---
title: "China new bank loans slow further in the first quarter this year"
type: "News"
locale: "en"
url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/282515749.md"
description: "New yuan loans in March totaled ¥2.99 trillion, falling short of the ¥3.4 trillion estimate, leading to a total of ¥8.6 trillion in Q1 2026, down from ¥9.8 trillion in Q1 2025. This decline is disappointing, especially as the first quarter typically sees a credit boost in China. The situation may reflect a shift in Beijing's focus towards curbing financial risks, with reduced efficiency in credit absorption amid rising energy prices affecting households and businesses."
datetime: "2026-04-13T09:15:03.000Z"
locales:
  - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/282515749.md)
  - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/282515749.md)
  - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/282515749.md)
---

# China new bank loans slow further in the first quarter this year

New yuan loans for the month of March came in at ¥2.99 trillion, missing on estimates of ¥3.4 trillion. That brings the total new bank lending in Q1 2026 to roughly ¥8.6 trillion. The total there marks a drop from Q1 2025 of around ¥9.8 trillion.

Typically, the first quarter of the year is when we normally see the big credit and liquidity boost in the Chinese economy. That as the government wants to make sure financial market transmission and credit conditions are sufficient, especially with the Lunar New Year in focus.

So, for the figure here to come in below what it was in Q1 last year is disappointing to say the least. It could point to a number of things though.

The first being a shift in Beijing's policy focus in wanting to curb financial risks. This was very much the case a few years back as they needed to balance out between deleveraging efforts and keeping the economy running hot. However, the focus has been very much on the latter as of late as policymakers are trying their best to bolster domestic demand.

As such, it is either a case of PBOC tools seeing reduced efficiency in terms of impact and/or domestic demand is not absorbing the credit push by the government and local financial institutions.

I'm erring more towards the latter and the situation will not be helped if households and businesses struggle further amid surging energy prices. Besides Japan, China is another country that is hit hard from the de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz. That as they have been reliant on a decent portion of oil imports from Iran (~15%) itself over the years.

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