THE central bank will relax its informal guidance for the upper limit of commercial banks’ deposit rates, facilitating the market liberalization of interest rates, sources with knowledge of the matter said Friday. Although the People’s Bank of China scrapped the official ceiling for deposit rates in October 2015, the rates are still largely constrained by the regulator’s window guidance and the market interest rate pricing self-regulation mechanism. Deposit interest rates are set around 1.5 times the central bank’s benchmark rates in general. The newly-appointed central bank Governor Yi Gang had hinted about the changes at the Boao Forum for Asia, one of the sources said. China’s interest rate liberalization reforms of letting the market set the cost of credit have been seen by economists as a key step toward allocating capital more efficiently and avoiding the wasteful investment that continues to dog the world’s second-biggest economy. The tight regulatory environment at the moment provides a window to push forward interest rate liberalization, as banks are now under more pressure to compete for deposits, a senior banking executive said. (SD-Agencies) |