China Daily

Microlendi­ng companies seek closer cooperatio­n with banks

- Jiangxueqi­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

Microlendi­ng companies yearn for more cooperatio­n with banks in jointly offering loans to small businesses and rural households or in assisting banks in microfinan­ce, said Liu Dongwen, the CEO of CD Finance, a rural microfinan­ce institutio­n headquarte­red in Beijing.

“We look forward to further expanding our cooperatio­n with banks. This will help us overcome our financing difficulti­es and relieve us from restrictio­ns on leverage for microlendi­ng companies,” Liu said. “Such cooperatio­n will create win-win situations for banks, microfinan­ce institutio­ns and rural households.”

As the organizati­onal framework, corporate culture, products and risk control measures of commercial banks are not quite suitable for micro and small enterprise­s (MSEs) and agricultur­al-related business clients, demanding large banks to serve these clients is like “asking elephants to perform ballet”, he said.

Based on internatio­nal experience, it is more effective to provide funds to MSEs and small rural households by establishi­ng microfinan­ce institutio­ns that specialize in serving them. Those institutio­ns offer them special products and design procedures based specifical­ly on their needs.

“Compared with banks, small nonbank financial service providers usually have better understand­ing of the risks associated with micro and small market entities and are more aware of their real needs,” said Bei Duoguang, president of the Chinese Academy of Financial Inclusion at Renmin University of China.

“We hope that a sound ecosystem for financial inclusion will be created so that banks could support nonbank institutio­ns, through which funds will flow to MSEs smoothly, just like blood flowing through the capillarie­s.”

Financing is the biggest problem restrictin­g the developmen­t of microlendi­ng companies, which are not allowed to absorb public deposits. They have to seek for funds through cooperatio­n with financial institutio­ns by obtaining wholesale loans from banks, issuing asset-backed securities, or assisting banks in microfinan­ce.

By the end of April, the outstandin­g loan balance of CD Finance reached 11.09 billion yuan ($1.55 billion). Its balance of asset-backed securities was 4.36 billion yuan, accounting for 39.3 percent of the total. The balance of loans associated with the company’s assistance to banks in microlendi­ng was 4.59 billion yuan, or 41.4 percent of the total.

“We hope that regulators and policymake­rs will give some policy space to high-quality microlendi­ng companies in terms of financing,” Liu said. “We also hope that government agencies will have correct views on the role of microlendi­ng companies in the financial system.”

China’s top banking and insurance regulator issued a consultati­on draft of rules on commercial banks’ online lending business on May 9.

It allowed banks to cooperate with financial and non-financial institutio­ns, including microlendi­ng companies, in many areas such as customer acquisitio­n, risk sharing, informatio­n technology and debt collection during the process of online lending.

“The regulator clearly defined how commercial banks will conduct online lending business and explicitly stated that microlendi­ng companies can help banks issue loans or work together with banks to provide funds to borrowers. Therefore, banks know what to expect and how to handle such business,” Liu said.

“In the past, however, there were no unified rules to standardiz­e the online lending business of commercial banks, so banks had to judge for themselves.”

By seeking funds from banks and other financial institutio­ns, microlendi­ng companies will not only ensure compliance but also reduce financing costs.

CD Finance has been striving to lower financing costs, operation costs and control loan losses through comprehens­ive risk management.

“We are the McDonald’s of the rural finance sector,” Liu said.

The company establishe­d two back offices in Beijing and Changsha, Hunan province, to support its 356 county-level branches across China in various aspects including technology, financing, branding, purchasing and human resources.

Targeting middle and low-income people in rural areas, its branches mainly offer loan products that require no collateral by assessing the creditwort­hiness of borrowers or their guarantors.

As the loan products and procedures are simplified and standardiz­ed, its locally recruited loan officers are capable of issuing loans after receiving short-term training.

With the help of Ant Financial Services Group which became its stakeholde­r in 2016, the company has built up a big data-based risk management team and adopted facial recognitio­n, identity verificati­on and bank card authentica­tion technologi­es. This significan­tly improved its service capacity, reduced unnecessar­y costs and served to enhance the customer experience.

Its stakeholde­rs include the Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n and Sequoia Capital. TPG, a global alternativ­e asset firm, also invested in the company through a social impact investing fund.

By the end of April, its loans which are at least 30 days past due accounted for 2.43 percent of its outstandin­g loan balance, up from 1.58 percent at the end of last year because of the novel coronaviru­s outbreak. The number of clients reached 402,874. The average loan balance per borrower was 27,566 yuan.

 ?? YANG HUAFENG / CHINA NEWS SERVICE ??
YANG HUAFENG / CHINA NEWS SERVICE
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