Gulf Times - Gulf Times Business

China mulls a wave of bank mergers to bolster stability

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Chinese authoritie­s are considerin­g a sweeping package of measures to shore up smaller lenders, escalating efforts to contain one of the biggest risks facing the world’s largest banking system.

Problemati­c banks with less than 100bn yuan ($14bn) of assets would be urged to merge or restructur­e under a plan being discussed by financial regulators, people familiar with the matter said.

Local government­s would be held responsibl­e for dealing with troubled lenders, with the central bank providing liquidity support if necessary, the people said, asking not to be identified discussing private informatio­n.

China has more than 3,000 small banks, many of which are struggling to cope with mounting bad loans and a government crackdown on risky funding practices. Authoritie­s have so far taken a piecemeal steps to stabilise the industry, seizing control of one bank in May and orchestrat­ing bailouts for two others.

President Xi Jinping’s government is now laying the groundwork for a more comprehens­ive solution.

The People’s Bank of China didn’t immediatel­y reply to a faxed request for comment. China’s Financial Stability and Developmen­t Committee, which is chaired by Vice Premier Liu He, said in a statement that it held a meeting on Wednesday to deepen reforms for small and medium-sized banks, including by helping them replenish capital. The committee didn’t provide any details or respond to a request for comment.

The reform proposal, which has yet to be finalised, would also compel existing shareholde­rs of troubled banks to buy perpetual bonds to shoulder potential losses, the people said. A UBS Group AG analysis of more than 250 Chinese lenders in July showed they face a potential capital shortfall of 2.4tn yuan. While a major industry consolidat­ion might stabilise weaker institutio­ns and make it easier for financial regulators to monitor risks, it’s unclear whether the plan would do much to address China’s moral hazard problem.

If the nation’s banks get larger through acquisitio­ns, the government may feel even more compelled to rescue those that run into trouble.

China pessimists have argued that the country is headed for a financial crisis because authoritie­s have papered over losses built up during a decade of rapid credit growth.

For the country’s big publicly traded lenders, the proposals could prove a mixed blessing. Firms like Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd may benefit if the measures lead to increased financial stability and allow big banks to snap up smaller rivals on the cheap, but there’s also a risk that they’ll be compelled to absorb some of the industry’s weakest players.

ICBC’s stock slumped to a two-year low in August after the bank injected capital into a troubled regional lender as part of a government-orchestrat­ed rescue. Troubled smaller banks pose increasing risks to the Chinese economy, which is already growing at its weakest pace since the early 1990s, weighed down by a multiyear deleveragi­ng campaign and a trade war with the US.

In the past two weeks, depositors at two small banks rushed to withdraw their cash amid rumours on social media that the lenders were failing. In one case, local authoritie­s had to arrange more than 30bn yuan of liquidity injections.

China’s so-called big four banks – ICBC, Agricultur­al Bank of China Ltd, Bank of China Ltd and China Constructi­on Bank Corp – have also signalled tougher times ahead by boosting provisions against bad loans. Industrywi­de nonperform­ing loans climbed to 2.2tn yuan at the end of June, the highest level in at least 15 years.

 ??  ?? Industrial & Commercial Bank of China branch in Beijing. Banks like ICBC may benefit if the new measures lead to increased financial stability and allow big banks to snap up smaller rivals on the cheap, but there’s also a risk that they’ll be compelled to absorb some of the industry’s weakest players.
Industrial & Commercial Bank of China branch in Beijing. Banks like ICBC may benefit if the new measures lead to increased financial stability and allow big banks to snap up smaller rivals on the cheap, but there’s also a risk that they’ll be compelled to absorb some of the industry’s weakest players.

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