Exclusive: Chinese banks prepare contingency plans over
threat of U.S. sanctions, sources say
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[July 09, 2020] By
Cheng Leng, Julie Zhu and Engen Tham
BEIJING/HONG KONG/SHANGHAI (Reuters) -
Chinese state lenders are revamping contingency plans in anticipation of
U.S. legislation that could penalise banks for serving officials who
implement the new national security law for Hong Kong, sources at five
state financial institutions said.
In worst-case scenarios under consideration by the Bank of China
<601988.SS> <3988.HK> and Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC)
<601398.SS> <1398.HK>, the lenders are looking at the possibility of
being cut off from U.S. dollars or losing access to U.S. dollar
settlements, two sources said.
The dollar is the dominant global currency for international payments
and central bank reserves.
"We are hoping for the best, but preparing for the worst. You never know
how things will turn out," one of the sources said.
Reflecting concern over the erosion of the former British colony's
autonomy, the U.S. House and Senate unanimously passed the bill last
week. It has yet to be signed into law by President Donald Trump.
The bill calls for sanctions on Chinese officials and others who help
violate Hong Kong's autonomy and on financial institutions that do
business with them. But it does not spell out what the sanctions would
look like.
"There are sanctions in this bill which could be interpreted to prevent
a bank from clearing some dollar transactions via U.S. institutions, but
unlike other congressional sanctions bills there are not specific
provisions mandating it," said Nick Turner, a lawyer specialising in
sanctions and anti-money laundering at Steptoe & Johnson in Hong Kong.
He said it remained to be seen whether the law would be used in such a
way.
In a milder scenario being looked at by the Agricultural Bank of China (AgBank)
<601288.SS> <1288.HK>, lenders would need to find ways to address the
problem of clients blacklisted by the United States, especially those
who might face a sudden loss of liquidity, a third source said.
The sources all declined to be named as the planning is confidential.
Bank of China, ICBC and AgBank did not immediately respond to Reuters
requests for comment.
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A general view of the financial Central district in Hong Kong, China
July 25, 2019. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu/File Photo
LEASING FIRMS TOO
The contingency planning has been initiated by the banks themselves, three of
the sources said.
The People's Bank of China and the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory
Commission, top financial regulators overseeing country's financial stability
and the banking sector, did not immediately respond to Reuters requests for
comment.
The worst-case scenario under consideration by the Bank of China also envisions
what would happen in the event of a run on its branches in Hong Kong if
customers feared that it would run out of U.S. currency, one of the sources
said.
It is also looking at the experience of banks in Iran, the same person said.
Iranian banks have been hit from time to time by U.S. sanctions dating back to
the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
Bank of China, the country's most international lender, had the biggest exposure
of the country's big four lenders to the greenback at the end of 2019, with
about $433 billion in liabilities.
China's top four banks, which also include ICBC, China Construction Bank
<601939.SS> <0939.HK> and AgBank, had a combined 7.5 trillion yuan ($1 trillion)
in U.S. dollar liabilities at the end of 2019, annual reports show.
The sources also said that least three state-run leasing firms, including an
ICBC unit and CSIC Leasing, are also making contingency plans. Leasing firms are
often heavily reliant on dollar borrowing to fund purchases of aircraft,
machinery and facilities.
ICBC Leasing and CSIC Leasing did not immediately respond to requests for
comment.
(Reporting by Cheng Leng in Beijing, Julie Zhu in Hong Kong and Engen Tham in
Shanghai; Additional reporting by Alun John, Kane Wu, Zhang Yan and Beijing
Newsroom; Editing by Tony Munroe and Edwina Gibbs)
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