Chinese banks' shadow loans grow despite regulatory glower

03 Sep, 2016

Shadow lending by listed Chinese banks surged in the first half, underlining the challenges faced by the country's banking regulator as it tries to rein in the use of opaque lending structures that are seen as a threat to financial stability. China's lenders, led by the mid-tier banks, have been increasing their use of shadow lending products for years, as they can offer higher returns and tie up less of a bank's capital than traditional lending.
But they also disguise the quality of a bank's balance sheet, and sector-wide make it harder for regulators to assess systemic risk and the volume of lending in the economy. A Reuters analysis of bank filings shows Shanghai Pudong Development Bank, a leading joint-stock lender, increased its receivables for trust schemes and asset management plans, or so-called shadow loans, by 14 percent in the first six months of the year to 1.27 trillion yuan ($190 billion), giving it China's biggest portfolio of such products.
The shadow loan book at China's largest joint-stock lender, Industrial Bank Co, rose 4.4 percent to 1.23 trillion yuan, equivalent to 63 percent of its normal loan book, according to Reuters calculations. China Minsheng Banking Corp, China Zheshang Bank Co, Shengjing Bank Co, Bank of Jinzhou Co and Bank of Chongqing Co also substantially increased their portfolios by 9 percent or more.
Minsheng and Zheshang both reported an 86 percent rise, the fastest among their listed peers, according to Reuters calculations. "I'm actually a bit surprised that some smaller banks were still growing those positions," said Wei Hou, AB Bernstein banking analyst. Given the regulatory push, the trend ought to be going the other way, he added. The China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. The CBRC has tried to address the rampant growth of these shadow lending products, particularly at mid-sized banks.
In April it issued Document 82 to lenders, which most bankers and analysts interpreted as an attempt to compel banks to increase provisioning on shadow loans and bring them in line with normal loans. Some analysts at the time said the move could force banks to seek fresh capital to shore up their balance sheets, a prospect that has become more likely as banks' capital positions deteriorated during the first half.
Shadow loans had already reached 12.6 trillion yuan at the end of last year, according to calculations by UBS, about five times the size of China's entire annual economic output. And credit rating agency Fitch said in July that around a third of system credit resides outside bank loan books, undermining asset quality data.
That is particularly worrying since Chinese banks' non-performing loans are already at a record high, according to official figures, and most analysts think the real figures are several times worse. The accounting treatment of these loan-like trust and asset management plans is significantly different. "These shadow loans are not subjected to the same rules as the loan book, despite being largely credit in nature," said UBS Securities analyst Jason Bedford.
Though the impact of the CBRC intervention is not evident in most of the listed banks' first-half filings, there are some positive signs. China Merchants Bank Co was one of the rare lenders to scale down its shadow loans in the first half, with a 23 percent decrease in receivables from trust schemes and asset management plans to 528.7 billion yuan, according to Reuters calculations. The bank's deputy president, Li Hao, who acknowledged that "to some degree, the bank's non-standard investments are loans", indicated a change of approach was taking hold at the bank.

Read Comments