China's commercial banks are reining in property loans, with some even raising previously preferential interest rates to the benchmark level, the 21st Century Business Herald reported Wednesday.
China's stocks edged up Wednesday with the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index up 1.81 percent, or 49.12 points, to close at 2,758.1 points.
UBS AG said on Tuesday that it is on track to double its headcount in China over the next three to five years.
Fidelity International's Anthony Bolton is betting on a rally in Chinese shares even as the central bank steps up measures to curb inflation. UBS AG Strategist Chen Li predicts the nation's equities will fall a further 10 percent.
The People's Bank of China (PBOC), the nation's central bank, is reported to have cut its 2011 lending target for banks by 10 percent from last year in a bid to slow free-wheeling lending and tame inflation.
China's bond market is starting to show renewed inflation concerns ahead of a report that will probably show the economy grew 10.2 percent last year, the fastest pace since 2007.
Foreign exchange management will be a great challenge for the Chinese government during the next five years, given the country's net trade surplus, increasing foreign direct investment (FDI) and speculative capital inflows.
China would progressively make its currency, RMB, convertible on the capital account in the next five years amid its push for the deeper internationalization of the currency, or yuan, the country's foreign exchange chief said Tuesday.
China is likely to raise the interest rate in the first quarter to keep a lid on the rising consumer prices, Li Daokui, an adviser to the central bank, said on Tuesday.
China's stocks edged up Tuesday with the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index up 0.09 percent, or 2.32 points, to finish at 2,708.98 points.
Bank of China Ltd (BOC) will grant new yuan loans according to capital adequacy rate and other indicators as the central government has repealed the national credit line, National Business Daily reported Tuesday, citing Xiao Gang, chairman of BOC.
With media reports rife about a property tax soon to be launched in Shanghai, 30-year-old Zhou Xin had no hesitation in signing the purchasing contract for a two-bedroom apartment located in the Zhabei district.