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7月末社会融资规模、广义货币增速均保持较高水平 信贷供给总体充裕 有效满足实体经济融资需求
Zhong Guo Zheng Quan Bao·2025-08-13 22:17

Core Viewpoint - The People's Bank of China (PBOC) has maintained a moderately loose monetary policy, supporting the real economy through high levels of social financing and broad money (M2) growth as of the end of July [1] Group 1: Credit Growth - In the first seven months, RMB loans increased by 12.87 trillion yuan, with a loan balance of 268.51 trillion yuan at the end of July, reflecting a year-on-year growth of 6.9% [2] - The fluctuations in credit data during June and July are attributed to financial institutions' half-year reporting and the settlement period for enterprises, as well as the significant impact of local government debt swaps on loan data [2][3] - The impact of debt resolution and risk mitigation factors on current loan growth exceeds 1 percentage point, with local government debt swaps affecting loans by approximately 2.6 trillion yuan since last November [3] Group 2: Loan Interest Rates - Loan interest rates have remained low, with new corporate loan rates around 3.2% and new personal housing loan rates at approximately 3.1%, both down by about 45 and 30 basis points year-on-year, respectively [4] - The decline in financing costs reflects adequate monetary and credit conditions, indicating that the real economy's financing needs are being met [4] Group 3: Monetary Aggregates - As of the end of July, M2 stood at 329.94 trillion yuan, growing by 8.8% year-on-year, while M1 was 111.06 trillion yuan, with a year-on-year increase of 5.6% [7] - The narrowing gap between M1 and M2 indicates improved liquidity and efficiency in fund circulation, aligning with the recovery of economic activities [7] Group 4: Economic Outlook - The cumulative social financing scale for the first seven months reached 23.99 trillion yuan, exceeding the previous year's figure by 5.12 trillion yuan, with a total stock of 431.26 trillion yuan at the end of July, reflecting a year-on-year growth of 9% [7] - The macroeconomic indicators have performed better than expected in the first half of the year, supporting the reasonable growth of monetary credit and meeting the effective financing needs of the real economy [7]