CHINA / National

    China hikes rates in a step to slow racing economy
    (AP)
    Updated: 2006-04-28 09:08

    China's central bank raised interest rates Friday in the government's strongest move yet to cool the economy verging on overheating. The news sent resource stocks, oil and commodity prices lower.

    The People's Bank of China announced Thursday it would raise the minimum rate banks charge on one-year loans in the local currency, the yuan, by 27 basis points to 5.85 percent.

    The increase, taking effect Friday, was the first since October 2004, when the central bank raised the lending rate by the same amount.

    Oil prices, which surged in recent months in part on growing demand from China, fell and shares of mining companies tumbled as traders bet that the growing demand for copper, steel and other commodities fueled by China's rapid expansion could slow.

    The Chinese economy expanded by 10.2 percent in the first quarter from a year earlier, aided in part by hefty lending by banks. That raised fears of inflation and that already debt-laden banks could end up saddled with more bad loans.

    Much of the bank lending is pouring into factories, buildings and other fixed assets. While the central bank rate increase is a broad move intended to discourage lending in general, the government has also taken more targeted measures in sectors where growth appears to be outstripping demand.

    The move was not entirely unexpected as speculation that Chinese authorities would take steps to slow the economy by curbing lending had depressed Hong Kong's stock market several days over the last week or so.

    The rate increase triggered a modest reaction in the currency market, with the dollar dropping as low as 114.22 yen as traders speculated the move had implications for China's currency policy.

    But as traders concluded that was unlikely, the dollar recovered to 114.85 yen.

    "The market realized that the Chinese interest rate move doesn't immediately mean there are direct implications for the exchange rate regime," said Jeremy Stretch, currency strategist at Rabobank in London. "It's domestic economic fundamentals warranting a moderate tightening of monetary policy."

    China is under international pressure, particularly from the U.S., to allow the yuan to strengthen at a more rapid pace than the government so far has allowed. U.S. manufacturers claim the yuan is undervalued, giving Chinese exporters an unfair advantage.

    Chinese authorities have already imposed investment controls on the aluminum, ferrous alloy, coke and cement industries. The auto industry will be next, He Yanli, a vice director at the National Development and Reform Commission, a key economic agency, told Dow Jones Newswires on Thursday. He said the auto industry controls would be imposed soon.

    China's car sales in the first three months this year rose 74 percent from the same period a year earlier to 890,000, the official Xinhua News Agency reported in early April, citing data from the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers.

     
     

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