BEIJING (AP) _ China's central bank announced a cut in a key interest rate 
Monday to stimulate growth as inflation has eased, the first drop in the cost 
of borrowing in more than six years. In a notice posted on its Web site, the 
bank said it was lowering the rate on one-year yuan-denominated loans by 0.27 
percent effective Tuesday.

The People's Bank of China also cut the share of deposits that banks must hold 
in reserve by 1 percentage point starting from Sept. 25.

However, it said major state banks would hold off on enacting the measure, 
which would slightly increase the pool of money available for lending. 
Regulators have steadily raised interest rates over the past three years to 
contain pressure for prices to rise.

However, the inflation rate eased to 4.9 percent in August, the lowest in 14 
months, easing concerns Beijing would take additional steps that could slow the 
economy further. The adjustment would bring the rate on one-year 
yuan-denominated loans to 7.20 percent and the reserve ratio to 16.5 percent, 
down from a record 17.5 percent after five hikes in a row this year, according 
to the government's official Xinhua News Agency.

The Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, the Agricultural Bank of China, 
the Bank of China, the China Construction Bank, the Bank of Communications and 
the Postal Savings Bank of China will retain the old reserve ratio for the time 
being, the bank statement said. The rate cur is the first since February 2002, 
when the central bank reduced the benchmark one-year lending rate to 5.31 
percent from 5.85 percent.

At the time, the central bank cited China's economic development and the 
internal and external environment following the dot com bust. Since 2003, the 
bank has been gradually tightening monetary policy in an attempt to cap 
inflation and avoid economic overheating, but Monday's move was apparently 
prompted by concerns that a slowing of the economy was now the major concern.

The rate cuts aimed to "resolve the present stand-out problems in the operation 
of the economy, consolidate targeted solutions .

and maintain continued stable, relatively fast development of the national 
economy," the bank's statement said.

The step is likely to boost flagging stock prices that fell to a 22-month low 
last week. China's two exchanges were closed on Monday, which was a public 
holiday.

Chinese leaders have put a priority on fighting an inflation surge blamed on 
shortages of pork and grain that began in mid-2007, imposing price controls, 
credit curbs, and subsidies to raise farm production. Consumer prices in August 
were down from July's 6.3 percent and well below February's 8.7 percent rate 
the peak of the inflation surge.

But officials face an unexpectedly sharp downturn in economic growth, which 
could cost jobs and fuel social tensions. China's trade surplus hit a record 
US$28.7 billion in August, but export growth slowed to 21.1 percent, down from 
July's 26.9 percent, the government reported.

Analysts have cut growth forecasts this year to as low as 9 percent, down from 
2007's explosive 11.9 percent. That still would be the fastest rate for any 
major country, but Beijing wants to keep growth high to reduce poverty and 
create new jobs.

The interest rate cut came as financial markets reverberated from the news that 
Lehman Brothers, burdened by US$60 billion in soured real-estate holdings, was 
filing for bankruptcy, and that Bank of America Corp. was buying Merrill Lynch 
& Co.

Until recently, China's own real estate sector and its financial markets, 
isolated by limits on foreign investments, were relatively unscathed by the 
turmoil afflicting other markets. But the global slowdown in demand has begun 
to take a toll at a time when mainland China's own financial markets are 
languishing in a near yearlong correction.

Property prices have begun to cool and growth in exports has begun to slow. 
China's industrial output growth rate fell to its lowest level in 18 months in 
August, adding to signs its rapid economic expansion faces a sharp downturn.

Analysts have cut forecasts of China's economic growth this year to as low as 9 
percent, down from last year's 11.9 percent. ___ Shanghai-based AP business 
writer Elaine Kurtenbach contributed to this report


http://in.news.yahoo.com/210/20080915/1482/tbs-china-central-bank-cuts-benchmark-in.html

Credit is a system whereby a person who can't pay gets another person who can't 
pay to guarantee that he can pay. 
 - Charles Dickens 


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