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Chinese Banks: The Path to Reform

Chinese Banks: The Path to Reform. Dan Fineman International Supervision and Analysis Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco March 2007. Overview. China entered the 21st century with one of Asia’s largest but least-advanced banking sectors

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Chinese Banks: The Path to Reform

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  1. Chinese Banks: The Path to Reform Dan Fineman International Supervision and Analysis Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco March 2007

  2. Overview • China entered the 21st century with one of Asia’s largest but least-advanced banking sectors • Important reforms have been implemented that have enhanced financial sector stability • But even more difficult reforms are needed to help banks catch up with the rest of the region in terms of efficiency, profitability, corporate governance and credit administration • Bank reform is important for China’s long-term growth and economic health

  3. Why Banks Matter Bank Loans vs. Corporate Bonds Outstanding RMB tr Bank loans Corporate bonds Source: Bank for International Settlements, IMF

  4. Reforms Implemented So Far

  5. The Pre-Reform System • Only four banks, all 100% state-owned • Policy lending prevailed • Little lending to consumers or private sector • High non-performing loans • Poor risk management

  6. Big 4 Monopoly Broken Big 4 Banks Market Share % Source: People's Bank of China, China Bank. Reg. Commission

  7. State Recapitalizes Banks 2003 2004 2005 2007 1998 1999 Source: Centre D'Etude Prospectives et D'Informations Internationales

  8. Balance Sheets Cleansed Major Bank Non-Performing Loans Source: China Banking Regulatory Commission

  9. Foreigners Rush to Buy Stakes Source: News reports, FRBSF

  10. Most Big Banks Now Listed Source: News reports, FRBSF calculations

  11. Banks Shifting to Consumer Lending Financial Inst. Consumer Loans as Percent of Bank Loans % Source: CEIC, FRBSF calculations

  12. WTO Commitments • Foreign banks allowed to conduct local-currency business as of this year • Global banks giving China a high priority • Although rapid market share gains unlikely, market liberalization is increasing pressures on local banks to reform

  13. Improved Supervision • New regulator – China Banking Regulatory Commission • Tighter accounting standards • Crackdown on fraud and poor banking practices

  14. Remaining Problems

  15. Rapid Loan Growth Raises Concerns Bank loan growth % Source: CEIC, FRBSF calculations

  16. Big Banks Remain in State Hands State Ownership of Top Five Chinese Banks % Source: Bank financial statements, Bloomberg

  17. Biggest State Role in Asia Government Links to Top Five Banks of Selected Countries # Source: Fitch, FRBSF

  18. Problems with Credit Administration • Policy lending continues • Decentralized approval process • Undeveloped credit culture • Inadequate credit data

  19. Market Mechanisms Weak • Interest rates not responsive to market needs • Thin derivatives and capital markets • Insufficient attention to profitability

  20. What Bank Reform Means for Business • More stable economic environment • A more vibrant private sector • Stronger consumer sector

  21. Conclusion • The pace of bank reform has accelerated the past three years • The authorities are committed to further reform • But serious obstacles to continued reform lie ahead. These obstacles are internal to the banks and inherent in the political and economic system

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