Banking
Reducing procedural burdens of inbound debt: In October, SAFE announced various measures to reduce the procedural burden for enterprises borrowing offshore. For example, it expanded, to a total of 18 free trade zones and the entire city of Shanghai, a pilot programme which allows qualifying enterprises to convert foreign exchange capital raised offshore (including loans and market-based funding) into RMB, without SAFE verifying the use of proceeds upon conversion. It also removed the requirement for borrowers to apply to SAFE to deregister the foreign debt upon repayment of the loan. Instead, borrowers can do this through the domestic banks. Read more...
Interest rate reform: In August, the central bank unveiled interest rate reforms intended to allow for more effective transmission of monetary policy and lower costs of funding for the real economy. Its new loan prime rate is set at an average of the rates 18 designated commercial banks charge their best corporate clients. The central bank hopes that this will better reflect market dynamics than the previous mechanism, under which the one-year lending rate stood still at 4.35% for the last four years. This reform was followed by a 5-basis point cut in the one-year medium-term lending facility rate (a key reference rate used by banks to price their loans) in early November.