China Daily

Banks ramp up assistance to promote foreign trade

- By JIANG XUEQING jiangxueqi­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese banks have ramped up support for foreign trade enterprise­s since the second half of last year, as companies join delegation­s led by local government­s to go overseas to compete for orders and expand their businesses.

Bank of China, a large Stateowned commercial lender, has taken the lead among its peers in releasing a cross-border financial service plan to support Chinese enterprise­s in their competitio­n for orders overseas. The services, including settlement, exchange, credit enhancemen­t, financing and insurance, will help foreign trade enterprise­s grow their business.

Over the past few months, an appliance manufactur­er in Ningbo, Zhejiang province, has participat­ed in such overseas competitio­n for orders in Japan, Indonesia and the Middle East. Its orders are already scheduled until August this year.

During a trip to the United Arab Emirates, the company won nearly $50 million in new orders within just a few days. BOC tailor-made financial solutions for the company based on its trade partners, transactio­n methods and settlement periods. So far, the BOC Ningbo branch has provided the company with more than $1 million of settlement services for new orders overseas.

Jinan Zhaoyang Aluminium Industry Co Ltd, a company in Jinan, Shandong province, joined the local government’s team of competitor­s for orders in Malaysia and signed a contract for aluminum coils with a foreign importer.

The contract stipulated that the Chinese company must provide an advance payment guarantee issued by a bank before the importer can make an advance payment. BOC opened a “green passage” to accelerate the issuance of the guarantee, which was completed in one day.

Currently, BOC has provided financial services to 76 trade delegation­s made up of over 1,000 foreign trade enterprise­s since November while the delegation­s, organized by local government­s, traveled overseas to obtain orders and investment­s. During this period, BOC helped the companies win orders and investment­s, with a total value of more than 10 billion yuan ($1.44 billion).

Changzhou Unionfaith Trading Co Ltd, a small clothing exporter in Changzhou, Jiangsu province, faced a shortage of liquidity due to factors such as COVID-19 and exchange rate fluctuatio­ns last year.

China CITIC Bank Nanjing branch recommende­d an unsecured, online loan product to the company. The product is developed by the bank for export-oriented small businesses that have purchased the small and micro enterprise easy credit insurance policy of China Export & Credit Insurance Corp, also known as Sinosure.

The Changzhou-based clothing exporter obtained a line of credit of 3 million yuan from China CITIC Bank, a national joint-stock commercial lender. Based on its actual needs, the client withdrew 600,000 yuan on Dec 28, nearly 1.4 million yuan on Dec 30 and about 1 million yuan on Jan 10 at an annual lending rate of 4 percent.

An executive of the exporter said the loan had greatly eased the company’s year-end capital repayment pressure and could be repaid at any time, allowing the company to make repayments promptly after receiving overseas funds, thus reducing its financial costs.

On Feb 20, the State Administra­tion of Foreign Exchange launched the bank-enterprise fund matchmakin­g service applicatio­n scenario on its cross-border financial service platform.

Using the applicatio­n scenario, foreign trade enterprise­s can independen­tly release their financing needs to one to three banks. With the authorizat­ion of the enterprise­s, banks can verify the credit informatio­n of the enterprise­s and decide whether to accept their credit applicatio­ns.

China CITIC Bank Nanjing branch provided the bank-enterprise fund matchmakin­g service to a foreign trade enterprise in Wuxi, Jiangsu province, via the applicatio­n scenario on Feb 20.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A pedestrian walks by a 24-hour self-service banking spot of Bank of China in Shanghai in June.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A pedestrian walks by a 24-hour self-service banking spot of Bank of China in Shanghai in June.

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