China’s big banks are no doubt suffering new headaches these days after learning over the weekend that Beijing has lowered their reserve requirement ratios, in the latest of a growing series of mixed signals as the government tries to maintain the health of both the banks and the broader national economy at the same time. The latest announcement has seen the banking regulator lower the amount of money that banks must keep in reserve, in a clear signal that the government wants them to lend more to help China maintain its economic growth that has shown recent signs of slowing sharply. (English article) The cut was the second in the last 3 months, and could add up to 400 billion yuan to China’s financial system as Beijing tries to boost domestic consumption to offset a sharp slowdown in exports due to weak demand from the key US and European markets. Analysts forecast the regulator could lower the reserve requirement ratio again this year, again in a bid to stimulate growth. The only problem in all this is that Beijing has taken away many of the banks’ most important channels for new loans, meaning they could find it difficult lending all of the new money being freed up by the regulator’s moves. Beijing remains determined to cool the nation’s overheated property market, meaning the banks won’t be able to use the new funds to make more mortgage loans that are one of their most important sources of new lending. At the same time, banks also won’t be able to make many new loans to local governments for infrastructure projects, as most of those local governments are already struggling to repay massive loans they took out for similar projects under Beijing’s 4 trillion yuan economic stimulus plan at the height of the global economic crisis in 2008 and 2009. Many of those local government loans are already showing signs of problems, leading reports to emerge last week that Beijing was considering a plan to allow banks to delay collection of repayments for as much as 4 years. (previous post) Exporters aren’t likely to need new funds from the banks either, since many are seeing demand rapidly fade for their products. One of the few sources that could actually use the funds are small- and medium-sized companies that cater to the domestic market, many of which generally suffer from a lack of access to credit and are forced to look to gray markets for their money. But with their history of lending to big state-run firms, China’s big banks have little or no experience making loans to these smaller companies and thus currently lack the channels to make them an important source of new lending. As a result of all this, the banks may have a difficult time boosting their lending despite Beijing’s wishes. One of the few remaining outlets for loans is the stock market, which means we could see a rally in stocks for the first half of the year as new funds flow into the market. But any such rally will probably be short lived, leading to new problems as many loans to stock buyers could also start to go bad. On the whole, the situation for the banks doesn’t look very good in the next year, as many will be forced to making questionable loans in unfamiliar areas in their drive to fulfill Beijing’s wishes for more lending.
Bottom line: Beijing’s latest move to boost lending bodes poorly for the nation’s banks, which are likely to make dubious loans in their quest to fulfill the government’s wishes.
Related postings 相关文章:
◙ China Considers New Bank Rescue 中国考虑出台措施援救银行
◙ Banks to Lend More, But to Whom? 银行获准增加放贷 但流向选择有限
◙ China Banks: More Trouble Signs
Leading solar panel maker Suntech (NYSE: STP) has put out a broadly positive pre-earnings announcement, showing the struggling market may be nearing bottom in its current downcycle as the company also took major moves to control costs. Investors seemed to like what they saw, bidding up Suntech shares more than 8 percent in Friday trading after the news came out, even though shares are still at about a quarter of their levels from 2 years ago. In its earnings pre-announcement, Suntech said its shipments declined 10 percent in the fourth quarter from the third, a bit better than the 20 percent decline it originally expected. (
An online discount retailer named Vipshop has taken an early lead in the race to become the first Chinese Internet company to list in the US this year, while the more established Sohu (Nasdaq: SOHU) has set up a new headquarters for its popular video service, laying the groundwork for its own US IPO for the unit. Meantime in other news for US-listed tech firms, IT outsourcing company Camelot Information Systems (NYSE: CIS) has been hit by a second class action lawsuit over a big drop in its share price, in what looks like another major headache for the company. Let’s look at Vipshop first, a relatively small company that is taking the bold move of being the first Chinese web firm to file for a US IPO this year, with plans to raise up to $125 million. (
Chinese telecoms star Huawei seems to be in a state of constant change these days in its bid to shed its image as a stodgy government-controlled company, with new comments from Ren Zhengfei indicating its media-shy founder may be preparing to step down soon. Ren’s departure, if it really happens, could remove one of the biggest PR obstacles for Huawei in its drive for global respect, since many of the questions about the company’s government and military ties stem from his past as an army engineer and a stealthy demeanor that has seen him grant only a handful of interviews in Huawei’s history. According to reports in the Chinese media, Ren has said that if Huawei employees believe he is unneeded and voice a desire for him to go, then he thinks that would be a good thing. (
After questioning most of Internet search leader Baidu’s (Nasdaq: BIDU) recent net initiatives as misguided, I’m happy to say it’s finally making a new and potentially promising move by exploring an expansion into Brazil. (
New data is showing that Hewlett-Packard’s (NYSE: HPQ) share of China’s PC market continued to plummet at the end of last year, a worrisome development for a company that is at once the world’s biggest computer brand but also seems unable to decide on its future direction in a PC market that will soon overtake the US to become the world’s largest. According to the latest data from IDC, HP’s share of the China PC market tumbled to 5.3 percent in the fourth quarter of last year, down from 8.5 percent in the second quarter, which was down from double-digits not long before when the company was one of China’s top players. (
Having ordered the nation’s top banks to make massive dubious loans to local governments during the financial crisis, Beijing is now considering letting the banks delay collecting those debts, in what looks like a lack of will to deal with the problem. On the one hand, I can understand why Beijing might not want to risk billions of dollars in loan defaults for its major banks, many of which may be unable to collect payments from cash-strapped local governments. But on the other hand, this problem really does exist, and it won’t help the banks or Beijing to delay dealing with the situation. Many may recall that Japan’s banks faced a similar problem in the 1990s, when they struggled under piles of huge bad loans created by the bursting of a US real estate bubble. The Japanese banks’ refusal to deal with the problem was one of the major factors behind the country’s “lost decade” in the 1990s, which saw the country experience little or no growth. Of course China’s situation isn’t completely the same, but there are many similarities. Local government debt at the end of last year stood at a whopping $1.7 trillion, of which about $700 million is coming due for repayment this year, according to media reports. Fearing that local governments lack the cash to repay so much debt and could default on many loans, the Chinese banking regulator is seriously considering a plan to let banks delay collection of the debt by as much as 4 years, and could announce a formal plan by the end of this month, according to media reports. (
Kaixin, China’s second biggest social networking site (SNS), has just released some new data that finally allow us to make some comparisons with industry leader Renren (NYSE: RENN), in what looks like a carefully timed move to restart its stalled IPO process to take advantage of hype surrounding the upcoming IPO for global leader Facebook. Frankly speaking, the Kaixin numbers look ok, but hardly seem to offer the kind of buzz the company would need to launch a hot IPO, especially in the current climate that has many US investors wary of Chinese companies following a series of accounting scandals last year. According to the handful of numbers given out by Kaixin, the company’s revenue grew 41 percent last year to about $60 million, while its registered user based reached 130 million, 60 million of whom were active users. (