Shanghai Daily

Fitch sees rebound in non-bank lending

- Tracy Li FINANCE

FITCH Ratings expects China’s non-bank consumer credit to return to growth this year after a sharp decline in 2018, as demand for online consumer loans remains strong and the government still aims for nonbanks to support its efforts to promote inclusive finance to the under-banked population.

That said, the authoritie­s are unlikely to roll back the steps taken to improve oversight and contain risks in the sector, which makes a strong rebound unlikely, the rating agency noted in its latest report.

China’s non-bank consumer loans doubled to stand at around 3 trillion yuan (US$440 billion) or 6 percent of the country’s total household debt, from the end of 2015 to the end of the first half of 2018, the report said. However, most of that growth came before regulation started to tighten in late 2017.

China has intensifie­d its crackdown on consumer credit in the “shadow banking” sector since December 2017, with stricter rules introduced on cash loans, such as a 36 percent ceiling for the annual percentage rate.

The regulators also introduced higher capital requiremen­ts on micro-credit originator­s.

Under regulatory pressure, many irregular lenders have exited the market, while stronger players have adjusted to ensure compliance with new requiremen­ts and diversifie­d away from the compliance-heavy cash loan business.

Ant Financial, a leading nonbank consumer lender and asset-backed security issuer, for example, has raised significan­t capital for its two micro-credit subsidiari­es and scaled back its cash loan product, Jiebei.

An asset-backed security is a financial security collateral­ized by a pool of assets such as loans, leases, credit card debt, royalties or receivable­s.

Due to the close scrutiny placed on web-based micro-lenders, China saw its peer-to-peer lending fall particular­ly sharply last year, from a peak of 1 trillion yuan at the end of 2017 to around 750 billion yuan at the end of 2018.

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