Are they going to prop up their gdp again? This game is getting old, how many more ghost cities and ghost malls and ghost countries are they going to build, their gdp is alot less than what it appears to be, probably in the low single digits....i laugh when I see these worthless stimulus programs, hasn't anyone learned from the US and their worthless economy that stimulus does not work and will never work....remember there cannot be such a thing as failing or falling economies or markets, central banks of today will prop up anything they can with their worthless stimulus games.....China is far from done, they are going to need trillions in stimulus once they realize how bad their economy actually is, this is just the beginning before the next crisis. ..
China central bank injects $22B into economy
Katy Barnato | @KatyBarnato
3 Hours AgoCNBC.com
China pumped 140 billion yuan ($21.8 billion) into its economy on Wednesday, in the central bank's latest bid to shore up slowing economic growth and waylay investors' fears of a "hard landing."
The People's Bank of China (PBoC) injected billions of yuan into the interbank money market via a short-term liquidity operation, the bank said on its website.
The loans mature in six days and have an average weighted bid rate of 2.3 percent.
Short-term liquidity operations were introduced in 2013 by China to smooth fluctuations in liquidity and stabilize interbank funding costs.
Nelson Ching | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Wednesday's action came at a time of extreme market volatility in China and increased intervention by the central bank.
On Tuesday, Shanghai Composite index ending down 1.3 percent.
China central bank injects $22B into economy
Katy Barnato | @KatyBarnato
3 Hours AgoCNBC.com
China pumped 140 billion yuan ($21.8 billion) into its economy on Wednesday, in the central bank's latest bid to shore up slowing economic growth and waylay investors' fears of a "hard landing."
The People's Bank of China (PBoC) injected billions of yuan into the interbank money market via a short-term liquidity operation, the bank said on its website.
The loans mature in six days and have an average weighted bid rate of 2.3 percent.
Short-term liquidity operations were introduced in 2013 by China to smooth fluctuations in liquidity and stabilize interbank funding costs.
Nelson Ching | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Wednesday's action came at a time of extreme market volatility in China and increased intervention by the central bank.
On Tuesday, Shanghai Composite index ending down 1.3 percent.
