Cfoto | Future Publishing | Getty ImagesBEIJING — China's slowing economy needs more than interest rate cuts to boost growth, analysts said.
He expects Beijing will likely ramp up fiscal stimulus due to weak growth, despite reluctance so far.
"The market is forming a medium to long-term expectation on the U.S. growth rate, the inflation rate.
As for Chinese government bonds, Ding said the firm has a "neutral" view and expects the Chinese yields to remain relatively low.
He pointed out that monetary easing still requires fiscal stimulus "to achieve the effect of expanding credit and transmitting money to the real economy."
Persons:
Larry Hu, That's, Edmund Goh, Yifei Ding, Ding, CF40, Pan Gongsheng, Haizhong Chang, Chang
Organizations:
China Resources, Getty, BEIJING, People's Bank of China, Macquarie, U.S, of Finance, PBOC, Ministry of Finance, Fitch
Locations:
China, Nanjing, Jiangsu province, abrdn, Beijing, U.S, Invesco