China
orders banks to clear hurdles slowing private sector
lending: sources
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[May 14, 2016]
By Zheng Li and Pete Sweeney
SHANGHAI, May 14 (Reuters) - - China's
banking regulator has sent an urgent notice to banks telling them to
clear bottlenecks slowing lending to private firms, sources with direct
knowledge told Reuters, highlighting rising concern in Beijing about
torpid private investment.
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Chinese banks sharply cut new lending in April after a record
first-quarter credit spree, much of which appeared to go to the
state sector and may have helped inflate asset bubbles in real
estate and commodities.
According to the document seen by Reuters, the China Banking
Regulatory Commission (CBRC) is requiring financial institutions to
conduct checks on their implementation of central government
directives intended to make it easier for private firms to access
bank credit.
It also tells them to work to resolve any problems in cases where
lending support to private enterprise is insufficient, including
small and micro-businesses.
The document requires institutions to report their implementation
results to the regulator by May 20.
The CBRC did not respond to calls seeking comment from Reuters.

The document also called for banks to reduce costs for short-term
credit products such as bridge loans, which private firms rely on to
stay afloat through tough business cycles, while examining risk in
their loan guarantee businesses.
One of the people with direct knowledge of the order said the
important part "is to implement State Council requests and
notifications. The key points are areas where policy solutions have
not been put into place, or measures have not been introduced,
impacting private investment's stable and sustainable growth."
PRIVATE INVESTMENT CRUCIAL
A broad measure of investment - fixed-asset investment - by private
companies rose just 5.7 percent in the first quarter from a year
earlier, a sharp slowdown from the pace of a year earlier.
In contrast, fixed-asset investment by state-owned firms jumped 23.3
percent.
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Encouraging private investment is crucial for Beijing both because such
investment tends to create more jobs and because such firms are seen as more
efficient users of capital and more innovative in moving up the value chain.
That is in sharp contrast with the inefficient state-owned sector, which has
struggled to produce positive returns on capital invested.
Data shows the proportion of private investment as a share of total social
financing rose from 49.8 in 2012 to 64.2 percent in 2015.
The People's Daily published an interview on May 9 in which it cited an
"authoritative person" saying excessive credit growth in China may lead to
recession.
The article prompted speculation rift is growing within the government about how
to best use credit to support growth. There are concerns that a return to
state-dominated investment programs targeting infrastructure and property - like
that launched in the aftermath of the global financial crisis - will saddle
Chinese banks with even more bad debt.
(Reporting by Li Zheng and Pete Sweeney; Editing by Richard Borsuk)
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