China Daily (Hong Kong)

Lenders to get more tools for financing

- By JIANG XUEQING jiangxueqi­ng@ chinadaily.com.cn

China will support innovation of financial instrument­s to further expand channels for capital replenishm­ent at commercial banks, looking to ease lenders’ capital pressure and improve their ability to serve the real economy.

The country’s financial regulators and the central bank jointly announced the decision on Monday in a notice posted on the website of the China Banking Regulatory Commission.

Regulators said they will improve the supporting rules to create favorable conditions for banks to replenish capital via instrument­s including non-fixed-term bonds and convertibl­e tier 2 bonds.

In addition to simplifyin­g procedures of regulatory approval for the issuance of such instrument­s, they will also expand the community of institutio­nal investors to the social security fund, insurance companies, securities brokerages and fund management firms.

On the same day the decision was made public, Agricultur­al Bank of China Ltd, the country’s third-largest commercial lender by assets, announced a plan to raise up to 100 billion yuan ($15.8 bil- lion) by issuing 27.47 billion A-shares to a target group that includes existing shareholde­rs, such as the Ministry of Finance and the State-owned investment company Central Huijin Investment Ltd. All the money raised, with relevant issuance expenses deducted, will be used to replenish the bank’s core tier 1 capital.

Several other listed banks are taking similar actions. On March 5, China’s securities regulator gave the nod to the Wujiang Rural Commercial Bank headquarte­red in Suzhou, Jiangsu province, for its plan to raise 2.5 billion yuan through the issuance of A-share convertibl­e bonds. Bank of Jiangsu Co Ltd also announced on Feb 3 it will issue A-share convertibl­e bonds of up to 20 billion yuan.

“Both large and small banks are facing pressure for capital replenishm­ent due to different reasons,” said Xiong Qiyue, a research fellow at the Institute of Internatio­nal Finance at the Bank of China Ltd. “Large banks, especially global systemical­ly important banks, will follow higher capital requiremen­ts according to internatio­nal standards. Small banks have to set aside more loan loss provisions for some previously off-balance sheet activities, which will appear on their balance sheet because of regulatory tightening on shadow banking.”

If banks experience a relatively huge capital pressure, their ability to offer credit will become limited and this will cause a lack of financial support to the real economy. So regulators need to expand channels for banks’ capital replenishm­ent to ensure that banks will satisfy the financial demands of the real economy, said Zeng Gang, director of banking research at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences’ Institute of Finance and Banking.

In the past, as China has limited instrument­s for capital replenishm­ent, additional tier 1 capital, a measure to describe the capital adequacy of a bank, accounted for about 5 percent of the total capital at China’s four largest commercial banks on average. However, the average for global systemical­ly important banks is around 15 percent, said Xiong with the Bank of China.

He noted that large banks that have stronger abilities are likely to explore innovative instrument­s for capital replenishm­ent, while small banks will still rely on traditiona­l measures.

According to China’s banking regulation­s, for global systemical­ly important banks, the capital adequacy ratio should not be lower than 11.5 percent at the end of 2018. The tier 1 capital adequacy ratio and core tier 1 capital adequacy ratio should be at least 9.5 percent and 8.5 percent respective­ly. The capital requiremen­ts for other banks will be 1 percentage point lower.

 ?? FENG JIANGJIANG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? An employee of Agricultur­al Bank of China Ltd helps a client at an outlet of the bank in Zhenjiang, Jiangsu province.
FENG JIANGJIANG / FOR CHINA DAILY An employee of Agricultur­al Bank of China Ltd helps a client at an outlet of the bank in Zhenjiang, Jiangsu province.

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