Chinese banks have made major progress in their campaigns to reduce
non-performing assets in the first half of this year, the China Banking
Regulatory Commission (CBRC) said yesterday.
But the commission warned about fresh difficulties in such efforts,
indicating that new bad loans will likely emerge from fixed asset projects that
have been suspended or cancelled because of the State's recent measures to cool
down frenzied fixed investment growth, reported Wednesday's China Daily.
Non-performing loans (NPLs) at China's major banks - the four State-owned
commercial banks and the 11 joint-stock banks - dropped by 4.44 percentage
points from the end of last year to 1.66 trillion yuan (US$200 billion), or
13.32 per cent of their total lendings, at the end of June.
The four State-owned lenders held 1.52 trillion yuan (US$183 billion) of the
total, or 15.59 per cent of their loan portfolios, the CBRC said. The four banks
are the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, the Bank of China (BOC), the
China Construction Bank (CCB) and the Agricultural Bank of China.
The commission said the major reason for the fast decline of NPLs was massive
disposals at the BOC, the CCB and the Bank of Communications, one of the
joint-stock lenders that is undergoing a major restructuring.
The BOC and CCB, which were chosen at the end of last year by the Chinese
Government for a pilot joint-stock reform and received a combined US$45 billion
recapitalization, sold nearly 280 billion yuan (US$33.7 billion) in NPLs to a
State-owned asset management company in June.
Despite the massive NPL disposals, the CBRC said its task of reducing both
outstanding NPLs and the NPL ratios at major banks this year has got more
difficult as the "loans to some suspended or cancelled projects will create a
new batch of bad loans."
The government has ordered tight credit curbs and land controls this year on
overheated sectors such as steel, cement and aluminium, trying to slow down the
rapid growth in fixed investment and bank loans starting from the latter half of
last year.
A big number of steel and cement plants as well as many other fixed asset
projects like economic development zones and shopping malls have reportedly been
ordered to stop construction.
Analysts have expressed worries such administrative measures will not solve
the problem, although they have had some immediate effect on slowing down fixed
investment and bank loans.
China's broad money supply, which is mainly driven by bank loans, rose by
16.2 per cent in the first half of this year, down by 4.7 percentage points from
a year earlier.