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BackChina Keeps Benchmark Lending Rates Unchanged for 11th Month as Growth Beats Expectations
China Keeps Benchmark Lending Rates Unchanged for 11th Month as Growth Beats Expectations
NEWS
CNBC4/20/2026Business2 min read

China Keeps Benchmark Lending Rates Unchanged for 11th Month as Growth Beats Expectations

PBOC holds one-year LPR at 3.0%, five-year at 3.5% amid resilient Q1 GDP and rising inflation

Quick Look

  • China's central bank kept its benchmark lending rates unchanged for the 11th consecutive month, holding the one-year LPR at 3.0% and the five-year LPR at 3.5%.
  • The decision comes as the world's second-largest economy posted 5% Q1 growth, factory-gate prices rose for the first time in over three years, and rising Middle East tensions push up oil prices, reducing pressure for additional stimulus.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

China's central bank has maintained its benchmark lending rates since June 2025, adopting a wait-and-see approach as policymakers assess the economic fallout from Middle East tensions against resilient domestic growth. The Q1 GDP beat expectations while deflationary pressures have eased, reducing urgency for additional stimulus.

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China held its benchmark lending rates unchanged for an 11th straight month, keeping its powder dry as policymakers weigh the economic fallout from the Middle East war against resilient growth at home and fading deflationary pressure that has given Beijing less urgency to act. The People's Bank of China kept the loan prime rate, or LPR, unchanged on Monday, as surging global oil prices amid escalating Middle East tensions pushed up energy prices and clouded the growth outlook. The one-year LPR, a benchmark for new loans, was kept at 3.0% while the five-year LPR, a reference for mortgage rates, was unchanged at 3.5%. The decision came after the world's second-largest economy grew 5% in the first quarter, accelerating from 4.5% in the prior quarter, and at the top end of its full-year target range. Beijing lowered its growth target for 2026 to a range of 4.5% to 5%, the least ambitious goal on record since the 1990s. China's factory-gate prices also rose for the first time in more than three years, climbing 0.5% in March from a year earlier, signaling that import-cost pressure has started seeping into the economy. Consumer inflation logged its biggest jump in more than three years, rising 1.3% in February, before easing to 1% in March. The upbeat growth at the start of 2026 has reduced pressure for additional stimulus, prompting economists to push back expectations for interest rate cuts. Policymakers will likely take a "wait-and-see" approach, with rising inflation reducing the PBOC's incentive to cut policy rates or roll out major easing in the near term, said Yu Song, chief China economist at UBS Securities. "The government may also need time to assess the impact of external uncertainties amid Middle East conflict," Song added. The PBOC said that it would maintain a "supportive" and "moderately loose" monetary stance this year to shore up growth, while keeping its currency stable. Speaking at an International Monetary Fund meeting in Washington last week, China's central bank governor Pan Gongsheng warned that rising geopolitical tensions, protectionism, and trade barriers have weighed on global growth and fuelled financial market volatility. Pan urged deeper international policy coordination to safeguard macroeconomic and financial stability.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • PBOC will likely maintain current rates through Q2 2026 as inflation pressures persist

    Likely · Within months

  • China may roll out targeted stimulus measures rather than broad rate cuts

    Possible · Within months

Open Questions

  • Will the PBOC consider rate cuts later in 2026?
  • How significantly will Middle East tensions impact China's economic outlook?
  • Will rising inflation force a shift in monetary policy stance?

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This article was originally published by CNBC.

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