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Review of IFC’s Role in China’s Financial Sector Transformation. Yanni Chen & Chaoying Liu Development Impact Department March 19 2013. Agenda. Context and Methodology Key findings – Advisory Services Key findings – Local Currency Financing Key findings – Investment Operations
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Review of IFC’s Role in China’s Financial Sector Transformation Yanni Chen & Chaoying Liu Development Impact Department March 19 2013
Agenda • Context and Methodology • Key findings – Advisory Services • Key findings – Local Currency Financing • Key findings – Investment Operations • Conclusions and Lessons Learned
Agenda • Context and Methodology • Key findings – Advisory Services • Key findings – Capital market • Key findings – Investment 5. Conclusion and Lessons Learned
Context • IFC’s engagement in China’s financial sector • China started financial sector reform in 1990s. Successful financial sector reform would have huge impact on the country’s economic development and poverty reduction • 1992 – IFC office in China • 1995 - IFC's Operations and Strategy in China • 2002 – IFC AS facility in Chengdu, Western region of China • 2003 - World Bank and IFC’s country strategy for China • 2007- IFC’s financial sector strategy for China • Operations • First investment to Bank of Shanghai in 1999, 50 Investments in FIs, valued at $1b • AS facility in Western of China - 46 Advisory services projects , valued at $50m • 3 Bond issuances, valued at $300m
Objective of the review • To understand if and in what ways IFC has contributed to the financial sector reform in China • To identify lessons learned for future strategy and operations • First such review in IFC covering IS, AS and treasury operations - focusing on IFC’s contribution
Scope of the review • Advisory Services • Policy work relating to financial infrastructure (secured transactions and credit reporting system), Microfinance, Housing finance, Green credit, and sector-wide capacity building • Investment Operations • Commercial bank investments and Microfinance • Local Currency Financing • Renminbi denominated bond, Swaps facility
Data sources • Primary • Interview: unstructured interviews with over 30 key stakeholders, investment clients, government agencies, and IFC staff • Site visit and in-depth interviews with beneficiaries of IFC’s clients: SME banking, microfinance, RMB-denominated bonds • Secondary • Project documents • Available evaluations and reviews • Media materials
Analytic Framework • Secured Transactions • Credit Reporting • Green Credit • Capital markets • Commercial banks • MFs • Energy Efficiency • Sector-wide capacity building IFC’s intervention Results chain • How IFC contributed to building institution capacity? • How IFC contributed to creating a favorable environment? • How IFC intervention helped improve business access to finance? Storyline
Agenda • Context and Methodology • Key findings – Advisory Services • Secured transactions reform • Credit reporting system • Green credit policy • Sector-wide capacity building • Key findings – Capital market • Key findings – Investment • Conclusions and Lessons Learned
Supported Secured Transactions Reform • Context • 2005/2006 SME survey – 70% SMEs no access to finance due to lack of acceptable collaterals • Lenders’ concern – no proper legal framework, no single registry • $9 trillion in dead capitals locked in SME sector • Intervention • A 5 year collective effort of WB, IFC and Chinese government, costing $1.6m • Legal framework – passed the property laws in 2007 • Infrastructure – a centralized registry • Capacity building – regulators, bankers and public
Supported Secured Transactions Reform Results • Enabled a strong growth of movables financing • Loans secured by movable assets comprise 40% of the total loans in China during 2008-10 vs 4% in 2005 • $3.5 trillion cumulative value of accounts receivable financing as of 2012 • Increased SME lending portfolio - 7 large commercial banks reported 45% in 2008-10 vs. 20% in 06-08 period • Removed barrier for SME access to finance – 68,575 SME received financing secured by accounts receivable over $1 trillion • 60% of the surveyed SMEs believe that without their current access to accounts receivable financing, their business development would be severely impacted
Advised the establishment of Credit Reporting System • Context • Before 2003, China had no consumer credit database • Intervention • A 7 year effort, costing $400,000 • Regulation – PBOC Regulation on Consumer Credit Information Database; CBRC - administrative rules requiring all FIs to report credit information • Infrastructure - Consumer credit information database • International best practice, capacity building
Advised the establishment of Credit Reporting System Results • The largest credit information database in the world built in 2006. By the end of 2010, the database covered more than 777 million individuals • 2007 China was recognized as one of the top 10 reformers in Doing Business • By the end of 2010, the cumulative number of inquiry for 812 million consumer database • Credit reporting system helps enterprises and individuals build up their credit history, and facilitate loans to the lower-end of the market. From 2006 to 2009, the number of enterprises with bank loans increased by 50%; the number of individuals with bank loans increased by 145%.
