Khaleej Times

Top Chinese banks have long way to go

Mainland banks struggling to compete with rivals in Asia

- Alfred Liu Bloomberg

After spending more than $16 billion on Asian acquisitio­ns in the past decade, China’s banks still have a long way to go before their regional forays start to have a meaningful impact on earnings. Only 9.1 per cent of Asian companies outside China currently have working relationsh­ips with the nation’s top banks for cash management, according to a survey of 848 corporates by research firm East & Partners. Some 14.4 per cent work with the Chinese lenders for trade finance, the survey showed. Given it was a first-time study, the firm had no comparable historical data.

“Definitely, it’s disappoint­ing,” said Jonathan Chng, a senior analyst at East & Partners in Singapore. “They have spent so much money trying to penetrate the overseas market and to expand into non-Chinese corporate customers, but the result is still not very favourable to them.”

While China is already the biggest trading partner for Asian countries from India to Japan, mainland banks have struggled to compete with the wider range of products longestabl­ished rivals in the region such as HSBC Holdings and Standard Chartered offer to customers. The state-owned lenders’ overseas plans — initially intended to support the global use of the yuan and the financing of Chinese infrastruc­ture projects offshore — have taken on greater significan­ce as a weaker economy and rising soured debt hobbles profit growth at home. Growing use of the yuan in internatio­nal business seems to have some bearing on how Asian companies engage with Chinese banks. Some 28.7 per cent of the firms in the East & Partners survey had a working relationsh­ip with the lenders for foreign exchange, the biggest connection to mainland banks. Just over 17 per cent had banking relationsh­ips for investment services, rounding out the four business areas covered by the survey.

Chinese acquisitio­n

The more than $16 billion of Asian acquisitio­ns by Chinese lenders in the past 10 years includes Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd’s purchase of Bank Halim Indonesia, which was completed in 2007, data compiled by Bloomberg show. More recently, China Constructi­on Bank Corp took a controllin­g stake in Indonesia’s PT Bank Windu Kentjana Internatio­nal late last year, while China Minsheng Banking Corp won approval earlier this month to buy Quam Ltd, a Hong Kong-based brokerage and financial-services provider.

ICBC doesn’t provide a breakdown of its Asian profits. Its interim report showed that its overseas business accounted for 6.6 per cent of operating income in the first half of 2015, up from 2.3 per cent in 2006, before its Bank Halim acquisitio­n.

CCB, China’s second-largest bank by assets, is seeking to expand its network to about 40 countries from 24 and increase the overseas contributi­on of pretax profit to five per cent by 2020, according to Chairman Wang Hongzhang. The overseas business only accounted for 1.79 per cent of the firm’s pretax profit in the first half of 2015, up from 0.83 per cent in 2006, exchange filings show.

“We are accelerati­ng the pace to internatio­nalise and to provide global financial services,” CCB’s Wang said in Hong Kong in October. “We are taking the opportunit­y of companies expanding overseas and the renminbi internatio­nalisation to strengthen our global competitiv­e position.”

Operations outside mainland China contribute­d 3.2 per cent of Agricultur­al Bank of China Ltd’s total operating income in the first half of last year, and 23 per cent of Bank of China Ltd.’s pretax income. Bank of China’s Hong Kong unit is the city’s top mortgage lender.

Press officials at ICBC and Bank of China declined to comment, while those at CCB and Agricultur­al Bank didn’t immediatel­y respond to phone calls. Concerns over deteriorat­ing asset quality as the country’s economy slows had dragged shares of the four banks down by an average 15 per cent in Hong Kong this year to Thursday. Bank of China fell 0.7 per cent as of 1.39pm local time on Friday, leading declines among the four lenders.

“In China, although the market is very big, there are a lot more opportunit­ies overseas,” Chng said. Chinese banks “still have a lot of work to do in order to be on the same level as internatio­nal banks.” —

$16b spent on asian acquisitio­ns by Chinese banks in the

past decade

 ?? Bloomberg ?? Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Limited completed purchase of Bank Halim Indonesia in 2007. —
Bloomberg Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Limited completed purchase of Bank Halim Indonesia in 2007. —

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