China Daily (Hong Kong)

Banks in race to stay healthy

Divergence in performanc­e of State banks, private lenders to increase this year

- By JIANG XUEQING jiangxueqi­ng@ chinadaily.com.cn

Divergence in the performanc­e of large State-owned lenders and private-sector listed banks in China will increase this year, and liabilitie­s will be in focus as competitio­n among them heats up, analysts said.

“The net interest margin is the most crucial driver of divergence in bank performanc­e in 2018,” said Sophie Jiang, a banking analyst at Nomura. “Compared with large State-owned commercial banks, joint-stock commercial lenders will continuous­ly face greater pressure on liabilitie­s this year. The pressure will have negative impact on NIM figures for joint-stock commercial banks and restrain their credit growth to a certain extent.”

According to a Nomura forecast, as at the end of 2017, the NIM, a performanc­e metric that examines a bank’s profitabil­ity, dropped by 32 basis points for small banks. The NIM for large banks, on the contrary, increased by 2 basis points.

This year, Nomura analysts expect the NIM of joint-stock commercial lenders to stay flat while that of large banks to expand by 6 basis points, considerin­g that the cost of deposits will remain relatively stable for large banks, Jiang said.

Agreed Chen Haowu, a banking analyst at Everbright Securities Co Ltd. “Thanks to their advantages in liabilitie­s and their power to increase lending rates in line with market conditions, the NIM for large banks will

Joint-stock commercial lenders will continuous­ly face greater pressure on liabilitie­s this year.”

Sophie Jiang,

enlarge by 5 to 10 basis points this year, while that of jointstock commercial lenders will remain stable in general,” said Chen in a research report on Jan 2.

Fu Yang, an analyst with AVIC Securities Co Ltd, also expects to see bank divergence increasing due to varying degrees of increase in cost of deposits.

“We believe cost of deposits will rise significan­tly for those joint-stock and city commercial banks, of which interbank liabilitie­s account for a large proportion of their liabilitie­s. But we won’t see a big change in such cost for State-owned and rural commercial banks,” said Fu in a recent report.

China’s banking regulators have tightened control over the risks associated with interbank, wealth management and off-balance-sheet businesses.

Mainly focusing on the deposit and lending business, State-owned banks and rural commercial lenders are less reliant on interbank liabilitie­s, so they will not be much affected by macro-prudential regulation and new rules on the issuance of certificat­es of deposit in the interbank market. Certain joint-stock and city commercial banks, however, have a large amount of CDs and are more easily affected by regulation­s, said Fu in the report.

“Next, although the deepening of financial deleveragi­ng and the strengthen­ing of banking regulation will have a certain negative impact on banks’ net profit or their return on equity in the short term, these factors will be favorable for valuation recovery of the banking sector,” said Jiang of Nomura.

Chinese banks are remarkably undervalue­d, compared with their European and US counterpar­ts, said Jiang.

“China’s efforts to deleverage and step up banking regulation will mitigate future risks, giving investors stronger confidence in the ROE (return on equity) of the Chinese banking sector, which currently stands at 14 percent on average,” she said.

As of Feb 5, 16 listed banks in China had released their preliminar­y earnings estimates for 2017, and 11 of them said they will likely post double-digit net profit growth year-on-year.

For most of them, the asset quality, it appears, will stabilize, when final figures for 2017 are confirmed. At the end of December, the nonperform­ing loan ratio of 15 listed banks dropped from the end of 2016 or the beginning of 2017.

 ?? WU CHANGQING / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Salespeopl­e promote financial services at the stall of private-sector, listed China Zheshang Bank, which is headquarte­red in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, at an internatio­nal finance expo in Beijing.
WU CHANGQING / FOR CHINA DAILY Salespeopl­e promote financial services at the stall of private-sector, listed China Zheshang Bank, which is headquarte­red in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, at an internatio­nal finance expo in Beijing.

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