Abstract:The People's Bank of China has kept the Loan Prime Rate unchanged for an eighth consecutive month, defying calls for broad-based easing. The central bank is prioritizing net interest margin stability over headline rate cuts.

Chinas benchmark lending rates remained on hold for the eighth straight month in January 2026, a move that aligns with the People's Bank of China's (PBOC) recent shift toward structural rather than broad-based monetary easing.
The 1-year Loan Prime Rate (LPR) was maintained at 3.0%, and the 5-year LPR at 3.5%. The decision was largely expected, given that the Medium-term Lending Facility (MLF) rates—the precursor to LPR pricing—were left unchanged.
The PBOC is navigating a difficult trade-off. While the real economy requires stimulus, commercial banks are suffering from historically low net interest margins (1.42% as of Q3 2025). Squeezing spreads further by lowering lending rates without cutting deposit rates risks destabilizing the financial sector.
Analysts at Oriental Golden Cheng noted that with the currency relatively stable and the Fed in a cutting cycle, external constraints on China's policy are easing. However, the central bank appears to be saving its ammunition (reserve requirement ratio cuts or rate cuts) for moments of higher impact, preferring to use targeted lending facilities to support specific sectors like tech and manufacturing. Broad-based rate cuts may be delayed until the efficacy of fiscal stimulus becomes clearer.