Off the wire
Canadian stocks flat as crude retreats  • Oil prices drop ahead of OPEC meeting  • Sudan welcomes Qatari consultations with two Darfur rebel movements  • Section of Olympic torch relay cancelled amid floods  • OECD says Ireland, Luxembourg, Netherlands most hit by Brexit  • Urgent: UN Security Council slams failed DPRK ballistic missile launches  • Helsinki airport to receive more Chinese visitors via Yekaterinburg  • Brazilian gov't blames "domestic issues" for fall in GDP  • U.S. dollar falls on mixed data  • Uganda recharges acquitted suspects of 2010 bomb attacks  
You are here:   Home

China's banks in pretty good shape, not vulnerable to financial crisis, U.S. expert says

Xinhua, June 2, 2016 Adjust font size:

China's banks are in pretty good shape and not vulnerable to a potential financial crisis despite a rapid rise of corporate debt in the country, a U.S. expert said Wednesday.

"While lending more to corporates unable to pay interest and principal on previous loans means financial risks are clearly rising, it is likely that China is years away from a potential banking crisis, providing it with a window to slow the growth of credit to a sustainable level," said Nicholas Lardy, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

"A key reason for this judgment is that while the ratio of debt to gross domestic product (GDP) is quite elevated, China also enjoys a high rate of national savings. The level of debt a country can sustain depends significantly on the share of domestic savings in GDP," Lardy, a leading expert on China's economy, wrote in an analysis published on the Financial Times website.

As China's debt build-up is almost entirely in domestic currency and China remains a large net creditor to the rest of the world, the world's second-largest economy is "not vulnerable to a financial crisis such as the one in Asia in 1997", he said.

Lardy noted that banking crises almost always begin with problems on the liability side of bank balance sheets, but Chinese banks' liabilities are overwhelmingly deposits, making potential bank runs less likely.

"In any case, the central bank has substantial tools to deal with potential bank runs. For example, the required reserve ratio imposed on banks is currently 17 percent. This could be cut with hugely positive effects on bank liquidity," he said.

Finally, Chinese banks have far less exposure to poorly performing state-owned enterprises (SOEs) than in the 1990s. Loans to SOEs now only accounted for 30 percent of all renminbi loans of Chinese banks and other financial institutions, down from 62 percent in the mid-1990s, according to the expert.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) said in April in a report that given China's bank and policy buffers and continued strong growth in the economy, the costs of addressing potential losses on bank lending remain manageable despite the rising corporate debt risks.

To reduce the risks that are accumulating in the financial sector, Lardy urged Chinese authorities to "move aggressively to curtail the flow of credit to chronically unprofitable, mostly state-owned corporates" and close down these so-called "zombie companies," which only survive with aid from the government and banks. Enditem