China’s central bank has pledged to keep stock, bond, and foreign exchange markets operating stably, using policy tools and supervision to guard against systemic risk, according to the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) (pbc.gov.cn). The statement underscores a continued focus on liquidity management, market functioning, and cross‑market coordination.
Governor Pan Gongsheng has emphasized a bottom line of preventing systemic risks while noting improving conditions in areas such as local government debt and real estate. Regulatory indicators like banks’ capital ratios and nonperforming loans were cited as within healthy ranges, reinforcing the stability message.
Why this matters: confidence, RMB exchange rate stability, macroprudential oversight
Stability messaging is intended to anchor expectations, support investor confidence, and underpin RMB exchange rate steadiness during bouts of external volatility. Authorities frame exchange‑rate management as flexible yet guided to remain basically stable at an adaptive, equilibrium level.
SAFE has emphasized FX market resilience under external pressures. “both the capability and confidence to maintain the sound operation of the foreign exchange market and keep the RMB exchange rate basically stable at an adaptive and equilibrium level,” said Zhu Hexin, Administrator of the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) (pboc.gov.cn).
Macroprudential oversight, legal reforms, and market infrastructure upgrades are highlighted as safeguards, according to Financial news, citing the head of the central bank’s Financial Markets Department (pbc.gov.cn). These measures seek to improve early warning, enforcement, and law‑based conduct across stocks, bonds, derivatives, and FX.
Clear communication and operational readiness can reduce volatility by shaping expectations and deterring procyclical flows. As reported by China Daily in November 2024 (chinadaily.com.cn), planned steps include more transparent messaging, expanded market connectivity, and progressive opening to sustain confidence.
Liquidity backstops, including facilities that accept a broad range of collateral, can ease temporary funding stress and support market‑making. The SFISF has been described as allowing securities, fund managers, and insurers to swap illiquid holdings for government or central bank paper, signaling a decisive stabilization intent, as covered by The Diplomat (thediplomat.com).
In the bond market, calibrated operations can temper yield swings and discourage one‑way positioning, while in FX, routine operations can smooth disorderly moves. Such actions complement supervision and are deployed as conditions warrant, rather than as permanent fixtures.
Risks and limits highlighted by analysts
Bond yield declines and insurer interest-rate risk
Analysts warn that rapid government bond yield declines can raise duration and reinvestment risks for insurers concentrated in long‑dated paper. Alicia Garcia‑Herrero of Natixis has cautioned that imbalances along the curve could unsettle risk exposures if not managed prudently.
Interventions guiding credit to the real economy
Some market strategists view recent measures as nudging banks and nonbank institutions to deploy funds into loans and productive investment rather than parking liquidity in bonds. CreditSights’ Zerlina Zeng has argued this guidance aims to bolster credit transmission without forcibly engineering higher rates.
FAQ about financial market stability
How is the PBoC aiming to keep the RMB exchange rate basically stable, and what tools does it use in the FX market?
By conducting FX operations, enhancing communication, and coordinating macroprudential oversight via foreign‑exchange authorities, aiming to keep the RMB basically stable at an adaptive, equilibrium level.
What is the SFISF swap facility and how does it help stabilize liquidity and market confidence?
A central swap window for securities, fund managers, and insurers to exchange illiquid assets for safer government or central bank paper, bolstering liquidity and signaling policy backstop confidence.
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Source: https://coincu.com/markets/rmb-steadies-as-pboc-outlines-market-stability-toolkit/




