China's top banks tighten exposure to smaller peers to curb credit risk,
sources say
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[January 03, 2024] (Reuters)
- Some of China's top banks have sharpened scrutiny of smaller peers'
asset quality and have tightened standards for interbank lending, three
sources said, in an effort to curb credit risk as a deepening property
debt crisis ripples through the economy.
Two of China's biggest state-owned banks and a leading joint-stock bank
have stepped up reviews of smaller lenders over the past couple of
months to identify those with poor asset quality and have a high risk of
default, the sources said.
The two state-owned banks have decided to reduce interbank lending
limits and set shorter maturity periods for smaller peers deemed high
risk, said two of the sources.
All the sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to the
sensitivity of the issue, have direct knowledge of the matter.
The move comes amid growing worries about the health of the smaller
banks in the world's second-largest economy, as a deepening property
sector crisis and ballooning local government debt make them the weak
link in the financial system.
The cautious approach taken by some big banks in dealing with smaller
peers could exacerbate capital woes for the latter as they have fewer
other fundraising options, which could force Beijing to step in with
more supportive measures.
While the larger Chinese banks mainly use customer deposits - a stable
and long-term funding source - to make loans, in recent years smaller
lenders have been aggressively borrowing from local rivals to raise
funds.
China's mid-sized and smaller banks account for roughly half of the
trading volume in the interbank lending market, data from the China
Foreign Exchange Trade System (CFETS), which is overseen by the central
bank, showed.
One of the sources, a senior official at the leading joint-stock bank
which is among those to review credit exposure to smaller peers, said
the bank had tightened its criteria for lending to smaller banks.
As part of that, it has stopped purchasing bonds issued by smaller banks
that have total assets below $40 billion, said the source.
The People's Bank of China (PBOC) and the National Financial Regulatory
Administration, the watchdog overseeing all aspects of China's $63
trillion financial sector, did not respond to Reuters request for
comment.
LIQUIDITY GAP
As China grappled with the impact of the slowing economy on the
financial system, the local authorities have been taking measures to
support the banking system, especially the smaller ones to maintain
financial stability.
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Pedestrians are seen behind the logo of Bank of China on its ATM
machine in Beijing, China, March 28, 2016.REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File
Photo
As part of those measures to prevent financial risks, some of
China's local governments sold record amounts of so-called special
bonds last year to inject capital into troubled small regional
lenders.
The state media reported last month, citing the Central Economic
Work Conference held on Dec. 11-12, during which top leaders set
economic targets for 2024, that it was necessary to effectively
resolve risks in small and medium-sized banks.
Although roughly 4,000 small banks are not by themselves seen as a
systemic risk, the concern is that enough of them have largely
funded themselves via short-term money market borrowing, posing a
collective danger in the event a few of them fail.
Greater use of interbank lending for funding purposes makes banks
more sensitive to counterparty risk.
While the country's Big Five banks, including the likes of
Industrial and Commercial Bank of China and Bank of China, dominate
the sector, smaller banks still account for a quarter of assets,
according to regulatory data.
The second source at one of the big state-owned banks said some of
the small lenders his firm had reviewed and deemed risky were in
highly indebted areas such as parts of Northeast China, the Inner
Mongolia region, and Henan province.
Rates for negotiable certificates of deposit (NCDs), usually a
routine fundraising tool for small lenders, have risen steadily
since August, partly due to a liquidity gap in recent months amid a
heavy debt supply.
The interest rate on one-year NCDs sold by small and medium-sized
rural commercial banks reached 2.84% in mid-December, the highest
level since August, according to a research note by Chinese
brokerage TF Securities.
In a sign of growing stress, 10 small and medium-sized banks have
defaulted on commercial paper at least three times over six months
last year, according to a statement released on Nov. 30 on the
Shanghai Commercial Paper Exchange website.
The banks include regional lender Ningxia Helan Rural Commercial
Bank Co. Ltd., based in northwest China's Ningxia region, and
Shaanxi Baoji Weibin Rural Commercial Bank Co. Ltd., located in
northern Shanxi province, the statement said.
(Reporting by Reuters Staff; Editing by Sumeet Chatterjee & Shri
Navaratnam)
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