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Be prudent, Chinese regulator urges banks as downturn bites

Published 07/21/2022, 03:31 AM
Updated 07/21/2022, 05:41 AM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A general view of the Central Business District, including the Bank of China Tower (center L) and China Construction Bank (CCB) Tower are seen from a Star Ferry in Hong Kong's Victoria Harbour December 26,2014. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu

BEIJING (Reuters) -China's financial sector will gradually feel the impact of the country's economic downturn, the banking and insurance regulator said on Thursday, urging banks to make adequate provisions for souring assets and classify risk prudently.

China's economic growth slowed sharply in the second quarter, to just 0.4% year-on-year, weighed down by COVID-19 lockdowns and curbs as the highly transmissible Omicron variant spread.

"Affected by complex domestic and international situations, the downward pressure on the economy will gradually be reflected in the financial sector," Liu Zhongrui, a China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission (CBIRC) official told a news conference.

Outstanding non-performing loans (NPLs) in the commercial banking sector stood at 2.95 trillion yuan ($436 billion), an increase of 106.9 billion yuan from the end of the first quarter, according to a CBIRC statement.

China's small and medium-sized lenders disposed of 594.5 billion yuan of bad loans in the first six months, an increase of 118.4 billion yuan from a year earlier, CBIRC spokesperson Qi Xiang told the news conference.

In June alone, the figure was 200.2 billion yuan, according to Reuters calculations.

Aside from NPLs, the banking sector has been grappling with widespread banking fraud that fanned concerns over banks' capitalisation.

The CBIRC is working with the finance ministry and central bank to accelerate the issuance of special local government bonds to help supplement the capital of small and medium-sized banks, State-backed China Banking and Insurance News reported.

The banking sector has also been hit by a widening mortgage-payment boycott by homebuyers protesting over unfinished real estate projects.

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CBIRC's Liu said sector policies would be kept consistent and stable as an orderly property market would better meet the reasonable demand for housing purchases.

On Sunday, regulators urged banks to meet property developers' financing needs where reasonable.

"A rise in the number of Chinese homebuyers ceasing mortgage payments on properties where construction has been suspended for a prolonged period could weaken banks' asset quality," Fitch Ratings said on Tuesday.

($1 = 6.7630 Chinese yuan renminbi)

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