Chinese banks to feel fund-raising pain as investors fear bad loans
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[December 28, 2020] By
Ryan Woo, Cheng Leng and Zhang Yan
BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese banks are
expected to face headwinds raising funds next year as profit-conscious
investors cling to the sidelines, expecting a wave of bad loans to
hammer the sector and erode already slimming margins.
The sector is ending its worst annual performance in years after putting
aside record provisions due to COVID-19 while Beijing urged banks to
sacrifice profits to help the economy.
Next year as lenders end pandemic-related loan forbearance - which let
borrowers suspend repayments or pay less in interest - banks must
bolster their capital against loans previously not classified as
nonperforming.
Big and medium-sized lenders also need to improve their capital adequacy
as demanded by global and domestic watchdogs.
China's banks raised 1.2 trillion yuan ($18 billion) in the first 11
months of the year, off the pace of 1.5 trillion yuan for all of 2019,
data from Fitch Ratings shows.
The 26 listed banks may need to replenish at least 1.25 trillion yuan of
capital in 2021, Shenzhen-based brokerage Guosheng Securities estimates.
"The pressure of capital-raising for the whole banking industry is still
pretty big," said Vivian Xue, Fitch's director of Asia-Pacific financial
institutions. "China's largest banks will need to raise substantial
capital or loss-absorbing debt over the next few years."
The four largest - Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, China
Construction Bank, Agricultural Bank of China and Bank of China - face a
shortfall in this loss-absorbing debt of 4.7 trillion yuan by the end of
2024 to meet requirements set by the Basel-based Financial Stability
Board, according to Fitch.
In the scenario, Fitch assumes risk-weighted assets including loans will
grow 8% annually.
The Group of 20 big economies adopted "total loss-absorbing capacity" in
2015 as a standard to help ensure the world's largest financial
institutions have the resources for any restructuring while minimising
support from public funds.
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People walk past the skyline of the Central Business District (CBD)
on the day that Chinese leaders elaborate on their 14th Five-Year
plan following an outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in
Beijing, China, October 30, 2020. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
SMALLER BANKS
But China's more than 4,000 smaller and unlisted banks have more acute funding
needs, analysts say, despite 200 billion yuan of local government special bonds
this year aimed at helping recapitalise regional banks.
"Smaller banks will have a bigger gap," said analyst Wang Jian at Guosen
Securities.
Fund-raising tools include tier-two bonds, perpetual bonds for bigger banks,
public share offerings, strategic capital injections and government-led
investments for smaller lenders.
Despite the array of options, banks face challenges in gaining investors'
interest.
"Small banks will have trouble winning recognition from investors," said analyst
Wang Yifeng at Everbright Securities.
Investors have been lukewarm to bank IPOs due to their poor share performance,
said Dai Zhifeng, an analyst with Zhongtai Securities.
Mainland banking shares have fallen 6.5% this year, even as China's broader
market surged 22%.
Concern about credit risks at smaller lenders, following the seizure of Baoshang
Bank, has also chilled confidence in capital instruments issued by regional
banks, Dai said.
On the retail end of fund-raising, mainly via deposit products, big lenders will
be favoured over regional ones.
Urban and rural commercial banks will have a harder time attracting deposits due
to a weak client base and regulatory crackdowns on high-yield deposits.
($1 = 6.5302 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(Reporting by Cheng Leng, Zhang Yan and Ryan Woo; Editing by William Mallard)
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