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PBOC Trades Gov’t Bonds for Second Straight Month, Adding Net Liquidity of USD7 billion
Yicai Global | English | News | Dec. 5, 2025 | UndeterminedFinancial System Problems
China’s central bank, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC), injected a net CNY50 billion (USD7 billion) into the financial system through government bond trading in November to ease liquidity pressures during the year-end funding squeeze. This amount is up by CNY30 billion from October, marking the second consecutive month of net liquidity addition via bond trading. The PBOC resumed such trading earlier this year after halting it due to supply-demand imbalances and bond market risks.
Analysts view the continued bond purchases as a sign that market conditions have improved enough to support PBOC trading and indicate a persistently supportive monetary stance aimed at stabilizing economic growth through the end of this quarter and into the next. Despite these efforts, the bond market remains relatively weak, so increased government bond purchases serve to reassure market confidence and expectations of loose monetary policy. The amount of bonds bought in November is considered a key indicator of potential policy direction in the near term.
Looking ahead, while monetary policy easing is anticipated this month or in early 2026 based on purchasing managers' index data, the bond market continues to face constraints from new fund sale rules, with 10-year government bond yields expected to trade within a narrow range of 1.75 to 1.85 percent. There may still be funding pressures and short-term spikes in money market rates at year-end despite broadly loose liquidity. Observers suggest that the PBOC’s net treasury purchases may stay steady or increase slightly in response to these conditions.
揭开新型腐败“面纱”,让隐性腐败难“隐”
Unveiling the Veil of New Forms of Corruption to Make Hidden Corruption Hard to Conceal
Guangming Daily | Local Language | News | Dec. 5, 2025 | Corporate Corruption or Fraud
The Supreme People's Court and the Supreme People's Procuratorate have jointly released typical cases highlighting new, concealed forms of corruption in the financial sector and their legal consequences. These cases expose methods such as receiving bribes disguised as "labor remuneration" or profit distribution from cooperative operations, making hidden corruption more difficult to conceal and enabling precise legal punishment.
The Huang bribery case exemplifies corruption linked to the government-business "revolving door." Huang, a former state-owned commercial bank executive, received over 42.68 million yuan through "settling-in fees," salary, and bonuses from a company controlled by Huang Mousen after facilitating that company’s access to the bank’s client list. Huang was sentenced to 14 years in prison, fined 4 million yuan, and had illegal earnings confiscated, setting clear legal boundaries against disguised bribery.
Bribery via "cooperative operation" without actual capital investment is also targeted, as seen in the case of Li and Xu, state-owned trust practitioners who accepted illicit property under this pretense. Their sentencing illustrates the judiciary’s zero-tolerance stance on corruption in the trust industry and the broader financial sector.
Other severe cases like that of Liu and Wu demonstrate strict punishments for large-scale bribery, embezzlement, and abuse of influence resulting in significant unrecoverable loans and misappropriation of public funds. Liu received more than 150 million yuan in bribes, while Wu accepted over 275 million yuan and embezzled more than 508 million yuan. Both received sentences of death with reprieve and lifelong imprisonment, underscoring the judiciary’s firm commitment to combating financial sector corruption.
Purbaya Bakal Negosiasi Ulang dengan China Bahas Utang Whoosh
Purbaya Will Renegotiate with China Regarding Whoosh Debt
JPNN | Local Language | News | Dec. 5, 2025 | Shifting Geopolitical Alliances
Finance Minister Purbaya Yudhi Sadewa has announced plans to renegotiate the debt settlement with China concerning the Whoosh Jakarta-Bandung high-speed rail project. The Ministry of Finance is finalizing the negotiation plan in collaboration with Danantara Indonesia, with technical teams from both sides preparing to discuss the optimal approach. Although the details are still unclear, the overall objective is defined.
Purbaya confirmed that he and Danantara Indonesia are ready to travel to China for negotiations but emphasized the importance of first determining the proper counterpart and the settlement scheme to be proposed. He noted uncertainty about whether the meeting would be with the China Development Bank (CDB) or the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), and said travel plans will proceed only once these details are confirmed.
The Whoosh High-Speed Rail project currently carries a debt burden estimated at around USD 7.2 billion (approximately Rp 116 trillion), which has increased due to cost overruns from the initial budget of USD 6.07 billion.
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