Promoting Green Credit Policy Intervention • Started in 2007, Provided policy advice to and PBOC and CBRC on formation of Green Credit Policy, eg., Guidelines on Credit Granting for Energy Conservation and Emissions Reduction; Provided training and study tours. Results • IFC’s PS and EP are now well established within key Chinese banks • Green Credit Guidelines launched in 2012 which specified how to integrate energy-efficient financing practices into lending • Demonstration effect The IFC-China Green Credit partnership model has been expanded to Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia and Indonesia • South-South knowledge exchanges • Too early to tell the impact on the ground
Agenda • Methodology • Key findings – Advisory Services • Key findings – Local currency financing • Renminbi denominated bond • Renminbi swap facility • Key findings – Investment • Conclusions and Lessons learned
Local currency financing • Intervention • Renminbi denominated bond • In 2005 IFC and ADB became the first foreign issuer of bonds on the Chinese domestic market through yuan-denominated “Panda Bonds.” • From 2005-2011, in total IFC issued 3 Bonds at valued at $300m or RMB 2.15b. • Renminbi swap facility • In 2011 IFC signed a swap legal agreement with 2 banks and became the first multilateral institution authorized to conduct transactions with Chinese financial institutions in the domestic local-currency swap market • In 2012 Board approved a lend of $50 million to Jiangsu Financial Leasing to be funded through the Swap Facility
Local currency financing Results • Opened the Chinese bond market to international financial institutions • Improved and strengthen regulatory framework • Introduced international good practice • Supported high quality domestic companies with long-term local currency financing, with low interest rate • Job creation, research development, GHG emission reduction • Evaluation of impact on the local capital markets is underway
Agenda • Context and Methodology • Key findings – Advisory Services • Key findings – Local currency financing • Key findings – Investment • Commercial Banking • Microfinance • Conclusions and Lessons Learned
Context in the 1990’s • Financial sector dominated by banks • Banking sector dominated by the “Big Four” state-owned banks • High NPLs in banking sector: 25-40% • Regulation prohibits foreign investment in banks • No foreign banks were interested • Bank loans most important source to firms • No access to finance for SMEs: 1% bank loans to private sector
What Did IFC Do?- Advisory + Sector level seminars and training programs Presentations to the banking regulator
Results • Demonstration effect • Business strategy and risk management • Corporate governance • Strategic focus on SMEs
Results - cont’d IFC contribution limited in a few of the banks due to: • Small stake • Less developed region • Heavy government influence • Management not receptive to international investors’ influence
Context in late 2000’s • ~ 300 NGO type programs, unsustainable • Regulatory environment, “formative” – no clarity on which agency regulates and licenses MFIs • Lack of professionally managed MFIs • Government experimenting different models, including VTBs • Legal status of MCCs only established in 2008
Results • Most investments too early to tell yet • Success story: CFPA Microfinance Co.: - NGO transformation - Strong business performance - Clear focus on poverty reduction - Opportunities for women • Challenges faced: - Delayed government approval - Slow ramp-up - Funding constraints, partly due to regulatory issues
Agenda • Methodology • Key findings – Advisory Services • Key findings – Local currency financing • Key findings – Investment • Conclusions and Lessons learned
Conclusion of the Review • China’s financial sector experienced transformational changes in the past 20 years. • Many factors were at play, and an important force behind the change was the Chinese government. • IFC has made significant positive contributions to this progress by playing roles of - a catalyst - a strategic investor - and a technical advisor, facilitator, and knowledge broker.
Lessons Learned • Taking calculated strategic risk pays off • Remaining relevant to government’s priorities and having strong client commitment help move forward agenda • A programmatic approach and long-term view is crucial for delivering systemic impact • Combining local knowledge and international expertise is critical • Co-investing and collaborating closely with strategic investors enhances success chances
Lessons Learned – cont’d • Being supply-driven leads to less success • Better resource allocation within IFC would help increase impact • Timing and mode of entering less-developed region needs to be better planned out • Small stakes restrict influence
Feedbacks from Clients “Not just to Bank of Shanghai, but to the entire banking sector in China, IFC brought in international best practices in bank management.” - Han Wenliang, Director of Board Supervisory Office, Bank of Shanghai “There would not be today’s Bank of Nanjing without IFC. IFC was a pioneer in pushing through China’s financial sector reform.” - Zhang Weinian, Head of Executive Office, Bank of Nanjing “IFC was a pioneer. Since IFC’s investment in 2005, Bank of Beijing has seen improvement in all aspects. IFC has played an irreplaceable role.” - Yang Shujian, Board Secretary, Bank of Beijing “The most important contribution of IFC was to bring in the concepts of corporate governance and balancing shareholder interests.” - Tang Bin, Director of Board Secretariat, Industrial Bank “IFC contributed to the transformation of the bank from a rural cooperative to a rural commercial bank.” - Long Yun, Chief, Office of Board of Directors, United Rural Commercial Bank
Feedbacks from Clients They also told us that IFC: • Is bureaucratic, slow, and inefficient • Uses cookie-cutter approach, lacks customization and flexibility • Is big on ideas and concepts, weaker on implementation and technical support • Lacks continuity in relationship management sometimes • Was HQ-centric back then: meetings at 12am Asia time; no decision-making power in region
Looking ForwardChallenges facing China and IFC’s Strategic Focuses • Climate change • Access to finance • Balanced growth between urban and rural • Integration in the world economy
Lessons Learned: M&E Recommendations Thank You!