BEIJING: Chinese banks are facing the threat of rising bad loans in the future as the current economic recovery is unbalanced and lacks a solid foundation, the country’s top banking and insurance watchdog said on Wednesday.
Outstanding non-performing loans in the banking sector stood at 3.5 trillion yuan (RM2.27 trillion) by end of June, an increase of 108.3 billion yuan from the beginning of the year, while the bad loan ratio declined to 1.86%, Liu Zhongrui, an official at the statistics department of China Banking and Regulatory Commission (CBIRC), told reporters in Beijing.
China has implemented monetary and fiscal policies since last year to support an economy jolted by the Covid-19 pandemic. Financial institutions were encouraged to lower rates for virus-stricken firms, and relief measures were rolled out to give borrowers breathing space during the crisis.
The regulator has been guiding banks to increase provisions and ramp up disposals of bad assets, said Liu, with the size of bad loans disposed of in the first half expected to be larger than that in the same period last year, said Liu.
Chinese banks are expected to see an increase in profit growth in the first half of this year due to a low comparison with the previous year when the Covid-19 pandemic disrupted businesses, Liu said.
Total assets of the banking sector rose 9.2% year-on-year to 328.8 trillion yuan by the end of June, while total liabilities grew 9.1% to 301 trillion yuan, the regulator said.
The regulator also saw the growth of property loans decline to 10.3% as the government curbs financing in the overheated sector to prevent risks. It also said it will strengthen its regulatory oversight on the financial arms of large internet platform companies to contain âdisorderly capital expansionâ.
In another development, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) asked some commercial banks on Monday about their demand for medium-term lending facility (MLF) loans, two market sources with direct knowledge of the matter said on Wednesday.
A batch of 400 billion yuan worth of one-year MLF loans is due to mature on Thursday, and the central bank said it would use some of the funds freed from its cut to banks’ reserve requirements, effective on July 15, to repay the debt.
The PBOC said on Friday that it would cut the amount of cash that banks must hold as reserves, releasing around 1 trillion yuan in long-term liquidity to underpin its post-Covid economic recovery that is starting to lose momentum.
It was not clear how much cash from the RRR cut would be used to repay the maturing MLF loans.
And the sources said such MLF queries did not guarantee MLF operations. â Reuters









