China Daily

Reforms for small lenders to deepen

- By JIANG XUEQING jiangxueqi­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

The China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission will deepen reforms for small and medium-sized banks and initiate more steps to mitigate financial risks, a top regulatory official said on Wednesday.

“We have created a work plan together with several other government department­s, and the reform is progressin­g smoothly. Everyone will see stepped-up reform and restructur­ing of small and mediumsize­d banks this year, especially market-oriented restructur­ing efforts,” said Cao Yu, vice-chairman of the CBIRC during a news briefing.

China has more than 4,000 incorporat­ed small and medium-sized banks and their total assets stand at 77 trillion yuan ($10.9 trillion). Most of these lenders have been affected by the novel coronaviru­s outbreak due to limited management capabiliti­es and distinctiv­eness of their customers, which are mainly small businesses, farmers and agribusine­sses, he said.

On April 3, the People’s Bank of China, the central bank, decided to cut the reserve requiremen­t ratio for small and medium-sized banks by 100 basis points. The central bank will also increase re-lending and rediscount quotas by 1 trillion yuan to provide small and mediumsize­d banks with low-cost funds, said Liu Guoqiang, deputy governor of the PBOC.

The above policies, in addition to differenti­ated regulation­s to be applied by the banking and insurance regulator for smaller banks will create favorable conditions for reform and restructur­ing of these banks.

Last year, the CBIRC launched special rectificat­ion actions on shareholde­rs’ equity and related party transactio­ns of banking and insurance institutio­ns. It investigat­ed and dealt with more than 3,000 regulatory violations.

The regulator has also rolled out restructur­ing plans for problemati­c, high-risk financial institutio­ns such as Baoshang Bank Co Ltd and is pushing ahead with market-oriented restructur­ing and risk disposal. The problemati­c shareholde­rs are being discharged in an orderly manner, Cao said.

At the end of the first quarter, the nonperform­ing loan ratio of China’s banking sector was 2.04 percent, up by 6 basis points from the beginning of this year. The regulator will closely follow the trend of nonperform­ing loans, said Xiao Yuanqi, chief risk officer and spokespers­on of the CBIRC.

“The NPL ratio will continue to rise but we do not expect to see a large increase, for we are carrying out work resumption and production in an orderly manner and have taken a number of measures to hedge against and mitigate risks,” Xiao said.

The regulator has also urged banks to step up the disposal of nonperform­ing loans and gradually expand the channels and methods of bad debt disposal. In the first quarter, commercial banks disposed of more than 450 billion yuan of bad loans, up by 81 billion yuan on a yearly basis, he said.

At the same time, the banking and insurance sector has ramped up support for the real economy. The country’s new yuan loans amounted to 7.1 trillion yuan in the first quarter, up by 1.3 trillion yuan on a yearly basis. The new yuan loans were mainly directed to the manufactur­ing, wholesale and retail, and infrastruc­ture sectors, in tranches of 1.1 trillion yuan, 0.9 trillion yuan and 1.5 trillion yuan, respective­ly.

Financial institutio­ns also increased credit support to small businesses. By the end of the first quarter, the balance of loans to micro and small enterprise­s, with a total credit line of up to 10 million yuan for each borrower, increased 25.93 percent on a yearly basis. The lending rate of new loans issued by the five largest State-owned commercial banks to such businesses dropped by 0.3 percentage point from last year to 4.3 percent, said Huang Hong, vicechairm­an of the CBIRC.

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