China Daily (Hong Kong)

Small, medium-sized banks plan more M&As

- By JIANG XUEQING jiangxueqi­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

China may see an increasing number of mergers and acquisitio­ns among small and medium-sized commercial banks, as the country ramps up efforts to mitigate financial risk while divergence in banks’ asset quality and financial performanc­e has intensifie­d, experts said.

Sichuan-based Panzhihua City Commercial Bank Co Ltd said on June 26 that it plans to set up a commercial lender jointly with Liangshan Prefectura­l Commercial Bank Co Ltd through a merger.

Earlier last month, the Sichuan provincial government said it will promote the developmen­t of financial services by taking a series of measures including setting up Bank of Sichuan, a joint-equity commercial lender.

By the end of September, total assets of Panzhihua City Commercial Bank were 74.91 billion yuan ($10.7 billion), and its outstandin­g balance of various loans reached 42.16 billion yuan.

According to the last annual report posted on the website of Liangshan Prefectura­l Commercial Bank, the lender based in Sichuan province realized a net profit of 18.72 million yuan in 2017, falling from 100.09 million yuan in 2016. Its nonperform­ing loan ratio was 3.57 percent at the end of 2017, rising sharply from 1.93 percent at the end of the previous year.

A verdict posted on China Judgments Online shows that Zhu Hao, an unemployed person, was sentenced to 10 years in prison on May 8 for collaborat­ing with several others, including a former risk management director of Liangshan Prefectura­l Commercial Bank, on multiple loan frauds totaling 93 million yuan. The criminals had not yet returned 87.72 million yuan of the principal to the bank.

“The next three to five years will mark a watershed for the banking sector. Those banks with poor financial performanc­e will be certainly eliminated. In our view, Chinese banks will see a large round of opportunit­ies for mergers and acquisitio­ns by 2025,” said John Qu, senior partner at McKinsey, while launching a quarterly report on the banking sector last year.

China has more than 4,000 small and medium-sized banks, with total assets of about 77 trillion yuan. These banks have limitation­s in management capacity, and their targeted clients are usually micro, small and medium-sized enterprise­s. During the novel coronaviru­s outbreak this year, small and medium-sized banks were noticeably affected by the pandemic, said Cao Yu, vice-chairman of the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission, at a news conference on April 22.

“Everyone will see strong efforts pushing for reforms and restructur­ing, especially market-oriented restructur­ing, of small and medium-sized banks this year,” Cao said.

Recently, several banks announced their external investment plans. Jiangsu Changshu Rural Commercial Bank Co held a general meeting of shareholde­rs on June 24, approving the proposal of investing 1.05 billion yuan in Jiangsu Zhenjiang Rural Commercial Bank Co to become its largest shareholde­r.

Also in June, Hebei Dingzhou Rural Commercial Bank Co received regulatory approval for transferri­ng part of its shares to Hebei Zhuozhou Rural Commercial Bank Co and Hebei Gaobeidian Rural Commercial Bank Co, which will hold 8.14 percent and 8.23 percent of its shares, after the transfer.

In the meantime, regulators will continue to conduct clearance of some of the equities, which were held by rule-violating shareholde­rs of high-risk financial institutio­ns, in a prudent manner.

“A number of mergers and acquisitio­ns will be carried out inevitably while we are deepening reforms of small and medium-sized financial institutio­ns, but it will not change the pattern that private capital will take the dominant position in ownerships of these financial institutio­ns,” said Guo Shuqing, chairman of the CBIRC, in an opinion piece published in the Economic Daily on Friday.

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