China presses state lenders to curb local government debt risk

Send a link to a friend  Share

[March 30, 2018]  BEIJING (Reuters) - China's Finance Ministry said on Friday state-owned financial firms cannot provide new loans for financing vehicles of local governments, as the government steps up effort to curb local government debt risk.

 

All state-owned financial companies were forbidden from providing any sort of funding for local governments, other than the purchase of their bonds, the ministry said in an online statement.

Authorities are in the second year of an intensifying campaign to reduce risks in the financial system, which includes a crackdown on shadow banking and investigations into hidden debt obligations by local governments.

The ministry said financial institutions' "over-reliance on local governments' creditworthiness" was leading to rising fiscal and financial risks.

State-owned financial institutions must step up scrutiny over infrastructure projects and make sure borrowers could use their own operating cash flow to cover all principle and interest of outstanding debt.

Lenders were forbidden from requiring or accepting any form of guarantee from local governments for financing.

While financial firms rectify their existing local government illicit financing projects, they were forbidden from "blindly" recalling or suspending loans, the ministry said, out of concern that could disrupt cash flows.

(Reporting by Beijing Monitoring Desk, Yawen Chen and Shu Zhang; Editing by Edmund Blair)

[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved.]

Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.  Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.

 

Back to top