Summary
China has held the most important political event of the year on Friday May 22- The National People's Congress (NPC) meetings, also known as “Two Sessions” in Chinese.
The annual gatherings will also reveal Beijing's plans for how to revive an economy battered by COVID-19 pandemic, which has led to the country's first economic contraction after decades of continuous growth.
Please find in our special report our in-house views and the industry expert’s takeaways on the stimulus and the policies announced at the conferences.
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Key targets for 2020 in China's government work report
Table 1: China's annual economic targets set in government work reports
SMM’s View
China has decided not to set a target for its economic growth for 2020 due to great uncertainties about the impact from COVID-19, and aims to keep the fundamentals of the economy stable, according to the government work report delivered on May 22.
Monetary and fiscal policies came largely in line with market expectations. Notably, the budget deficit target for this year was raised to "at least" 3.6% of gross domestic product (GDP).
As for infrastructure and real estate―major consumers of nonferrous metals, new infrastructure took centrestage as expected, while the principle of "housing is for living in, not for speculation" will remain in place and no target was set for shanty town redevelopment.
The construction of new infrastructure including developing a new generation of data communication network, widening the application of 5G, building more charging facilities, promoting new energy vehicles, stimulating new consumer demand and boosting industrial upgrading.
Expectations into the NPC meetings were high among metal industry participants, particularly in regards to more expectations around stimulus. However so far there is little in the way of major new announcements, just more of a reconfirmation of existing supporting policies.
China will also intensify its efforts to develop major transportation and water conservancy projects and national railway development capital will be increased by 100 billion yuan. With Beijing shifting to new infrastructure to spur its economy, the support to traditional infrastructure seems limited.
New urbanisation is another point of focus at the sessions. China will begin the renovation of 39,000 old urban residential communities this year, supporting the installation of elevators in residential buildings and the development of community services.
Without positive surprises from Beijing’s economic policies, nonferrous metals weakened across the board on Friday. SMM expects limited further boost from new infrastructure to consumption of nonferrous metals given the strength of the recovery already seen in 2Q.
Faced with a global recession and widespread of the pandemic outside China, "we must focus on maintaining security in the six areas in order to ensure stability on the six fronts,” Chinese Premier Li Keqiang said in the work report. The “six fronts” refer to employment, the financial sector, foreign trade, foreign investment, domestic investment, and expectations. The “six areas” refer to job security, basic living needs, operations of market entities, food and energy security, stable industrial and supply chains, and the normal functioning of primary-level governments.
Industry Experts’ View
Not setting a GDP target for 2020
While Beijing has abandoned its GDP target for the year, it laid out targets for other metrics such as employment and inflation.
Premier Li stressed that ensuring people have jobs will remain as a priority. China aims to create more than 9 million urban jobs. The target for surveyed urban unemployment rate was set at around 6% and that for registered urban unemployment rate was at about 5.5%. It also aims to eliminate poverty in the country, mainly in the rural areas.
The Chinese government abandoned its decades-long practice of setting an annual target for economic growth, and shifted stimulus focus to jobs. That, combined with more than $500 billion in infrastructure bonds to be issued this year and more monetary easing on the horizon, suggests that China is trying to cement a fragile domestic recovery without indulging in the kind of debt blowouts seen in the US and Europe, said Bloomberg.
Tang Jianwei, chief researcher at the Financial Research Centre, Bank of Communications, said that not setting a GDP growth target this year is an important decision made from comprehensive consideration of changes in the internal and external environments, and that the decision reflects a pragmatic attitude and a spirit of being practical and realistic. “Not setting an economic growth target does not mean inaction in macroeconomic policies. Counter-cyclical adjustments, especially more proactive fiscal policies and more flexible and appropriate monetary policies are needed to support employment and expand internal demand.
Deficit ratio set above 3%
China's deficit-to-GDP ratio is projected at more than 3.6% this year, according to the government work report submitted to the national legislature for deliberation on Friday. The fiscal deficit will rise 1 trillion yuan from a year ago and China will also issue 1 trillion yuan in special treasury bonds for the fight against the coronavirus. The quota on local-government special bond issuance is set at 3.75 trillion yuan, up 1.6 trillion yuan from last year.
