs on China were not even mentioned," said Jason Chan, senior investment strategist at Bank of East Asia, Hong Kong. The talks left key issues, like chip exports, unaddressed, leaving room for conflicts in the future, and no one knows for how long the current truce will last, he added. Chinese markets have been struggling to recover from trade shocks for the past two months after Trump announced sweeping tariffs on April 2 that threatened the global trade system. The CSI 300 Index has barely eked out any gains since then, while the Hang Seng Index has climbed 3.5 percent, but the two are underperforming the nearly 10 percent bounce in the MSCI World Index . The market is less sensitive to trade talks and investors are shifting focus to economic fundamentals, Wang Zhuo, partner at Zhuozhu Investment, said. "The key for China now is to bolster manufacturers' confidence and break the deflationary trend." (Reuters/Xinhua)


RTHK
8 hours ago
- RTHK
HK 'ready to fully support overseas push by NEV firms'
HK 'ready to fully support overseas push by NEV firms' John Lee says strategic AI and smart-driving companies here can work with NEV firms from the mainland to promote new quality productive forces. Photo: RTHK The chief executive said on Thursday the SAR will strengthen its capital market to fully support the development of new energy vehicle (NEV) companies from the mainland. Speaking at the International Automotive & Supply Chain Expo at AsiaWorld-Expo, John Lee said that in terms of production and consumption, the nation's NEV market is the largest in the world. "Hong Kong's international capital market and world-leading professional services can provide financing and overseas promotional services for the mainland's new energy vehicle firms," he said. "The city can also help foreign companies enter the enormous mainland market." Hong Kong, Lee said, will fully support the nation's work in promoting global cooperation in the industry's supply and manufacturing chains, as well as building an efficient logistics system. The government has been attracting strategic companies, such as in the artificial intelligence and smart driving technology fields, to set up in Hong Kong for two years now, and the chief executive said they can collaborate with NEV firms to promote new quality productive forces. Lee also said the administration will lead the green industries to boost sustainable development. By fostering the development of NEVs, such as subsidising private enterprises to install quick-charging facilities, he said the government is aiming to put in place sufficient charging facilities for 160,000 electric vehicles. The number of EVs at the end of last year was around 110,000.