The massive Chinese credit bubble grew as new loans expanded 396% in January as China's banks extended a total of 2.9 trillion yuan ($460.7  billion) in new loans, up from the previous month, hitting a  historic high. - caixinglobal.com
  New loans to companies in January totaled 1.78 trillion yuan, an  increase of 631.91% from December, central bank data showed on Monday.  New long-term loans taken out by households totaled 591 billion yuan, an  increase of 89.91% from a month ago.  The larger-than-expected lending figure shows that demand for  property purchases has not weakened, said Liu Dongliang, an analyst with   China Merchants Bank.  Medium- to long-term household lending, which are primarily made up of  mortgage loans, surged from the previous month, while new short-term  household lending totaled 310 billion yuan, a large percentage of which  likely came from consumer loans, which eventually ended up in the  property market, said Liu.  
   Caixin also learned from banking sources that the central bank has  given “window guidance” to banks, telling them to keep the total scale  of new yuan lending constant from Feb. 11 to Feb. 15, as regulators  attempted to curb loan growth ahead of the weeklong Lunar New Year  holiday. 
   China’s M2, a broad measurement of the money supply, grew 8.6% in  January from a year ago to 172.08 trillion yuan, increasing 0.4% from a  historic low in December, when the growth rate was 8.2%.   |