China's M2 rose 17.94 percent in August, slightly lower than
July's 18.4 percent and the lowest monthly figure of the year,
China Securities Journal reported on Wednesday.
M2 is the broad measure of money supply that covers cash in
circulation and all deposits.
The paper said that new loans in August were 189.5 billion yuan
(US$23.7 billion), up 16.13 percent on the same period last
year.
The August new loan figure is higher than July's 171.8 billion
yuan but much lower than June's 394.7 billion yuan, indicating that
red-hot loan growth has been checked.
Growth in M1, the narrow money supply gauge covering cash in
circulation and corporate demand deposits, rose 15.57 percent from
a year earlier. It rose 15.3 percent in July.
Analysts say the August figures suggest that tight monetary
policies are still very much the order of the day.
The disparity in M1 and M2 growth has dropped month by month
from 8.6 percentage points in January to 2.37 percentage points in
August, indicating an increase in current deposit savings leading
to faster currency circulation and rising asset prices.
Analysts suggested raising interest rates on long-and
medium-term deposit savings.
(Xinhua News Agency September 14, 2006)