- This week, the rediscount rate in China's bill market showed a slight downward trend, with the six-month national bank acceptance bill rate hovering around 0.72%, down 1 to 2 basis points from the previous week. This directly reflects the relative scarcity of credit assets within the banking system.
- Macro financial data indicates that new credit in April turned negative again after nine months, despite commercial banks' bill financing exceeding 1.2 trillion yuan. This was not enough to prevent the contraction of total broad credit, which marginally boosted institutions' demand for bill assets.
- The monetary authorities have sent a clear signal of preventing excessive liquidity. In May, the People's Bank of China reduced the scale of reverse repurchase agreements to a record trillion-yuan level, maintaining net withdrawal operations for three consecutive months, aiming to guide the excessively low market interest rates back towards the policy rate center.
Pricing Logic of Bills Amid Credit Contraction
The current low rediscount rate in China's bill market deeply reflects the structural contradiction between insufficient effective financing demand in the real economy and abundant bank funds. The unexpected negative turn in new credit in April has put significant pressure on commercial banks' credit issuance assessments. To fill the gap in conventional loan assets, banks typically turn to the bill market for volume operations. The bill financing scale of up to 1.2 trillion yuan failed to reverse the negative credit situation, indicating a significant contraction in conventional corporate and residential loans. In this supply-demand pattern, the demand for bills as standardized short-term credit assets is passively pushed up, thus suppressing the upward space of rediscount rates. Traders generally expect that in May, with no fundamental improvement in credit issuance, the low-level oscillation around 0.72% will continue.
Central Bank's Liquidity Withdrawal and Peak Shaving Operations
Facing the continuous liquidity accumulation in the interbank market, the People's Bank of China's open market operations demonstrate strong determination and precise control intentions. The record trillion-yuan scale of reduced reverse repurchase agreements marks the deepening of the central bank's net withdrawal stance for three consecutive months. This operation does not signify a comprehensive shift to monetary tightening but rather a correction of the previously extremely loose funding environment. The central bank has clearly stated in its first-quarter monetary policy implementation report that it will guide overnight rates to operate near the desired policy rate level. This means that under the macroeconomic combination of good GDP growth in the first quarter and limited inflation pressure, the central bank is more focused on the efficiency of fund use, preventing low-cost funds from engaging in leverage arbitrage within the financial system.
Expectation Management of Commercial Banks' Credit Issuance
Historically, April is usually a small month for credit issuance, but the slope of this decline has exceeded the expectations of most market participants. This expectation gap led to a downward trend in the bill market following the data release. However, since the market had already partially priced in the weaker financial data, the space for further significant declines in rediscount rates is limited. Commercial banks are currently adjusting their asset-liability allocation strategies for the second half of the year. In a phase where expectations for reserve requirement and interest rate cuts are significantly weakened, bank finance departments need to reassess the yield on bill assets and the matching of funding costs. If credit demand shows a moderate recovery in subsequent months, the buying power in the bill market may face marginal weakening.
Bill Term Regulation and Real Trade Background Review
The infrastructure and compliance framework of China's bill market have undergone profound reshaping in recent years. Since the regulatory authorities issued the revised commercial bill management measures in November 2022, the maximum term for commercial bills has been strictly compressed to six months. This policy adjustment has greatly accelerated the circulation efficiency of the bill market, reduced long-tail credit risks, and made the 0.72% six-month national bank acceptance bill rate the most representative market benchmark. Additionally, regulators continue to emphasize that bill issuance must be based on real transaction relationships and creditor-debtor relationships, institutionally curbing the proliferation of purely financing bills. Relying on the nationally unified electronic platform established by the Shanghai Bill Exchange, current bill transactions have achieved a high degree of transparency and standardization, providing the central bank with precise data tools to monitor the efficiency of monetary policy transmission.