The year-on-year increase of 1 trillion yuan in the government deficit points to greater fiscal expenditures this year. A higher deficit ratio means that the government will have more money to spend, for cutting taxes fees, rents and interest rates, as well as supporting consumption and investment. This will help to safeguard employment, people's livelihoods and the development of market entities after the crippling impact of the COVID-19 pandemic pushed some companies close to bankruptcy and led to a cash crunch for local governments.
The issuance of 1 trillion yuan special treasury bonds is a once-a-decade policy move previously seen in 1998 and 2007. China issued 270 billion yuan of special treasury bonds in 1998 to support the ‘big four’ banks, and 1.55 trillion yuan in 2007 to set up China Investment Corporation. The issuance of special treasury bonds this year came in line with expectations, and it will be used in specific projects, targeting on shortcomings exposed by the epidemic, said He Lifeng, chairman of the National Development and Reform Commission. Some analysts believe that the special treasury bonds will be used to bolster consumption and offset the impact of decreased overseas demand.
The amount of local government special bonds rises greater than expected, by 1.6 trillion yuan from last year. On the backdrop of falling investment this year, the special bonds will be designated to fund new infrastructure such as 5G, as well as housing renovation, water conservancy and transportation. In previous years, the special bonds were mainly used to fund housing renovation in rundown urban areas.
Significant increase in broad money supply
China will pursue a prudent monetary policy in a more flexible and appropriate way, according to the government report. The country will use a variety of tools such as required reserve ratio reductions, interest rate cuts, and re-lending to enable the M2 money supply and aggregate financing to grow at notably higher rates than last year.
1. The tone of monetary policy remains prudent but more flexibility is emphasised
The highlight this year’s meetings is that measures will be taken to enable the M2 money supply and aggregate financing to grow at notably higher rates than last year. M2 money refers to the sum of the deposits and cash of enterprises and residents, equivalent to the total amount of money available in an economy. The growth rate of China’s broad M2 money supply had stayed below 10% since May 2017 amid a deleveraging campaign. The M2 money supply returned to double-digit growth in March and April this year, indicating that the supply of money is also accelerating. China’s central bank recently also said that we should allow the macro leverage ratio to rise in stages. These send out a message that the growth of money in the market will be significantly increased, with a rate expected above 10% this year
2. To push for further reduction of interest rates
The interest rates will continue to fall in the long run, which is the need for economic development. There is room for a further 100bp cut in the required reserve ratio in the future (or long-term liquidity measures of the equal strength), said Zhu Jianfang, chief economist at CITIC Securities. The measures may be implanted at twice, with the timing related to the rollout of fiscal policy such as the large-scale issuance of local special bonds and the issuance of special treasury bonds.
Sticking to the principle of “housing is for living, not for speculation”
China will implement city-specific policies to promote the steady and healthy development of the real estate market, said the report.
Some cities have adjusted their respective housing policies since the second half of 2018. While some third- and fourth- tier cities tentatively relaxed regulations on the housing market amid the impact of the pandemic, rules concerning easing control on housing purchases and loans have been revoked. This reinforces China’s basic principles of real estate regulation and control.
Overall sense of disappointment from metals market participants
Metals prices in China have seen a strong recovery over April and May, and sentiment ahead of the NPC meetings was very positive, with many market players expecting further signals of support to metals demand from higher spending. While the general message of stronger credit growth and easier financial conditions was welcome by many traders, overall the lack of a commitment to a high growth target or further detailed infrastructure spending was seen as a dent to market confidence, and was the reason most metal prices closed lower on the day.
We will have a more detailed analysis of the impact of the NPC outcome to the metals industry next week.
Further Reading
2. Chinalco: Blind copper smelting capacity expansion should be strictly curbed (May 22, 2020)
3. China steel rebar inventories to sustain decline as supply may retreat (May 22, 2020)
4. COVID-19 to deter Brazil iron ore shipments even as Vale reopened Malaysia port (May 19, 2020)
5. Exclusive: China's base metals output in April (May 14, 2020)
6. SMM China Nickel Weekly and Nickel Downstream Sectors PMI Monthly (May 14, 2020)
7. SMM Copper Raw Materials Market Report (May 14, 2020)
For queries, please contact William Gu at williamgu@smm.cn
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