BEIJING, March 11 (Xinhua) -- China's central bank
announced Wednesday a sale of 70 billion yuan (about 10 billion U.S. dollars) of
three-month bills on Thursday.
The move was aimed at maintaining a steady growth in
the country's monetary base and keeping interest rates stable, said the People's
Bank of China in a statement.
Since the beginning of 2009, the central bank has
increased the frequency of its three-month bill sales. In February, it sold
three-month bills once every week. Thursday's sale will be the biggest one since
May 2008.
A Guosen Securities report said the amount of
liquidity in the market is abundant and commercial banks need more channels for
short-term investment. Three-month bill sales helped broaden the channels.
Analysts said the central bank might continue to
drain funds from the market as new yuan-denominated loans reached about 2. 5
trillion yuan in the first two months, but it will leave it on track to conduct
a small net injection into the market in March as several previous sales will be
due this month.