Pan Gongsheng used the Lujiazui Forum to unveil the most sweeping set of market support measures since the 2024 rate tool overhaul, targeting both liquidity infrastructure and foreign capital channels.
People's Bank of China Governor Pan Gongsheng announced six new supportive policies at the Shanghai Lujiazui Forum on Wednesday, aiming to channel mid- to long-term funds into the nation's stock and bond markets while deepening the internationalization of the yuan.
"The short-end interest rate regulation mechanism will be improved by narrowing the operating corridor and adding overnight reverse repo operations," Pan said at the two-day forum, which runs through June 18 and features more than 70 speakers from China and abroad. The operating rate for temporary overnight repo and reverse repo facilities will be adjusted to the 7-day reverse repo rate plus or minus 25 basis points, compressing the corridor from 70 bps to 50 bps. The move follows the PBOC's February restructuring of its quarterly monetary policy report — the first such reorganization in more than two decades — which elevated overnight repo rate dynamics to the document's lead section, signaling a potential shift toward an overnight policy anchor.
The loan prime rate, China's benchmark lending rate, currently sits at a record low of 3.0 percent, leaving limited room for further cuts. The last major PBOC tool restructuring occurred in 2024, when the central bank shifted its primary operational focus from the medium-term lending facility to the seven-day reverse repo rate, a shorter-duration instrument that gives policymakers more granular control over interbank liquidity. The latest corridor compression suggests the PBOC is tightening its grip on short-end rate volatility before any potential normalization cycle.
Internationalization push targets offshore yuan markets
Three of the six measures directly target offshore yuan infrastructure. The PBOC will create an overseas central bank repo facility, allowing foreign central banks, monetary authorities, international financial organizations and sovereign wealth funds to obtain yuan liquidity by pledging high-grade bonds such as Chinese government bonds. Shanghai's cross-border yuan fund pools already exceed 1,600, and the PBOC has provided more than 10 billion yuan — roughly $1.4 billion — in refinancing through these channels.
A pilot program for offshore yuan foreign exchange trading will launch in the Shanghai Free Trade Zone, with six major Chinese banks — Industrial & Commercial Bank of China, Agricultural Bank of China, Bank of China, China Construction Bank, Bank of Communications and China CITIC Bank — authorized to conduct transactions via the China Foreign Exchange Trade System. The PBOC said it will further develop the offshore yuan FX market based on the pilot's progress.
The central bank also announced it will study a macro-prudential tool to provide emergency liquidity to non-bank institutions through swap arrangements during systemic stress in bond and other markets, when normal liquidity channels are disrupted. This backstop aims to balance financial stability with moral hazard prevention, a concern that has grown as China's $18 trillion bond market deepens.
An Action Plan for the Development of Offshore Finance under the Shanghai International Financial Center will be introduced to improve business rules and risk management frameworks, while the interbank market data repository has been officially launched to enhance penetrative monitoring of trading, custody and settlement data.
What this means for markets
The six-policy package represents the PBOC's most coordinated attempt since the 2024 rate tool overhaul to reshape both the plumbing of domestic liquidity management and the architecture of offshore yuan access. For global investors, the overseas central bank repo facility and the Shanghai FTZ FX pilot create new on-ramps for yuan-denominated asset allocation at a time when China's bond market offers a yield premium over developed-market peers. The narrowed rate corridor reduces the risk of sharp liquidity squeezes that have periodically disrupted China's interbank market, while the non-bank liquidity backstop addresses a structural vulnerability exposed during previous bond market selloffs.
The e-CNY, which introduced interest-bearing features on Jan. 1, 2026, with wallet balances now integrated into reserve requirements, adds another dimension to the PBOC's toolkit for influencing capital flows. Any joint frameworks emerging from discussions between Singapore's Monetary Authority — an attendee at this year's forum — and the PBOC could further shape how digital assets and yuan-denominated products flow across borders in Asia's financial system.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.