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央行最新发布,社融增量30.9万亿元,政府债净融资占近四成
Zheng Quan Shi Bao·2025-11-13 10:10

Core Insights - The People's Bank of China reported that the cumulative social financing scale increased by 30.9 trillion yuan in the first ten months of 2025, which is 3.83 trillion yuan more than the same period last year [1] - The year-on-year growth rate of social financing stock was 8.5% at the end of October, while the broad money (M2) growth rate was 8.2%, both showing a decrease of 0.2 percentage points [1] - The structure of social financing is changing, with non-loan financing methods now accounting for over half of the total financing increment [3][4] Government Debt and Financing - Net financing from government bonds accounted for nearly 40% of the social financing increment, totaling 11.95 trillion yuan, which is an increase of 3.72 trillion yuan year-on-year [3] - The total issuance of government bonds reached approximately 22 trillion yuan in the first ten months, nearly 4 trillion yuan more than the same period last year [3] - The government is leveraging increased bond issuance to support major projects and stimulate demand in the economy [3] Loan Structure and Trends - In the first ten months, RMB loans increased by 14.97 trillion yuan, with a loan growth rate of 6.5% at the end of October [6] - The balance of inclusive small and micro loans reached 35.77 trillion yuan, growing by 11.6% year-on-year, while medium to long-term loans for the manufacturing sector increased by 7.9% [6] - Loans related to new economic drivers have maintained a rapid growth rate, indicating a shift in credit structure towards high-quality development [6] Monetary Policy and Economic Impact - The current monetary policy stance is supportive, aimed at promoting a reasonable recovery in prices [9] - The Consumer Price Index (CPI) showed a year-on-year increase of 0.2% in October, while the core CPI rose by 1.2%, marking the highest growth since March 2024 [9] - Experts suggest that while there is still room for monetary policy adjustments, the marginal efficiency has declined, and excessive easing could lead to negative effects [10]