At a joint seminar, the central banks of China and S. Korea express their strong opposition to the U.S. Federal Reserve's QE III program. Bank of Korea Governor Kim Choong-soo said: "The rise in global liquidity could lead to rapid capital inflows into emerging markets including South Korea and China and push up global raw material prices. Therefore Korea and China need to make concerted efforts to minimize the negative spillover effect arising from monetary policies of advanced nations." For China this makes its own policy decisions harder. Chen Yulu, adviser to the central bank People's Bank of China says about inflation and bubble fears: "on the one hand China needs to stabilize growth, but on the other hand China is very worried about a property price rebound." Slowing growth makes the capital inflows smaller but the concerns persist for the longer term effects of the U.S. Fed's QE programs.