Abstract:China's December financial data reveals a widening gap between M2 and M1 money supply, indicating that while credit is being supplied, it remains trapped in the financial system rather than flowing into real economic activity.

People's Bank of China (PBOC) data released Thursday underscores a persistent structural challenge for the world's second-largest economy: a liquidity trap where credit supply fails to stimulate velocity.
The widening divergence between M2 and M1 suggests that while the central bank is pumping liquidity into the banking system, households and corporations are hoarding cash in time deposits rather than spending or investing.
Conclusion: Until the M1 growth rate accelerates—signaling a return of business confidence and capital turnover—stimulus measures are likely to have a diminishing marginal return on real GDP growth and commodity demand.