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China moves to boost liquidity amid US trade war

| Updated: October 09, 2018 12:42:33


A Chinese national flag is seen at a port in Beihai, Guangxi province, China, June 17, 2017. Reuters A Chinese national flag is seen at a port in Beihai, Guangxi province, China, June 17, 2017. Reuters

China will cut the amount of cash banks must hold in reserve as part of efforts to support its economy, amid an escalating trade war with the US.

The move will see 750bn yuan ($109bn; £83bn) in cash injected into the financial system.

The US is fighting a trade war with China which threatens the outlook for Chinese manufacturing and exports.

It is the fourth time the country's central bank has cut its reserve requirement this year.

China's central bank said it would cut reserve requirement ratios by 100 basis points from 15 October. These are currently 15.5 per cent for large commercial lenders and 13.5 per cent for smaller banks.

Cutting reserve requirements frees up money for banks to lend to each other and consumers.

The People's Bank of China's move will release 1.2 trillion yuan in liquidity, with 450bn yuan of that due to offset maturing loans - meaning 750bn yuan will be injected into the financial system.

It comes as the US and China have imposed tariffs on one another's goods in a row that is hitting companies and risks hurting the global economy, according to BBC News.

The US has imposed tariffs on virtually half of all Chinese imports into the US and has threatened to target all of its imports.

China has retaliated with its own set of tariffs, and has accused the US of launching the largest trade war in economic history.

Neither are showing signs of backing down, with the Trump administration escalating matters with accusations of election meddling and currency manipulation.

The row has hit China's stock market and currency, and there are tentative signs it is affecting China's economy.

"The ongoing China-US trade war is imposing headwind to China's growth, and monetary easing is being used to counter that," DBS said in a research note.

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